Skip to main content

Home/ Learning Sciences/ Group items tagged teacher

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Ezgi Hazal KÖK

Prof. Dr. Özcan Demirel - 0 views

  •  
    Dr. Demirel is one of the important professors in Turkey who has worked in the field of Educational Sciences for 36 years at Hacettepe University. Mostly, he has focused on curriculum development, different learning approaches, teacher education and English language teaching in his articles and papers. Via this link, you are able to reach the names of his articles, papers, books, projects and so on.
leventmetu

ANN LESLIE BROWN - 3 views

Ann Leslie Brown (1943-1999) was an educational psychologist who developed methods for teaching children to be better learners. Her interest in the human memory brought Brown to focus on active mem...

http:__edr.sagepub.com_content_28_7_33.full.pdf+html

started by leventmetu on 22 Oct 13 no follow-up yet
ibrahim tanrikulu

Project Noah, learn and document wildlife!! - 0 views

  •  
    Project Noah is a tool to explore and document wildlife and a platform to harness the power of citizen scientists everywhere. You can explore and document and share the wildlife around you.
  •  
    İbrahim, we used Project Noah in one of projects at Canada. It was one of the most preferred app for the preservice science teachers. They recommended using the app for inquiry based learning activities. I especially like the biodiversity map here. Such a useful tool for science classrooms.
Defne Kara

Ryan Shaun Joazeiro de Baker ( Ryan Baker ) - 0 views

  •  
    Ryan Shaun Joazerio de Baker is a prominent professor in cognitive science at Teachers College of Columbia University whose focus is on the interaction between student learning and educational software.He is also organizing seminars on Learning. Here you can find his publications,web-page and all about his research interests.
Emrah Baki Basoglu

Seymour Papert and Stephen Krashen - 10 views

Hi all! Let me introduce two researchers who have made important contributions to learning sciences. The first name is Seymour Papert, who established connections with Piaget's developmental psycho...

learning LearningScience theory krashen technology

started by Emrah Baki Basoglu on 12 Oct 14 no follow-up yet
ibrahim tanrikulu

Introducing Meliha Tok (her nickname is zamazingo33) - 1 views

  •  
    Hi all, I invited my friend, Meliha Tok, who is a teacher of blind students. She is working in a state school, in Mersin. She agreed to share her learning experiences with blind students. She will Also share newspaper reports and new technologies About teaching blind students and people. We are all invited to ask what we want to Learn about learning experiences with learning Of Blind people.
Ezgi Hazal KÖK

What is Situated Learning? - 4 views

shared by Ezgi Hazal KÖK on 04 Nov 13 - No Cached
  •  
    the page briefly and clearly defines what situated learning is, and shows how to create authentic learning contexts by using digital media. There are very short videos showing situated learning genres and some handouts which can be helpful in the class.
  • ...3 more comments...
  •  
    This is a very helpful and rich source for us, thank you for sharing it. Especially the situated documentary idea is very interesting I think. Making use of technology, simulations, games are such effective ways for solving the mismatch between classrooms and real-world situations.
  •  
    I really liked the use of situated learning genres to make some theoretical concepts more concrete via real world experiences and scenarios. These genres can be integrated with classroom practices depending upon the specific requirements of the subject area, learner group and curricula to be implemented. While watching the video I thought that the situated documentary would help me while learning history when I was at high school. I had difficult times trying to learn history by reading dull history books.
  •  
    As you mentioned Pınar, the videos on the website helped me to get the theory very well because of some concrete examples. And also the video "field research" provides a good example for science and vocabulary teaching, I think.
  •  
    While I was reading about interactive case scenarios, I remembered some of my friends playing a game on the Internet called "fantasy role play". I am sure most of us have already heard about it because it is very popular among METU students. Actually the major aim of the game is to have some fun, but it can also be organized as a learning tool.
  •  
    Thanks for sharing the examples. I already started thinking about how to integrate these into teacher training programs.
Sinem Hizli Alkan

