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David Goodrich

Knerds on the Board: Personalizing History Class | Knewton Blog - 2 views

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    This is a video talking about a history teacher's attempt to tackle differentiation through his work now at Knewton. It reminded me so much of our recent Willingham talks Peter started with us about kids who gravitate toward either experience (like Logan) and those who gravitate to content knowledge. It also reminded me of what we are doing with MyBlend except from a content creation focus.
David Goodrich

SoundCloud - Hear the world's sounds - 0 views

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    Multiple-Modalities, student anxiety for learners not prepared to have choices, competency-based learning is unique for each institutions based on research, allows for more 1-1 teacher support for students, some faculty provide more of an adviser role while others thrive as SMEs on the screens, place & time, good & bad days, agility of personalized learning, expectations of students for prompt responses proves to be a continual problem, teachers/institutions don't know where to start in all cases - advice is for IT infrastructure to be carefully planned out to align with student services side of an institution... start with a course or a degree program that lends itself well to a competency-based approach, start small, work with a team of others from other departments,
David Goodrich

Five Key Lessons for Blended Learning Teachers | Edgenuity Blog - 0 views

  • Set high expectations.
  • 2. Use data to inform instructional decisions.
  • 3. Purposefully plan off-line instruction.
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  • 4. Regularly check for understanding.
  • 5. Provide positive feedback and celebrate student success.
David Goodrich

No Confusion with InfuseLearning - Getting Smart by John Hardison - #blendchat, Blended... - 0 views

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    I have been planning to do an #EdTech review on Socrative and Infuse Learning as they are fantastic tools for getting a healthy pulse of a blended classroom, a checking on prior knowledge, an exit slip, a checking for understanding or even for creating a formative and collaborative quizzing environment for learning. Think clickers on steroids really, but without having to purchase and distribute a uni-function device. The interfaces will allow any web connected device for more in depth responses from the learner that goes beyond multiple choice functionality. In fact, Infuse Learning even goes as far as allowing students to respond to a prompt in real time by drawing a picture and the submissions all get aggregated on the teacher screen so that the class can see everyone's drawings in one main view. Brilliant. I see that @JohnHardison1 beat me to the punch not long ago in promoting the use of these tools. In fact, he even has included chunked video screencast tutorials from his YouTube account embedded right in the post so that you can experience a demonstration about Infuse Learning options from the teacher and student perspective. Nicely done John! I hope our MyBlend community can check this out and benefit from learning about the power of these tools.
David Goodrich

A Bunch of B.S.: The Antidote for #EdTech Negativity - Getting Smart by John Hardison -... - 0 views

  • keeping up with educational technology seems to be an insurmountable task at times but one worthy of all educators’ best efforts.
  • Jodie Morgenson said the most common, unfounded complaint she hears is, “It (#edtech) makes my job harder.” Perhaps Jodie’s following tweet serves as the perfect rebuttal: “The only way this would be true is if you hated learning.” Right on, Jodie.
  • When I asked him if “operator error” was the common denominator, he replied, “Many times that is the case. Many blame training, but today’s tools allow one to learn just about anything.”
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  • “If you really want to do something, you’ll find a way. If you don’t, you’ll find an excuse.” -Jim Rohn “To hell with circumstances; I create opportunities.” -Bruce Lee
  • the constant evolution of this educational technology seems to have increased some educators’ anxiety and negativity.
  • It was his third bit of advice, one that was also forever engrained in me through two amazing parents, that I have pledged to honor all my life. My professor said, “John, it really is this simple: you can be positive…or you can be negative. You know what each energy earns you. It’s your choice.”
David Goodrich

Sal Kahn Keynote at the Hoover Institution's Symposium on Blended Learning in... - 0 views

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    "Sal Khan, the founder of the Khan Academy, recently delivered the keynote address at the Hoover Institution's Symposium on Blended Learning in K-12 Education. In this keynote, he describes his vision for "education reimagined.""
David Goodrich

Flipping the Elementary Classroom - jonbergmann.com - 0 views

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    In this short post, Jon ____ gives some good thoughts to consider for the elementary teacher regarding considering the value of creating a video for a lesson or not, and what things to keep in mind if such an intervention might be called for.
David Goodrich

