Finland has vastly improved in reading, math and science literacy over the past decade in large part because its teachers are trusted to do whatever it takes to turn young lives around.
I Can Change the World - 0 views
What Three Big EdTech Investments Say About The Future Of Education | Co.Exist: World c... - 0 views
Why Are Finland's Schools Successful? | People & Places | Smithsonian Magazine - 0 views
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“This is what we do every day, prepare kids for life.”
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“Whatever it takes” is an attitude that drives not just Kirkkojarvi’s 30 teachers, but most of Finland’s 62,000 educators in 3,500 schools from Lapland to Turku—professionals selected from the top 10 percent of the nation’s graduates to earn a required master’s degree in education
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We can't let educators off the hook | Dangerously Irrelevant - 0 views
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I think most teachers don’t even realize that there’s a decision to be made. It’s not a matter of choosing the red pill or the blue pill… if you don’t know that there are even two pills available as options
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Every day that I present for educators, I have a greater appreciate for how distorted the view is as seen through the eyes of a typical EduBlogger.
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Rather, it's that their priorities don't always line up with those of other progressive educators in and out of the blogosphere.
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SpeEdChange: If school isn't for collaborating, why does anyone come? - 0 views
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If students want to learn in isolation; if they want to sit at a desk and work on their own stuff, occasionally checking in with an "expert," they have no reason to come to school.
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For years we've talked about (or we may have even been) kids who've only come to school because of team sports, or music groups, or theatre, or even hanging out at lunch.
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If school isn't about doing things together, just about everyone has better places to spend their day.
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If students want to learn in isolation; if they want to sit at a desk and work on their own stuff, occasionally checking in with an "expert," they have no reason to come to school. They can do a lot better at home, or at their local coffee shop or even the public library, where both the coffee and the WiFi connection will be better.
Will · Learners not Knowers - 0 views
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But I am saying my kids don’t (won’t) need teachers any more to get them to pass the test.
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If nothing else, the new iPhone’s integration of Siri is a clear indicator of how far technology has come in terms of understanding semantic cues and interactions.
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If it’s all about test scores and “student acheivement” measured by test scores, immersing kids into Knewton-type environments is by far the easiest, cheapest, path of least resistance for the system’s current definition of “learning.”
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Workers, soldiers or nomads - what does the Gates Foundation want from our ed... - 0 views
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The why of education should be the first question that we answer in any discussion in the field.
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Sadly, it seems to be very difficult to say anything about “what learning is” and “why we educate our children”.
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but it’s pretty tough to create a system that both trains people to do what they are told and to also critically assess their culture.
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The Morrisburg Leader - Home - 0 views
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