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Contents contributed and discussions participated by J.Randolph Radney

J.Randolph Radney

The Necessity & Promise of Online Learning | Powerful Learning Practice - 3 views

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    This supports the notion of blended learning.
J.Randolph Radney

Google for Teachers II - 5 views

shared by J.Randolph Radney on 13 May 11 - Cached
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    Byrne has several resources for teachers who want to use Web 2.0 tools in their courses.
J.Randolph Radney

#iMoot - Moodle Course Creator Challenge - The Rubric - Cat's Pyjamas - 2 views

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    A rubric to evaluate course design
J.Randolph Radney

TED-ED - TED-ED Front Page - 0 views

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    The idea of an educational collection of TED quality would seem to be a helpful resource for us all.
J.Randolph Radney

Apps in Education - 4 views

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    I have acquired an iPad 2 to see how this device may be used in the university classroom to enhance education in writing courses I teach. This blog seems to be a clearing house for applications on iPad in education.
J.Randolph Radney

TeachPaperless: 10 Ways to Help Students Ask Better Questions - 10 views

  • The points students bring up are thought-provoking. However, I'm most impressed by the questions they ask one another. They clarify and ask follow-up questions. They make inferences. They ask connecting questions and critical thinking questions. It's a messy process, but it's beautiful messy. It's art.
  • As long as a question is respectful, I want students to question their world. This applies to analyzing mathematical processes, thinking through social issues, making sense out of a text or analyzing the natural world for cause and effect.
  • Three times a week, we do inquiry days, where students begin with their own question in either social studies or science and they research it, summarize it and then ask further questions. While my initial goal involved teaching bias, loaded language and summarization, I soon realized that students were growing the most in their ability to ask critical thinking questions.
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  • I require students to ask questions before, during and after reading.
  • Sometimes I'll ask a really lame question and then say, "Someone tell my why that question sucked?" or I'll ask a deeper question and say, "Why was that a hard question to answer?" The goal is to get them to see deeper questions and to also think about why a question is deep or shallow.
  • Feedback on questions: I highlight their questions in Google Docs and leave comments on their blogs with very specific feedback.
  • Some students have a really hard time with questioning strategies.
  • I teach students about inquiry, clarifying, critical thinking and inference questioning.
  • Students sometimes ask me questions. Other times they ask partners or small group questions. Still other times they ask the questions to the whole class.
  • Technology allows students to take their time in crafting a question while having access to the questions of their peers.
J.Randolph Radney

Free Social Teaching and Learning Network focused solely on education - 5 views

  • Teach what you know. learn what you don't. Join Sophia, a free social learning community focused solely on education.
J.Randolph Radney

Change Stories - 3 views

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    Use your voice to document change.
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