Who would like to learn more about Finnish Education System? - 1 views

shared by Sinem Hizli Alkan on 31 Oct 13 - No Cached
  •  
    Defne shared a video about teacher education in Finland and I have a document about that also which is sort of a collection and summarize of data from different resources and from my observations when I was there. But I can not share the doc file here so feel free to ask me if you are interested in;)
Evrim Baran

Harvey Mudd professors' research suggests 'flipped' classes might not be worth the hassle - 1 views

  •  
    Research finding on Flipped Classrooms. Connected to some of the reading reflections this week on technology.
  • ...2 more comments...
  •  
    how interesting research, I am very suprised...
  •  
    This research proves to be another evidence of the importance of combining both technological and pedagogical knowledge (excluding content knowledge for this case as it is not mentioned). I think the impact of flipped classes can be larger when it is known what and how to do with the technology.
  •  
    This classes can have no effect on students learning, in a short term. For me, a study should measure the long term effect of the flipped classroom. This point can be missed. there is need for not only summative but also confirmative evaluation.
  •  
    As a language teacher, I've felt really interested in such a change in the instructional process. I always need more time for activities and hands-on experiences; however, I fail to have. I think if the initial preparations are well-organized and students are provided with effective support, flipped classrooms idea may work better than the traditional classes. Therefore, I disagree with the researchers who have found no significant difference in learning. One research may not set a good example for a generalization.
Hatice Çilsalar

20 hours for learning - 7 views

  •  
    The tedtalk related to how to learn things especially practical things is very enjoyful. In this video it is emphasized that everyone can learn whatever they want in twenty hours. But there are some requirements for this type of learning that are: deconstruct your skill, learn enough to self-correct or self-edit, remove practise barries, and prastice at least 20 hours. the only barrier to have any skill is only emotional.
  • ...3 more comments...
  •  
    This is an absolutely amazing and inspiring video. After watching video, I strongly believed that barriers we have to overcome have emotional bases instead intellectual ones. Maybe if I follow 4 steps properly and focus on ı can even play guitar. In fact, it seems to me devotion and removing practise barriers are the keys to success and manageable, then why not give a try.
  •  
    I liked the song in the video very much and the graphics showing the relationship between the time and skill or how we are good and the practice. However, I am not sure that 20 hour is applicable to everything to be learned. In the four steps, we can relate self-correction part to self-coaching as mentioned in the readings.
  •  
    The four steps mentioned in the video have really good implications for the learners. Self correction and removing the barriers are especially important to learn anything new. However,I agree with Burcu, 20 hours of practice is not enough to acquire some kind of skills. Can anybody learn a foreign language in 20 hours? Kaufman reminded the fact that early stage of skill improvement is very fast but being an expert takes long time and effort. It is a very common phenomenon we come across in language classes. After students become intermediate or upper intermediate, they have difficulties to improve in English to be advanced learners. Expertise requires patience, motivation and continuous hard work. Students need to be patient and practice more but under the stress of proficiency exam they feel hopeless. Maybe, teachers should inform them about the stages of skill acquisition so that learners will know that what they experience is just a part of the skill acquisition process.
  •  
    2o hours to learn something sounds interesting. But, I don't think 20 hours would be enough to learn some practical things. Learning English can be a good example of that. Despite the many ads claiming to teach English in a short time, I have not come across any method to teach English in a short time.
  •  
    It was really fun to watch.What drew my attention was the quote `The major barrier to skill acquisition isn`t intellectual...it`s emotional yet the quote reminded me of another quoate :)from the readings of this week `the journey to truly superior performance is neither for the faint of heart nor for the impatient.`Although both shares the view that once should be open, courageous,eager to learn, they differ in the sense that genuine expertise comes with struggle, sacrifice and there aren`t shortcuts as in learning how to play the guitar with `four chords`.Instead, one has to invest time wisely for a bit of a period of time to apply it as an expert.Take for example,art lessons.One cannot learn and paint in 20hrs if he/she is not very talented.
leventmetu

