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Judy O'Connell

Understanding by Design White Paper 2012 - 1 views

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    The Understanding by Design® framework (UbD™ framework) offers a planning process and structure to guide curriculum, assessment, and instruction. Its two key ideas are contained in the title: 1) focus on teaching and assessing for understanding and learning transfer, and 2) design curriculum "backward" from those ends.
Cathy Oxley

Infographics as a creative assessment on Vimeo - Kathy Schrock - 1 views

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    This presentation explores the use of student-created infographics as an assessment of mastery of content knowledge. It also provides information on the 21st century literacies involved in the creation of an infographic.
Cathy Oxley

TRAILS: Tool for Real-time Assessment of Information Literacy Skills - 8 views

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    "TRAILS is a knowledge assessment with multiple-choice questions targeting a variety of information literacy skills based on 3rd, 6th, 9th, and 12th grade standards. This Web-based system was developed to provide an easily accessible and flexible tool for school librarians and teachers to identify strengths and weaknesses in the information-seeking skills of their students. There is no charge for using TRAILS."
Judy O'Connell

Classroom Guide: Top Ten Tips for Assessing Project-Based Learning | Edutopia - 0 views

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    "This classroom guide is intended to inspire and expand your thinking about effective assessment for project-based learning. The tips are organized to follow the arc of a project. First comes planning, then the launch into active learning, and then a culminating presentation. Reflection is the final stage"
Judy O'Connell

Learning In Burlington: BYOT and one-to-one initiatives are literacy initiatives - 0 views

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    "As a school leader who recently sold my community on the importance of moving to a one-to-one environment where every student has access to a web-based device, I believe strongly that our students will be more literate than students in other schools who do not have access to web-enabled devices. A look at the world outside of our schools and the technological resources being accessed in so many professions that allow people to work "smarter" is a clear indication of the track that our students need to be on in order to be able to function in the "real world." The biggest stumbling block in schools even if we can get the devices is the proficiency level of the adults in the building in utilizing the technology resources effectively. This is not meant to be an indictment of educators, but it is a critical question that we all have to look at, assess, and then move forward. Technological tools/resources can assist educators in some of our biggest undertakings (i.e. common core standards integration, teacher evaluation, providing relevant professional development, etc.). However, because so many educators in schools are not comfortable with the most modern literacy skills we are not able to make better progress."
Cathy Oxley

No More Eye Candy! Fontichiaro, Abilock, @ ISTE - Google Drive - 1 views

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    "Inspiring visual imagination, assessing visual creativity."
Jennie Bales

How to Use Information Fluency for Effective Online Research Strategies - 1 views

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    The Internet is a swelling ocean of information. Navigating through the steady flow of that information ocean can be hazardous. This is certainly true of a student who is not information fluent. The driving question is what are some smart online research strategies? Luckily this falls within the realm of the Essential Fluencies, namely Information Fluency. This involves the 5As process: Asking the right questions Acquiring the knowledge Analyzing the content for relevancy and credibility Applying the knowledge to our use Assessing the effectiveness of our message
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