Blending Alone: How to Blend in a Non-Blended Environment - Getting Smart by Guest Auth... - 1 views

  • Instead of a course syllabus or description, I’ve found it more useful to give students a “roadmap for success”.
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    I appreciate the focus on preparing students, parents, and teachers for the "shift" that happens when customizing and personalizing instruction. This article focuses on the ground-work that needs to be laid to transition parent and student mentality from a traditional to blended environment.
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    Solid post. I Digg it. Would love to solicit guest posts very much like this with Michigan faculty. I think his words about giving "a) some examples of research that supports blended learning and b) have some concrete samples of the different types of work that students will produce and c) demonstrate what assessment will look like. If you cover these three components, then my experience is that parents are thrilled about the change." could also ring true for MyBlend PD.
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    "Instead of a course syllabus or description, I've found it more useful to give students a "roadmap for success".  Here is an example from my middle school Geography class.  The idea is that all learning options are clearly laid out and routes for success are made clear.  It is well worth spending a class or two clarifying what the journey will look like in a blended learning environment and I've found that this reframes the experience for students in a way that they understand.  It also lays the groundwork for the one-on-one conversations you will have with students moving forward.  You will want to delineate the different segments of the class, discuss possible timeframes for moving through the challenges and what the options are for demonstrating mastery at each stage.  In this particular roadmap, some items are bold because they will be done by all students.  Other components are framed by a dotted line meaning that only some students will be eligible for those challenges based on their progress at specific stages.  You will want to make the roadmap as clear as possible so students are able to understand the journey to the point where they develop a sense of agency around their work. "
jjgerlach

Do Grades As Incentives Work? | Psychology Today - 0 views

  • One danger is that grade-focused teaching corrodes the very meaning of learning. The purpose of learning becomes merely the achievement of grades. Not the mastery of the material. Not finding innovative and imaginative solutions to tough problems. Not joining with fellow students to run with an idea and see how much each can learn from the others. It becomes instead what former Harvard dean Harry Lewis calls "an empty game of score maximization." It makes the work seem pointless.
  • A student out to maximize her grade point average is tempted to choose the easiest courses, those with the least challenge and work, or those with the "easy-grader" professors.
  • The students in the bottom half of the class--students whose learning we want to encourage--know that the odds of high grades and high rankings are stacked against them. If we corrupt students' souls by convincing them that the main motive for learning are high grades and honors, we end up de-motivating, and de-moralizing, those students who have little chance for the top rankings.
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  • Students have grown up in a system that has taught them to work for grades. Most teachers are still using grades to incentivize students. The university's culture, ranking system, and credentialing depends on grades. This all creates extraordinary pressure on students. Even if they are ones who already know they thrive on their excitement and passion about the material and the skill and enthusiasm of a good teacher, when the time crunch comes, the pressure to put the time into the graded class is difficult to resist.
David Goodrich

Flipped Classrooms and the Mastery Approach to Learning - YouTube - 0 views

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    "Aaron Sams and Jon Bergman from Woodland Park, CO have flipped their classrooms on their head. Now, kids watch lectures at home and come to class to do more experiments and interact with the teachers. They've also implemented a Moodle testing solution to verify that the kids have mastered each topic before they can move onto the next. " This is a nice highlight of Jonathan Bergman by our friends over at TechSmith. Here, Mr. Bergman shares a bit of his rationale for moving toward a mastery model in his Chemistry course and how it has allowed for differentiation which is a topic of importance with MyBlend partners.
David Goodrich

The Flipped Class: Myths vs. Reality - THE DAILY RIFF - Be Smarter. About Education. - 0 views