Multimodal Affect Recognition in Intelligent Tutoring Systems - 1 views

  •  
    In human-interaction, 55% of affective information is carried by the body whilst 38% by the voice tone and volume, and only 7% person by the words spoken [1]. Ekman [2] further suggests that non-verbal behaviours are the primary vehicles for expressing emotion. With the availability of computational power, and great advances in the fields of computer vision and speech recognition, it is now possible to create systems that can detect facial expressions, gestures and body postures from video and audio feed. Furthermore, systems that can integrate different modalities can offer powerful and much more pleasant computer experiences as they would be embracing users' natural behaviour.
  •  
    In the paper it says "According to Wolcott teachers rely on nonverbal means such as eye contact, facial expressions and body language to determine the cognitive states of students, which indicate the degree of success in the instructional transaction". I really wonder what is your opinion about it and would it be succesful to implement affect recognition (after voice-recognition) in intelligent tutoring systems.
leventmetu

5th Grade Geometry Tutor - 0 views

  •  
    You can take a look (a free version for teachers and parents)
  • ...4 more comments...
  •  
    I also played, and had fun during tutoring, I wish ı had an oppurtunity to have that kind of tutors when ı was a kid
  •  
    I am also curious to hear more about the design principles behind these kind of tutors. I wonder if the designers followed a particular ID model.
  •  
    I checked it also but when I made an error(Of course it was in purpose B-) the feedback was not like a feedback. And I am also curious what is the meaning of those triangles and trees on the coordinate system according to designer.
  •  
    I think the designers of these kind of tutors rely on some accepted design principles like representing student competence or minimize working memory load, but they also follow pedagogical guidelines which impose them to find the most appropriate ID model. Since the analogy might be taken too literally they do not prefer to build an ITS modeled on human tutors. So I think there is no specific ID model for the designers but it should be an employee rather than an employer.
  •  
    This tutor provides only practice opportunities for students but I am not sure that whether it includes problem solving context
  •  
    I reallu like this application. Students can learn both geometri and how they can draw their way not to crash some objects. But The sam question came my mindwith Filiz, is this develop higher order thinking skills?
Aysegul Solar

Some helpful quotes for review homework - 1 views

  •  
    Read and selct one of yours mine is : Teacher: 'Why didn't you do your homework?' Student; 'Sorry, but Kanye West didn't let me finish...'
  •  
    "That feeling you get when all of your homework is done." miss you so much that feeling :)
Sinem Hizli Alkan

TPACK in Math Education - 0 views

  •  
    " The mathematics teacher with TPACK (Technology Pedagogy Content Knowledge) is a chess player. "
Betül İpek

Just believe and never give up!! - 1 views

http://www.farkyaratanlar.org/site/tr/fark_yaratanlar/45/Yusuf-%C3%87opur.html Here is a video of a educator who is a "extraordinary teacher" example for us!

started by Betül İpek on 26 Oct 14 no follow-up yet
Yelda Sarıkaya-Erdem

Problem Solving Knowledge Transfer: An Expert's Perspective - 1 views

  •  
    Here is another research that comes up with the findings indicating being an expert does not mean to teach effectively because of expertise-base biases. So, expert teachers make difference thanks to their pedagogical knowledge, don't they?
canannn

Science of Learning Research Centre - 4 views

shared by canannn on 13 Oct 14 - No Cached
  •  
    Hey everyone. This is the Science of Learning Research Centre. Researchers in education, neuroscience and cognitive psychology work together with teachers to understand the learning process.
SEDA MUSAOĞLU

Neuroscience & classroom - 4 views

  •  
    This is an online course for educators who want to understand how their students learn by helping them connect brain research into classroom practice. This course sheds light on some current issues related to neuroscience. I recommend you have a look at it :)
  •  
    Dear Seda, I like this website too much, thank you :)
  •  
    Its a whole course. Valuable resource for teachers. Similar examples, particularly in Turkey, can bridge the gap between neuroscience findings with the teaching practice.
Özlem Duran Ataalp

An instrument designed and validated for assessing TPACK - 3 views

Actually, I'm really interested. I've read the abstract and as soon as I have time, I'll read the article. Great! I love Evrim Hocam :)

« First ‹ Previous 101 - 120 of 131 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page