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Sam Elphick

Teaching only to where the teacher feels comfortable… | Teaching and Learning... - 4 views

  • I wonder about whether we as teachers set the same goals for ourselves.  Do we want to push past our levels of comfort?  Do we want to be scaffolded (or go and find scaffolds for ourselves) to move to higher levels and better outcomes?  Do we want to feel challenged?  Are we willing to use ‘experts’ to support us through the Zone of Proximal Development from watching the expert, doing with the expert and finally becoming the expert?
  • When we relate these questions to using E-Learning and ICT applications in our curriculum development and teaching, we need to determine whether we are willing to use students as the experts to teach us?  Are we willing to be out of our comfort zone in front of our students, until we have tried and tried again to succeed?
  • s, finding ways to improve his/her skills, of practicing the new technology.  Wouldn’t it be beneficial for the students to see some of the struggles the teacher is having when learning something new, so the students could realize that learning is a slow process – even for teachers?
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  • I recently listened to an interview with a fourteen year old student as the guest speaker.  She claims that teachers only teach ICT to the level where the teachers feel comfortable, and then the teachers stop teaching ICT.  As young people today have skills well above the ICT skills of most of their teachers, they are effectively ‘undertaught’ by the teachers in terms of ICT skills. 
  • Whose level of comfort is important in our classrooms: The teachers’ comfort or the students’ comfort?  If teachers refuse to move past their own levels of comfort in front of their students, are we in fact robbing students of the opportunity to see that true learning, and the art of improving yourself, is a life-long task?
  • we finally succeeded at something we had to work really hard at…won’t it be great if we could move ourselves along this E-Learning journey with the support of our students?
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    A fantastic article worth reading that explores teacher vs student expertise in ICLT and it's implications with teaching an learning. The interview at the bottom is also worth a listen, it is an interview with Edith, a student in England speaking about ICLT in her learning. She recently spoke at a TeachMeet, and in the interview, explores many aspects of ICLT in the classroom, including wether ICLT should be treated as an integrated, or separate subject.
Sam Elphick

Student Blogging Guidelines | always learning - 6 views

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    Student Blogging Guidelines - What guidelines does your school have for students blogging and publishing work online? This article provides a good starting point with some guidelines and questions that students can ask themselves before they publish their blog/work online.
Alex W

Online annotations of student work - 6 views

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    A free website which allows for comprehensive online annotations of student work.
Dan Sherman

Online Summer Math Programs - proven to reverse summer learning loss - 3 views

Research shows that most students lose more than 2 months of math skills over the summer. TenMarks summer math programs for grades 3-high school are a great way to reverse the summer learning loss...

TenMarks Summer Math Programs Learning Loss Online Web 2.0 Interactive Slide Worksheet Structured Review Master Learn

started by Dan Sherman on 05 Jul 11 no follow-up yet
Mark Woolley

Google Sidewiki - 1 views

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    Great way to have students engage with any web content. Will work in Flock and Firefox. Very interesting, it turns every webpage into a wiki. A great study tool especially for secondary students.
Mark Woolley

Posterous - The place to post everything. Just email us. Dead simple blog by email. - 3 views

shared by Mark Woolley on 16 Mar 10 - Cached
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    The very easiest way to publish your students work. Email the work in (words documents, photos, movies, presentations almost anything) and posterous will add it to your blog.
Mark Woolley

St Benedict's Catholic College on Vimeo - 3 views

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    St Benedict's Catholic College Vimeo Channel showcases the best of St Benedict's Catholic College.A great way to showcase student work. (Now with a custom URL)
Alex W

Collaborative Storytelling - 5 views

shared by Alex W on 07 Sep 11 - Cached
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    Great tool to develop students working together to tell stories
Mark Woolley

Celestia - Space Simulation - Primary and Secondary - 5 views

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    "Welcome to Celestia ... The free space simulation that lets you explore our universe in three dimensions. Celestia runs on Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X. Unlike most planetarium software, Celestia doesn't confine you to the surface of the Earth. You can travel throughout the solar system, to any of over 100,000 stars, or even beyond the galaxy. "
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    Celestia is great - and it works in tandem with Stellarium - some more freeware - we started our students off with an examination of the Earth (Stellarium) and how it relates to the Solar System and then you can move on to Celestia - a chance to explore further out into space
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    http://www.stellarium.org/ check this out - we have both Stellarium and Celestia on the student image - "Stellarium is a free open source planetarium for your computer. It shows a realistic sky in 3D, just like what you see with the naked eye, binoculars or a telescope. It is being used in planetarium projectors. Just set your coordinates and go." both freeware
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    Awesome Nathan I didnt realise they worked so well together. Welcome to the group and thanks for your input.
Sam Elphick

10 movies every teacher should see together with students | The Teacher Chronicles - 9 views

  • A well produced movie can sometimes be enough to shake my world completely. It can change my perspectives on things I thought I was certain about. Here’s a list of 10 movies I think that every teacher, or every person working with people, should see (in no particular order).
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    How many of the movies in this list have you shared with a class? I haven't seen all of them yet, but it seems to be a pretty good list (geared toward high school classes) of movies worth watching with your classes...
Brad McAllister

Creating, Connecting, Critiquing - 5 views

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    great extension english blog used to mark and share student work
Dan Sherman

MATH PRACTICE AND LEARNING PROGRAM - FREE FOR TEACHERS - 0 views

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    Teachers choose their own curriculum (mapped to state standards), assign work to students, have it automatically graded immediately, review individual and class performance, and most importantly, take immediate action. TenMarks is super effective and real easy to use - it was designed with the help of math teachers across the country. What's more - it's FREE for the entire class!
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