This is a map of the wheel-ruts of modern English. Etymologies are not definitions; they're explanations of what our words meant and how they sounded 600 or 2,000 years ago.
"LEARNing Landscapes | Vol. 6, No. 2, Spring 2013
23
Michael Fullan
,
University of Toronto
ABSTRACT
There is currently a powerful push-pull factor in schooling. The push factor is that
school is increasingly boring for students and alienating for teachers. The pull fac
-
tor is that the exploding and alluring digital world is irresistible, but not necessarily
productive in its raw form. The push-pull dynamic makes it inevitable that disruptive
changes will occur. I have been part of a group that has been developing innova
-
tive responses to the current challenges. This response consists of integrating three
components: deep learning goals, new pedagogies, and technology. The result will
be more radical change in the next five years than has occurred in the past 50 years.
T
here is currently a volatile push-pull dynamic intensifying in public
schools. The push factor is that students are increasingly bored in school"
"Three Ring unlocks the power of your mobile phone or iPad. Now it's easy for teachers and students to document evidence from the classroom. Capture anything, regardless of format, in just seconds.
Take a picture of any paper, drawing, or board work.
Record presentations or discussions with audio or video.
Students can upload their own work from any mobile device or computer."
"BLCFeatureTopicIn this episode of the November Learning Podcast Series, Alan November speaks to Ian VanderSchee, an upper level mathematics teacher at Coppell High School, in Texas. The two discuss Ian's implementation of Alan's "First 5 Days" ideas at the start of this school year and how these ideas have positively impacted his students ever since.
To learn more about these and other possible "First 5 Days" implementations, we encourage you to read Alan's book, Who Owns the Learning, and we invite you to attend the Building Learning Communities conference being held this summer in Boston. You can learn about both of these on our Web site at http://www.novemberlearning.com. You might also share your thoughts and stories about the "First 5 Days" on Twitter, using the hashtag #1st5days."
leveled reading resources about current events
Check http://t.co/Bbw8ciB44h to search current events AND Ss select own lexile levels w/quizzes for FREE. #ELAchat #sschat #r4november
"Mini challenges are a great alternative to open exploration or direct instruction. They can be a form of guided discovery. We recommend starting with easier (easier to find, more intuitive, etc.) challenges and building up. Ideally these challenges are completed in pairs or small groups so that there is additional support and an immediate opportunity to "teach." A favorite final challenge is for the student(s) to come up with a challenge for the other pairs/groups or to prepare a "discovery" to share with the whole class using an LCD projector."
Advice, evaluation, grades-none of these provide the descriptive information that students need to reach their goals. What is true feedback-and how can it improve learning?
Who would dispute the idea that feedback is a good thing? Both common sense and research make it clear: Formative assessment, consisting of lots of feedback and opportunities to use that feedback, enhances performance and achievement.
Yet even John Hattie (2008), whose decades of research revealed that feedback was among the most powerful influences on achievement, acknowledges that he has "struggled to understand the concept" (p. 173). And many writings on the subject don't even attempt to define the term. To improve formative assessment practices among both teachers and assessment designers, we need to look more closely at just what feedback is-and isn't.
An interview with James McPherson, Civil War historian, and the author of the Pulitizer Prize winning book, "Battle Cry of Freedom," discusses the origins of the Civil War, the connection of the Mexican War with the Civil War, and the legacy of the Civil War.