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Tracey Kracht

T&L Live @ School CIO Summit: A Curated Social Media Hub - 0 views

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    This year's program is all about professional development for tech lead learners-those edtech leaders who bridge the gaps between classroom and administration, curriculum and technology, school and home. This full day of workshops and discussions is specifically designed to "train the trainers" with shared best practices, workshops, and discussions that attendees can take back to their districts and put into action. This is your chance to network with others who care deeply about the future of education.
Tracey Kracht

Flipped Learning | Turning Learning on Its Head! - 0 views

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    This blog is written by Jon Bergmann who has worked with Aaron Sams to crate flipped learning.  It contains a lot of information that can help guide our discussions on flipping learning and personalizing the educational environment.
Tracey Kracht

What is Blended Learning? - Web Learning @ Penn State - 0 views

  • A blended learning approach combines face to face classroom methods with computer-mediated activities to form an integrated instructional approach.
  • The goal of a blended approach is to join the best aspects of both face to face and online instruction.
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    A good intro discussion on blended learning where classes need to be designed with an understanding of... "what blended instruction is why blended instruction  is employed  how best to leverage the advantages of a blended approach  "
Tracey Kracht

Ten Takeaway Tips for Teaching Critical Thinking | Edutopia - 0 views

    • Tracey Kracht
       
      I still would like to see what the outer circle would look like if the students were on Today's Meet - discussing in real-time what is happening in the inner circle.  That is a group I want to help dissect the thinking while it is occurring.  It would be a great way to model and help students stay engaged.
  • So challenge them to communicate back to you.
    • Tracey Kracht
       
      Perhaps this is where video comes in - they can communicate either face-to-face or process and then submit commentary electronically.  One way is not better than the other and you need both to be successful in life.
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  • "fishbowl" configuration, with an inner circle and an outer circle.
  • It can be hard for a teacher to let go of the reins and let the students do the teaching.
  • you want to create an environment where intellectual curiosity is fostered and questions are encouraged
  • Pose a provocative question to build an argument around and help your students break it down.
  • It all comes back to modeling,
  • uses a "devil's advocate" card that he secretly gives to a student before each discussion
Tracey Kracht

10 Techy Icebreakers for The 21st Century Teacher ~ Educational Technology and Mobile L... - 0 views

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    Icebreakers to help students or teachers relax as they get ready for discussion.  
Tracey Kracht

Apps for CBL||Challenge Based Learning - 0 views

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    As we look for ways to share tools and 'categorize' them for easy use and decision making, this is an interesting framework for these discussions!
Tracey Kracht

Twitter: How to archive event hashtags and create an interactive visualization of the c... - 0 views

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    This Twitter tool could be very interesting in terms of helping teachers see all of the discussions in the hashtag and presenting them in a way others could as well.  Definitely something to explore!
Tracey Kracht

Future Work Skills 2020 | Classroom Aid - 0 views

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    This article discusses the skills workers will need to be successful in our future world.
Tracey Kracht

School of Education Johns Hopkins University Mindmapping and Learning - 0 views

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    This article discusses the importance of mindmapping and what it does for students.
Tracey Kracht

5 Reasons Your Students Should Blog | The Principal of Change - 0 views

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    George Couros discusses blogging for: Open Reflection, Developing Literacy with Different Mediums, Student Voice, Creating an Open Archive of Learning, Developing a Positive Digital Footprint
Tracey Kracht

44 Better Ways To Use Smartphones In The Classroom - 0 views

    • Tracey Kracht
       
      Even though this article specifically is discussing the use of smartphones, it fails to mention these are online tools...so in the world of 1:1 we could capture some of these pieces in our pilot.
  • “The Five C’s.” Collaborate, communicate, create and coordinate/curate
Tracey Kracht

Why We Need a Moratorium on Meaningless Note-Taking - Getting Smart by Susan Lucille Da... - 0 views

  • Instead, students should be learning note-taking as a way of organizing data and curating information they need for a defined purpose.  Students should sift and cull, summarize and synthesize. Students should learn how to take notes in ways that correlate with real-life situations. Finally, students should master the skill of making meaning from their notes and finding the best ways to share that meaning with others.
    • Sara Wickham
       
      This is so true.  Reminds of the idea that students should be able to make notes, not just take notes. 
    • Tracey Kracht
       
      Absolutely agree - this is so important! Simple strategies would be really great for taking time to have students think and add to their notes.
  • When does our note-taking have a real purpose? When we are collecting field notes, listening to a webinar or YouTube training video, scanning a book for nuggets of wisdom. When we attend workshops or conferences, or even when we meet someone for a networking lunch.
    • Sara Wickham
       