  • It is called the flipped class because what used to be classwork (the "lecture" is done at home via teacher-created videos and what used to be homework (assigned problems) is now done in class.But from our perspective, as successful flipped teachers, we believe it is so much more.
  • The Flipped Classroom is NOT:A synonym for online videos. When most people hear about the flipped class all they think about are the videos.  It is the the interaction and the meaningful learning activities that occur during the face-to-face time that is most important.About replacing teachers with videos.An online course. Students working without structure.Students spending the entire class staring at a computer screen.Students working in isolation. 
  • The Flipped Classroom IS:A means to INCREASE interaction and personalized contact time between students and teachers.An environment where students take responsibility for their own learning.  A classroom where the teacher is not the "sage on the stage", but the "guide on the side".A blending of direct instruction with constructivist learning.A classroom where students who are absent due to illness or extra-curricular activities such as athletics or field-trips, don't get left behind.A class where content is permanently archived  for review or remediation.A class where all students are engaged in their learning.A place where all students can get a personalized education.
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  • Jon Bergmann is one of the first teachers to flip his classroom and has recently co-authored a book on the the Flipped Class which is to be published by ISTE press.  He is the Lead Technology Facilitator at the Joseph Sears School in Kenilworth, Illinois.
  • Jerry Overmyer has teaching experience in secondary and college mathematics. He is the coordinator for MAST WebConnect, and provides expertise on quality resources for teachers and students in mathematics and science. He is the creator of the Flipped Class Network.
  • Brett Wilie is a secondary science teacher from the Dallas, Texas area. Brett has been an educator for 13 years and has been a Science Department Chair for the past 5 years. He has recently been nominated to the "20 Educators to Watch Project" and was recently a presenter at the Flipped Class Conference.
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    "There has been a lot of interest in the flipped classroom."
David Goodrich

Are You Ready to Flip? - THE DAILY RIFF - Be Smarter. About Education. - 0 views

  • begin creating (or collecting) quality learning resources.  These collections will look different depending on the teacher and class.  It is important that these be accessible outside the classroom and be available whatever-whenever-wherever (WWW), so students can have ownership of the pace of their learning, and review as needed. 
  • Resources created by those outside the classroom may also be used but should be reviewed carefully to assure they meet the learning objectives.
  • Many teachers struggle with the "extra" class time that is created by removing direct instruction from the classroom, and do not know exactly what to do with their students.  These in-class "activities" (for lack of a better term) must: 1)  help support the student understanding of the stated learning objectives, 2)  be designed to help students process what they have learned and place the learning into the context of the world in which they live, 3)  be engaging to the students, yet flexible enough to allow students the ability to process and produce in a way that is meaningful to them.  Possible in-class work could include:student created contentindependent problem solvinginquiry-based activitiesProject Based Learning
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  • not all material is suitable to be taught through a video lesson.
  • We should never use a tool (in this case a video) just for the sake of using the tool; we should use the tool because it is the right tool for a particular job.
  • If you have some of the following goals or priorities for your class, then flipping might be a good option:Interactive questioningContent and idea explorationStudent content creationStudent voice and choiceEffective differentiation in instructional strategiesCollaboration with other professionals with the same goals
  • Dan Spencer is currently the educational technology consultant for the Jackson County (MI) Intermediate School District.  Before that he taught at Michigan Center High School (MI) and American Fork Junior High (UT).  He has actively used the Flipped-Mastery model along with iPod Touches for the past three years in his chemistry classes.
  • Deb Wolf is a science teacher and instructional coach in Sioux Falls, SD.  She has been teaching for 23 years.  She first flipped her class in 2008 in both chemistry and AP chemistry.  This past year Deb coordinated a federal grant, "Teaching Smarter in the 21st Century" the focus of which was to train 40 middle school and high school math and science teachers in the flipped-mastery model and 21st century skills and tools.
  • Aaron Sams is the co-creator of the flipped class model and the co-author of the book on the flipped class.  He has been an educator for 12 years. He currently teaches science at Woodland Park High School in Woodland Park, Colorado. He was awarded the 2009 Presidential Award for Excellence for Math and Science Teaching. Aaron recently served as co-chair of the Colorado State Science Standards Revision Committee.
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    "Begin with the end in mind.  "
David Goodrich

Office of Instructional Consulting: IU School of Education - 0 views

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    via PocketOffice of Instructional Consulting: IU School of Education April 28, 2012 at 03:41AM @jgh @brainysmurf FYI these Bonk 10-min videos run fine on iPad (site says Firefox, IE...yuck) http://t.co/SW5ViZnm #bonkopen #bonkland via PocketOffice of Instructional Consulting: IU School of Education May 16, 2012 at 05:47PM
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