Skip to main content

Home/ Learning to Change/ Group items tagged professional-development

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Jeff Johnson

Professional Learning Communities - 0 views

  •  
    The term professional learning community has become quite commonplace in education circles. The term describes a collegial group who are united in their commitment to an outcome. In the case of education, the commitment would be to student learning. The community engages in a variety of activities including sharing a vision, working and learning collaboratively, visiting and observing other classrooms, and participating in shared decision making. The benefits of professional learning community to educators and students include reduced isolation of teachers, better informed and committed teachers, and academic gains for students. Shirley Hord of the Southwest Educational Development Laboratory says, that as an organizational arrangement, the professional learning community is seen as a powerful staff-development approach and a potent strategy for school change and improvement.
Clif Mims

FriendFeed - About Us - 0 views

    • Clif Mims
       
      This might be an interesting way to facilitate conversation in classes and professional development.
  • customized feed
  • FriendFeed enables you to keep up-to-date on the web pages, photos, videos and music that your friends and family are sharing. It offers a unique way to discover and discuss information among friends.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • It’s also fast and easy to start discussions around shared items. On FriendFeed, you and your friends contribute to a shared stream of information — information that you care about, because it's from the people that you care about.
  •  
    This might be an interesting way to facilitate conversation in classes and professional development.
Sheryl A. McCoy

World Without Walls: Learning Well with Others | Edutopia - 0 views

  •  
    one of the most profoundly important articles I have read recently. "For educators and the schools in which they teach, the challenges of this moment are significant. Our ability to learn whatever we want, whenever we want, from whomever we want is rendering the linear, age-grouped, teacher-guided curriculum less and less relevant. "
1 - 7 of 7
Showing 20 items per page