Contents contributed and discussions participated by Amanda Bond
KLTV Shows Archives - KidLit.TV - 0 views
What are the best children's books of 2015? | Children's books | The Guardian - 0 views
How to Build Trust in Schools | Vicki Zakrzewski, Ph.D. - 0 views
http://www.teachthought.com/teaching/the-role-of-failure-in-learning-helping-students-f... - 0 views
How Children Learn: Portraits of Classrooms Around the World | Brain Pickings - 0 views
Passion and curiosity can't happen 'on demand'! or ‘What do the ‘shoulder ... - 1 views
ComPassion Based Learning: An Important Message About ComPassion-Based Learning - 0 views
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You are the tour guide on their voyage to learn! I have been on many tours and seen many tour guides. Some of them talked monotone and seemed bothered by my questions. Some seemed passive and sick of working. Some seemed so freakin' excited that I wanted to take the tour again right after it was done. Which type of tour guide are you willing to be. Your class is like a sports team. You are the coach. If you are bringing a lot of energy and enthusiasm to the table, you will most likely have a team with a lot of energy and enthusiasm. If you want students to be passionate and enthusiastic about learning......then you need to tie your shoes, and dive in. Be enthusiastic. Show them passion. Answer every question with a big smile and a follow-up question. Inspire every student to go a little bit further with their project and with their learning than they normally would have. Congratulate and complement them often. Choose one of your passions and investigate it with them. Tell other teachers, principals, custodians how proud you are of the students and there hard work and tell them to stop in and see it. Take pictures of them working and tell them you cannot wait to show the other teachers how involved they are.
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Looks like there is an element of risk of this "bombing" but the key is the teacher enthusiasm and investment of time, encouragement and ability to lead the student with good questions.
Could there actually be one "C" to rule them all?! | Connected Principals - 0 views
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Control in the sense of ownership, investment and engagement, degree of agency and autonomy. Control to exercise choice. Control to pursue curiosity.
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Not sure I agree with this but it is thought provoking. I come from a school that developed four areas for student learning - Knowing, connecting, relating and supporting. Everything in the school was communicated and discussed through these lenses. Students and staff talked about learning and teaching through these areas.
McREL Blog: The Devastating Power of Zero - 0 views
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Zero is defined as the figure or symbol which stands for the absence of quantity. In education, it also stands for the absence of hope. Students should be allowed to rework based on their teacher's good feedback, and, in the process, change the power of zero from an absence of hope to hope for meaningful improvement.
A Principal's Reflections: Initiating and Sustaining Change - 1 views
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The presentation itself focused on key elements, behaviors, strategies, and initiatives that aided our pursuit of meaningful change to benefit our learners and greater school community as a whole. Change does not have to be an illusive process that is frustrating and takes too long to come to fruition.
What Does It Mean To Disconnect? | The Thinking Stick - 1 views
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I have been pondering this question for some time now. What does it mean to disconnect? We all say we need to. We all believe it's healthy for us (any research out there?). What does it truly mean to disconnect. Jeff Utecht is the teacher for the GAFE course I have been taking - I like the issues he raises here. I feel more comfortable when I am connected I must confess. I did not enjoy being tethered to a network cable while working in my hotel room last weekend. The Internet was so slow I did not create or work on my course work, it simply took too long.
Fun in Failure? - 1 views
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