Skip to main content

Home/ PLN Summer 2011/ Group items tagged technology

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Kim Vint

Gifted Education in the 21st Century « Advocacy & Consulting for Education, Inc. - 0 views

  • Technology has completely changed the way that we communicate and interact, the way that we learn and use information. However, our educational system still has not reflected this fundamental change, and remains reliant on what Renzulli calls “to-be-presented knowledge,” with teachers and textbooks as the gatekeepers of this knowledge. However, this doesn’t reflect how our society and our information structures work today. Renzulli argues that our educational system needs to adapt to the skills and technology that we have developed as a society in order to prepare our students for 21st-century jobs and for rebuilding America’s reputation as a birthplace for creativity, leadership, innovation, and development of new technologies. This can be done through using technology to improve the way that we deliver education, as well as what we are teaching students, and improving students’ engagement in the educational process.
    • Kim Vint
       
      We, as teachers, need to be aware of the technology that our students are using outside of school.
Kim Vint

Education Week: Schools Use Digital Tools to Customize Education - 0 views

  • In today’s digital marketplace, students of all ages can create experiences tailored just for them. When a teenager searches for movies to watch, an online film site can provide suggestions based on past viewing history. Music lovers can create personalized playlists for everything from a workout in the gym to a study session. And when children play video games, they can choose a variety paths—based on their interests and skill levels—toward slaying a dragon or defeating an enemy. Then many of these same students walk into their classrooms and sit at their desks to absorb one-size-fits-all lessons or, if they’re lucky, instruction aimed at the high-, mid-, or low-level learner. And in many cases, there is little, if any, technology integrated into those lessons.
    • Kim Vint
       
      I totally agree that we're fighting a losing battle if we don't allow children to use technology in schools to complete their assignments.
Kim Vint

Google Reader (572) - 0 views

shared by Kim Vint on 07 Jul 11 - No Cached
  • Title: What's New? What's Good: Exploring Digital WritingDescription: Folks often speak of engagement when they talk about writing in online spaces. But is the "writing" that's occuring in these new spaces any good? Is it worth doing? Is it better than what came before? In this session, we'll discuss where and how you're writing in digital spaces, and we'll take a look at some resources created by the National Writing Project to explore what digital writing is, or isn't.Presenter: Bud HuntEmail & Other Links: budtheteacher@gmail.com NWP's Digital IS
    • Kim Vint
       
      I enjoyed this article! Many of our students will write digitally in the future. We'd better be ready!
  • Trying to prepare students for their future without interactive Web 2.0 technologies in school would be like trying to teach a child to swim without a swimming pool. However, it is exceptionally important for schools to carefully consider what technologies they will embrace.
    • Kim Vint
       
      Good analogy!
Allysen Lovstuen

Steve Evraire Daily Education News - 0 views

  •  
    Daily Education News
anonymous

Kathy Schrock's Guide for Educators - Home Page - Kathy Schrock's Guide for Educators - 0 views

  •  
    Kathy Schrock's Guide for Educators offers teacher resources, including categorized lists of sites that are useful for enhancing curriculum and professional growth.
1 - 8 of 8
Showing 20 items per page