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Formal and Informal Learning - 0 views

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    Malcolm Knowles is generally considered to be the originator of the term "informal learning" through his book published in 1970: Informal Adult Education: A Guide for Administrators, Leaders, and Teachers. Allen Tough was probably the first to really study how adults use informal learning.
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Free lesson - new - 0 views

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    great site for current news tailored to your ESL students
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Teaching English Language Learners Across the Content Areas - 0 views

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    This looks like a good site for you K-12 teachers. We are sure to encounter ELLs in ANY classroom and working the content standards into feasibility is/will no doubt be a challenge
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Helen or Hélène? | Psychology Today - 0 views

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    interesting
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Twitter used to study happiness patterns - USATODAY.com - 0 views

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    Cornell University researchers analyzed tweets from 2.4 million people to study happiness patterns. Awesome.
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Educational reform: Standardized tests not the way to inspire learning | OregonLive.com - 0 views

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    Very interesting opinion piece on standardized testing and ed reform by an Oregon teacher
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Education Week: How Many Decades Before 'Reform' Becomes 'Status Quo'? - 0 views

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    Good article about how the reform movements throughout the last few decades are the same thing in different forms and that nothing has really changed.
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On Assignment: Is a single-minded focus on testing the best way to teach children? - Sa... - 0 views

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    This article challenges teachers to stop "teaching to the test" and to grow student as learners and build relationships with them.
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Education Week Teacher: Teachers as Brain-Changers: Neuroscience and Learning - 0 views

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    "Teachers as Brain-Changers: Neuroscience and Learning"
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Why Do Some People Learn Faster? | Wired Science | Wired.com - 0 views

  • The physicist Niels Bohr once defined an expert as “a person who has made all the mistakes that can be made in a very narrow field.”
  • Education isn’t magic. Education is the wisdom wrung from failure.
  • Why are some people so much more effective at learning from their mistakes?
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  • Moser experiment is premised on the fact that there are two distinct reactions to mistake
  • The first reaction is called error-related negativity (ERN). It appears about 50 milliseconds after a screw-up and is believed to originate in the anterior cingulate cortex, a chunk of tissue that helps monitor behavior, anticipate rewards and regulate attention
  • second signal, which is known as error positivity (Pe), arrives anywhere between 100-500 milliseconds after the mistake and is associated with awareness.
  • subjects learn more effectively when their brains demonstrate two properties: 1) a larger ERN signal, suggesting a bigger initial response to the mistake and 2) a more consistent Pe signal, which means that they are probably paying attention to the error, and thus trying to learn from it.
  • new paper, Moser et al. extends this research by looking at how beliefs about learning shape these mostly involuntary error-related signals in the brain,
  • scientists applied a dichotomy first proposed by Carol Dweck
  • Dweck distinguishes between people with a fixed mindset
  • and those with a growth mindset,
  • subjects with a growth mindset were significantly better at learning from their mistakes
  • those with a growth mindset generated a much larger Pe signal, indicating increased attention to their mistakes.
  • increased Pe signal was nicely correlated with improvement after error, implying that the extra awareness was paying dividends in performance.
  • When kids were praised for their effort, nearly 90 percent chose the harder set of puzzles.
  • when kids were praised for their intelligence, most of them went for the easier test.
  • According to Dweck, praising kids for intelligence encourages them to “look” smart, which means that they shouldn’t risk making a mistake.
  • Students praised for their intelligence almost always chose to bolster their self-esteem by comparing themselves with students who had performed worse on the test. In contrast, kids praised for their hard work were more interested in the higher-scoring exams. They wanted to understand their mistakes, to learn from their errors, to figure out how to do better.
  • The experience of failure had been so discouraging for the “smart” kids that they actually regressed.
  • The problem with praising kids for their innate intelligence — the “smart” compliment — is that it misrepresents the psychological reality of education
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A Focus on Learning Rather Than Testing | FutureReady | The North Carolina New Schools ... - 0 views

  • One theme that has already emerged is the prevalence of trust that schools and their faculties will do what is in the best interest of students.
  • “We train the people and then leave it to them. The focus is on teacher professionalism. We talk about central steering, not central control.”
  • Key decisions, such as class size and textbook selection, are locally controlled.
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  • a national policy exists that requires schools to avoid ability grouping of students in what was described as preventing a “dead-end education for students.”
  • Teachers generally teach approximately 19 hours per week. The balance of their time is focused on working with their colleagues, reaching out to families and other duties
  • 96% of teachers are unionized
  • High levels of teacher education and preparation allow them to be more independent in the classroom.
  • Broad commitment to the vision of a knowledge-based society.
  • Educational equality
  • Education is free of charge to all, including books, meals, transportation and health care
  • “Our secret is investing in early intervention so that students don’t need it later.”
  • Sweden and Norway spend less on the front end and more later in remediation.
  • The principal works as a pedagogical director.
  • A culture of trust in which no school inspectors or national exams exist.
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iPad's Promise and How to Use it Now | Mr. Gonzalez's Classroom - 0 views

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    I used this blog from @educatoral for writing my grant on using the iPad in the classroom!!! #usdedu
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Amazon Kindle Fire May Surpass IPad Pre-Sales, Leak Suggests | Fox News - 0 views

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    Could this be the new iPad alternative? Have you heard about the kindle fire?
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The Innovative Educator: Seth Godin Discusses Failure of Educational Model - 0 views

  • Godin explains that it wouldn't take very many passionate parents to start schools down the right path.
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