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Aaron Davis

What Does Your Students' Digital Footprints Look Like?Learn2Earn Blog - 0 views

  • It’s clear that students are entering a very different world. Students are now digital citizens, and their digital footprint, which is updated on almost a daily basis, will most likely have a major impact on their future. But, who is informing these students about this? Who is teaching these students the proper ways to use social media?
  • Provide them with authentic projects to complete for authentic audiences in which they can make a positive impact on the world as they learn. Help them share their success stories through blogs, social media sites and other forms of communication. Recognize the importance of your students’ digital footprints and show them how to create a successful and positive online image.
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    "Provide them with authentic projects to complete for authentic audiences in which they can make a positive impact on the world as they learn. Help them share their success stories through blogs, social media sites and other forms of communication. Recognize the importance of your students' digital footprints and show them how to create a successful and positive online image."
Aaron Davis

10 Quick Ways to Give Students A Voice | Blogging Through the Fourth Dimension - 0 views

  • 1.  Give them a blog.  
  • 2.  Give them time.
  • 3.  Give them post-its.
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  • 4.  Model constructive feedback.
  • 5.  Give them whiteboards.
  • 6.  Give them a chance.
  • 7.  Give them an audience.
  • 8.  Give them a starting point.
  • 9.  Give them a purpose.
  • 10.  Give them trust.
Aaron Davis

Student Voice: Do We Really Listen to Students? - Finding Common Ground - Education Week - 0 views

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    A great piece from Peter DeWitt challenging the notion of whether we are really listening to students.
Aaron Davis

Students don't need a 'voice.' Here's what they really need. - The Washington Post - 0 views

  • We need to give them a classroom and an audience and blank sheet that says “curriculum” at the top. We need to give them a budget and a building.
  • We want kids to be learning, to be passionate about their work? Let them learn things that have real meaning to them. Make them the authors of their curriculum.
  • Don’t give them a voice. Give them our schools
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    An interesting read about students taking ownership of their learning. Not sure if this is really where the future is, but would be interesting.
Aaron Davis

Richard Olsen's Blog › Teacher Quality and the Purpose of School - 0 views

  • Sure preparing students for the workforce is a major role but so is developing the social aspects of our students, developing in them a morale compass, an appreciation of culture and history, and how to develop constructive and meaningful relationships. Students engage in leadership programs, work and play in teams, and participate in many other activities and programs for the sole purpose of social and emotional development. There is also a third aspect to the purpose of schools, that is, to develop students as unique individuals.
  • When we talk about teacher quality we can only do so ethically in light of what they and their school community believe about the purpose of school, and the weighting of the three roles of school. If we don’t properly understand the purpose of a specific school we cannot possibly determine whether an individual teacher is “good or bad.”
Aaron Davis

5 Reasons Your Portfolio Should Be A Blog | The Principal of Change - 0 views

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    A great post from George Couros building on the idea that your portfolio should be 'online'
Aaron Davis

A Roadblock as an Opportunity #DigitalPortfolios | The Principal of Change - 0 views

  • If we have never done this practice ourselves, “digital portfolios” become nothing more than digitized paper portfolios.
  • Digital portfolios are less of an endpoint and more of a beginning of what we can create for learning, but time is needed for support and play.
  • If it is truly “their portfolio”, then shouldn’t students be able to have ownership over the majority of the content and who has the ability to see it?
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  • Doing something from the viewpoint of the learner will dramatically change this process of digital portfolios in schools, and if we put ourselves in the place of our students, I wonder how much different this opportunity will look for our students if we are to jump in first.
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    Another great reflection from George Couros in his ongoing investigation of Digital Portfolios
Aaron Davis

Break Out of the Silo: Become a Connected Educator - Finding Common Ground - Education ... - 0 views

  • Technology is interesting. Some educators love to use it, and it seems to be an appendage that they can easily use throughout the day. Other educators are not as loving, and they hate the word "technology" and think social media is a waste of time. And then there are a group of educators somewhere in between. They have Smartphones, use their Smartboards from time to time, but they don't have a need to find the most current tools.  Those educators in the middle find the tools that work best for them and their students. They have a few "go-to" apps, and they find a balance between paper and computers.
  • I believe that we need to find a balance between using the tools we have always used that work (you decide what that is), and using new tools that involve social media and technology.
  • Teaching can be a very solitary profession. The adults walk into the classroom with students, they close the door, and spend their day going from lesson to lesson.
Aaron Davis

An Acronym Leading to Empowerment in Schools (CEE) | The Principal of Change - 0 views

  • Compliant, Engaged, and Empowered (CEE). Although I see the three as separate, with empowerment being the most crucial part of this process, they are not necessarily exclusive from one another.
  • Motivation is key to learning, and this table could be used easily in terms of leadership (I am planning to write about that in the near future), but in school, compliance should not be the standard that we are looking to achieve, and engagement is not enough.  A student that is empowered will know that they are valued and are more likely to be successful in so many areas.  That is the ultimate success.
  • Not college ready. Not career ready. COMMUNITY ready.
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    "Compliant, Engaged, and Empowered (CEE)."
Aaron Davis

Every Workshop I Attend Should….What Attendees Wish We Knew | Blogging Throug... - 0 views

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