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Diagnostic, Formative & Summative Assessments - What's the difference? - 0 views

  • This post will attempt to give a very brief overview of diagnostic, formative, and summative assessments, how they can be used to inform instruction and how to implement them in the classroom.
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Blooming Orange: Bloom's Taxonomy Helpful Verbs Poster - 0 views

  • how you can apply Bloom's higher-order thinking skills in your classroom. This poster shows the segments of an orange with each segment relating to a thinking skill and some helpful verbs to serve as prompts.
  • For those of you who prefer it, we've also created a grayscale version of the poster. And if for some reason you're against "oranges" and prefer lists, you can just download the Blooming Verb List. You should be able to glue the template onto a 3" x 5" index card or colored card stock, making it easy to carry around.
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Bloom's Taxonomy Poster for Elementary Teachers - 0 views

  • For decades, Bloom's Taxonomy has helped teachers plan lessons and design instruction. When Benjamin Bloom and a team of educators first conceived the classification in the late 1940's, they probably never imagined the impact their work would have over 50 years later. While other theories and systems have come and gone, Bloom's taxonomy appears to have become the most commonly used standard in many educational settings. In the 1990's, Lorin Anderson and a group of psychologists updated the taxonomy in the hope that it would have more relevance for 21st century students and teachers, transforming the nouns to verbs and making some other seemingly small but significant changes. An interesting account of the history of Bloom's Taxonomy can be found here. The Blooming Butterfly poster was designed by the Learning Today product development team as a tribute to Bloom and Anderson and to the educators all over the world that continue to implement their vision. We hope that it will serve as a visual reminder for teachers as they continue to guide students to become better thinkers, just as Bloom imagined many years ago!
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Prezi - The Zooming Presentation Editor - 0 views

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    Create astonishing presentations live and on the web
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Let's Get Quizzical! - Quiz Makers for Teachers! - 0 views

  • There are so many different types of quizzes that you can give. From multiple choices, essays and extended responses, there are so many examples. Here are a few quiz makers that will easily let you put your students’ knowledge to the test!
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"Like a bird let loose" - girls' education in Afghanistan | Women's Views on News - 0 views

  • This is Meena. She’s 17 years old. She’s a student in Balkh province in northern Afghanistan. Meena is also one of the 687 Afghan students interviewed for Oxfam’s new report, High Stakes: Girls’ Education in Afghanistan, published today. Since the fall of the Taliban, girls’ enrolment in education has increased from an estimated 5,000 under the Taliban, to a current total of 2.4 million girls. Obviously, this is a significant gain, but there’s still a long way to go.
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Ready Classroom offers free K-8 resources teaching emergency preparedness for teachers,... - 0 views

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    Learn about severe weather that could hit a US area and how to prepare for it.
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Einztein - Find free online university courses - 0 views

  • Connect your favorite courses to relevant learning resources. Exchange knowledge and information with other members whose academic interests match yours. Join peers and professors in exploring the newest academic frontier: free online courses.
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Teacher Toolbox | Free Resources - 0 views

  • We developed these free resources to provide teachers with high-quality resources online, so you can spend less time searching and more time doing what you do best -- helping your students! Let us know what else you would like to see here.
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Richard Byrne's Favorite Tech Resources for Teachers - 0 views

  • Why aren't the lesson plans that used to work so well, not working now? 
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Why America's teachers are enraged - CNN - 0 views

  • Thousands of teachers, nurses, firefighters and other public sector workers have camped out at the Wisconsin Capitol, protesting Republican Gov. Scott Walker's efforts to reduce their take-home pay -- by increasing their contribution to their pension plans and health care benefits -- and restrict their collective bargaining rights.
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UniLeaks - 0 views

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    Keeping education honest
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Now There's a WikiLeaks for Colleges - Education - GOOD - 0 views

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    According to the site's "Who We Are" section, they'll accept anonymously submitted "restricted or censored material of political, ethical, diplomatic or historical significance which is in some way connected to higher education, an agency or government body working in partnership with an institution, e.g., a university." That means they want those private emails between professors, copies of shady contracts, secret research, and internal memos. Whistle-blowers can upload their documents through an encryption-free electronic drop box. The site's journalists then turn them into news stories.
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How I Was Able to Ace Exams Without Studying | zen habits - 0 views

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    In high school, I rarely studied. Despite that, I graduated second in my class. In university, I generally studied less than an hour or two before major exams. However, over four years, my GPA always sat between an A and an A+. Recently I had to write a law exam worth 100% of my final grade. Unfortunately, I was out of the country and didn't get back by plane until late Sunday night. I had to write the test at 9 am Monday morning. I got an A after just one hour of review on the plane. The fact is most of my feats are relatively mundane. I've had a chance to meet polyglots who speak 8 languages, people who have mastered triple course loads and students who went from C or B averages to straight A+ grades while studying less than before.
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The Goal of Learning Everything « Scott H Young - 0 views

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    Recently, I wrote about my goal of learning everything. This is more than a tad ambitious, and probably impossible. Even learning a small fraction of everything can have huge benefits that ripple outwards towards every other area of life. Unfortunately, most people fall into a group I'll call "functional" learners, and severely cut off their potential.
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2011 Directory of Learning Tools - 0 views

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    Over 2,000 tools for learning/working in education and the workplace, conveniently compiled in the 2011 Learning Tools Directory. If you want to recommend any tool/s, just add them in the Comments of the relevant page/s and they'll be added in by the site admin.
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20 Top Learning, Technology & Media Links: Weekly Digest - 13 | Upside Learning Blog - 0 views

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    As people increasingly embrace social media and new technologies with open arms, social learning, informal learning and blended learning continue to gain a strong foothold in an organization's learning palette. We have scouted the Internet to help you know how. And, how could we possibly end this post without mentioning the iPad? Besides the latest scoop, news and stories, you can also find tips, tricks and tutorials to help you get the most out of this 9.7" wonder. Find it all here in our Weekly Digest - a collection of our top 20 links from the week gone by, each accompanied by a quick brief.
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Global Girl Power: To Fight Poverty, Invest in Girls - TIME - 0 views

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    Girls who stay in school for seven or more years typically marry four years later and have two fewer children than girls who drop out. Fewer dependents per worker allows for greater economic growth. And the World Food Programme has found that when girls and women earn income, they reinvest 90% of it in their families. They buy books, medicine, bed nets. For men, that figure is more like 30% to 40%. "Investment in girls' education may well be the highest-return investment available in the developing world," Larry Summers wrote when he was chief economist at the World Bank. Of such cycles are real revolutions born.
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Ruby Bridges: Forty years ago her first day of school made history - 0 views

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    Forty years that brought incredible change in our country, forged in the crucible of the civil rights movement and the battle to end segregation. Forty years that changed me as well. I was born in Mississippi in 1954, the oldest child of Abon and Lucille Bridges. That year the United States handed down its landmark decision ordering the integration of public schools. Not that I knew anything about school at the time. What I knew and loved was growing up on the farm my paternal grandparents sharecropped. It was a very hard life, though. My parents heard there were better opportunities in the city. We moved to New Orleans, where my father found work as a service station attendant, and my mother took night jobs to help support our growing family.
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