      These are great examples of why we take notes in the professional world.  These would be great examples to share with students.
  • What are the actual skills students need in order to organize the vast amounts of information they must cull through to make meaning and solve problems? Is note-taking from the Internet, from Twitter, or from texts really a different kind of animal? Won’t students buy into the note-taking process if they understand that it matters for something more than spitting back a professor’s lecture notes that haven’t changed in the last twenty years?
    • Sara Wickham
       
      These are great questions!
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  • I have a theory that teachers do this because students refuse to read the boring textbook (another issue), so the teacher digests it for them and then conducts a forced walk through the material. Many teachers, unfortunately, think this is what they are supposed to do; sadly, they think it’s what teaching really is.
    • Sara Wickham
       
      How often do we do the thinking for our students?
  • But at the very least, such notes should include hyperlinks, should be posted in a shared digital space, and should be open to amendment and annotation by the students themselves.
  • Likewise, we need to think of note-taking as something more than the traditional Cornell style. Note-taking should include brainstormed lists, diagrams and drawings, photographs, and other artifacts of learning. We should rethink note-taking not as outlined material for the test, but as blogs, wikis, backchannels, discussion forums, and status updates. The form of the notes should suit their purpose; the tool for taking the notes should do so as well.
    • Sara Wickham
       
      Great ideas here on how note-taking can become more meaningful in a digital world.
Tracey Kracht

Ten Takeaway Tips for Teaching Critical Thinking | Fluency21 - Committed Sardine Blog - 0 views

    • Tracey Kracht
       
      This is a very interesting opportunity to have students really think in a different way.
  • establish clear rules for voicing different perspectives
  • begin leveraging your students’ critical-thinking skills in the classroom
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  • Questioning is at the heart of critical thinking,
  • Pose a provocative question to build an argument around and help your students break it down
  • best way to teach that is to model.
  • uses a “devil’s advocate” card that he secretly gives to a student before each discussion, charging him or her with the role of bringing up opposing views.
  • It can be hard for a teacher to let go of the reins and let the students do the teaching.
Tracey Kracht

Education Week: Ed-Tech PD Focuses on Student Learning Needs - 1 views

  • Traditional professional development, however—the kind in which teachers attend a one-time workshop or conference to learn a new teaching method, for example—hasn't provided much help in bringing her classroom into the 21st century.
  • That reality needs to change,
  • focus, with razor-sharp attention, on what students need to learn, rather than on how to use a specific device.
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  • The starting place should be what you want your kids to learn, such as learning how to be better readers, to write more creatively, or to hold good classroom discussions."
  • All successful learning begins with a problem
April Adams

Benefits of Being a Connected Educator - EdTechReview™ (ETR) - 0 views

  • Students live and will work in an increasingly highly connected and collaborative world, and we have to understand what this means for learning, working, and living in order to provide a more personal, self-directed and more effective learning environment for the students.
    • April Adams
       
      Reason enough to do it! 
  • Increased exposure to more diverse ideas, learning experiences and techniques. Increased networking which helps educators to know other educators and their practices across the world. It provides educators with opportunities to collaborate on a variety of research, projects, techniques for teaching and more. It allows educators to stay up to date with all the current things happening in educational organizations all over the world. Educators can easily learn about the best practices for teaching globally and share them with others. It keeps their literacy flowing and evolving on the tools of 21st century . Educators can make their students experience high-quality virtual classes (with MOOCs) and blended classes where learning occurs even outside the schools. Through this educators can make masses of people understand the relevance of education that students are receiving presently and how they can make positive amends to it.
    • April Adams
       
      Goals for PD!  Transformational learning for adults.
  • Twitter is being regarded as the easiest way for being connected as it fills spaces in between the things in your lives
    • April Adams
       
      Not new info but important for teachers to think about the power in the classroom.
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  • You can write your own blogs and share them with others.
    • April Adams
       
      It may be my deal next year..... scary! 
  • This will create for you a ‘Personal Learning Network’ (PLN).
    • April Adams
       
      Goal in the CE series?
  • Taking the connections and turning them into lessons that can impact students is really one of the keys to being a connected educator.
    • April Adams
       
      Great way for teachers who are struggling to see the validity of the connectivity.
  • Since educators can reach out and connect with educators from all over the world, they will witness a wonderful change in their teaching that will make a positive impact on their students.
    • April Adams
       
      Could the PLN plan to be make a connection with  1. someone outside of this district teaching your content. 2. someone outside of this state teaching your content. 3. a professional whose research you believe in?
  • The ‘connected educator’ is not just a reader or viewer, but an active participant in ongoing discussions and planning efforts.
    • April Adams
       
      LOVE THIS!  ACTIVE Participant.  
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