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Jason Finley

5 Reasons Why Our Students Are Writing Blogs and Creating ePortfolios | Powerful Learni... - 5 views

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    "Here are 5 reasons why we are making student blogging and portfolio development a high priority."1. Positive digital footprints2. Communicating with digital tools3. Transparency for parents and family4. New ways of thinking about Web tools5. Effective digital citizenship++Their world view is changing
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    It would be interesting to see a group of teachers collaborate over the course of a semester in having each of their students create their own blog. This collaboration wouldn't require common planning / interdisciplinary assignments, but having a common theme to connect the content would make sense.
Ellen Berrings

Learning From Teaching Blog - 2 views

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    Sponsored by the Great Schools Partnership This blog has posting valuable to all educators in considering their practice. Samples of posts include: Brain Research, Differentiation, Collaborative Group Work and Student Feedback
Jason Finley

Learning should be like… - 1 views

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    "I read a blog post found in my Reader feed, which leads me to a link on YouTube, that leads me to a quote, which leads me to the person who stated the quote, to find a link on their Twitter profile, only to find another article on something that I would have never found myself. ...That is how learning should be; continuous, connected, and meaningful." 
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    Great video at end of article!
Jason Finley

Seth's Blog: What does your brand stand for? - 6 views

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    "A brand that stands for what all brands stand for stands for nothing much." At the first RF conference Peter McConville and Tom Sabo ran a really interesting activity where we looked at schools' mission statements from across Vermont. As a part of this activity they asked if individuals could recall their own. Not many (if any) could. It is too bad really. Coming from a corporate background myself, I understand the power of an organization having a common and driving statement of intent. To me what was striking, and unfortunate, was that it wouldn't be at all challenging to get fairly close if you just said something about students who strive to become life-long learners who are global citizens that give back to their community. Maybe it is just me, but I think that a mission statement should be as unique as the schools, communities, and individuals that are striving to fulfill that mission. It should be a mantra, a way to identify what is truly important to your school, a means of sharing your school's common sense of purpose, to communicate your school's common sense of direction to fulfill that purpose. My sense is that a mission statement should be the keystone for the very unique work that we do in our schools, it should be more akin to Dan Pink's My Sentence. But, read though most and you'll find that they seem interchangeable and ambiguous. I think that it may be better to not have one at all if it doesn't really share the message of what your individual school is about and what it specifically strives to be. Does your school's mission statement really share your school's mission?
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    Jason, I think this is a good topic for schools to consider. Having a memorable mission statement and core values is central to NEASC expectations. I appreciate that about their process. Dan Pink continues to offer good crossovers between schools and business. I hope I can find some good workshops or conferences with some of his work and the work of Eric Jensen this next year.
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    Jason Thanks for posting this. Question - how do I copy this post over to another Diigo group I am working with? Jim
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    Mission statements are pretty generic... NEASC is moving away from asking schools for mission statements but instead for statements of core values and beliefs about learning in the hope of getting more school specific statements.
Jen Kravitz

Mr. Gillespie's Office: Redos and Retakes - 1 views

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    This blog post provides clear response to a few common complaints about allowing students to redo or retake an assessment on which they did not do well. 
Jason Finley

What the U.S. can't learn from Finland | Pasi Sahlberg Blog - 2 views

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    Interesting read.  Again, we need to question and challenge everything...especially those things we Most believe in.
Jason Finley

The Importance of Video in Professional Development - 3 views

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    "Generally teachers don't like traditional observations and they don't often result in significant improvements. Video transforms lesson observations, turning them on their head."
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    "Seeing what others see facilitates meaningful conversations surrounding practice and leads to more significant improvements back in the classroom. This all allows mentoring and coaching relationships to become far more productive..."
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    "...the most important thing about using video for CPD purposes is to get away from the idea of video as a management tool, and embrace it as something that you as an individual teacher can have control of."
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    "The idea is for teachers to start by self-reflecting, and once you are confident in doing so you can share videos with colleagues and develop coaching and mentoring relationships which are more productive and genuinely result in classroom based improvements."
Adam Rosenberg

Flipped & PBL - 4 views

I don't know of any; I would also like to see it in action.

blended instruction good teaching

Jason Finley

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2013/05/22/what-has-changed-is-that... - 10 views

'It is harder for us to be nice to kids' - departing veteran principal

good teaching

Rowland Foundation

Blog: Building Perseverance into School Culture - 1 views

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    Mike McRaith's blog summary of Angela's Psychology of Achievement Presentation
Jason Finley

The No. 1 Enemy of Creativity: Fear of Failure - 7 views

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    If we really want to "transform" education we need to stop worrying about if the initiative is going to succeed or fail. Because, as I've said before...there are no failures...only first attempts.I know I post quite a bit...this article, however, has more to teach than most.
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    ...why the hell I had never learned the basic methods for thinking like a designer (especially in a world where the leading company, Apple, has a culture built around design methods).
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    "...the most important insight from design thinking was that you have to make sure you've defined the right problem before you try to solve it. So, you act like an anthropologist to understand human needs and problems before jumping to solutions."
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    "...this shift in mindset requires a different kind of leadership. ... linear analysis for planning and executing when the decision-making information is known, and a discovery mindset when they must use small bets to create the data."
Jason Finley

Nine Things Successful People Do Differently - Heidi Grant Halvorson - Harvard Business... - 6 views

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    "It turns out that even brilliant, highly accomplished people are pretty lousy when it comes to understanding why they succeed or fail." Great piece to consider as we engage in our work as fellows.
Jason Finley

13 High Schools Worth Visiting - Vander Ark on Innovation - Education Week - 6 views

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    13 schools categorized by area of focus / innovation.
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    It would be a great resource for the Vermont ed community to put together a categorized list of schools such as this. Sometimes the most innovative practices are happening right down the road. (And, sometimes right down the hall)
Jason Finley

Some Thoughts on Disciplining Educational Innovation - 4 views

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    Really a great post by Vermont Superintendent Dan French. In this he talks about educators from across districts and beyond "utilizing the collective wisdom of their peers." He sees a potential providing an opportunity for educators where "Curriculum development and professional development are 'open sourced' with best practices being identified, implemented, and evaluated much more quickly across a group of schools since teachers are no longer working in isolation within their own schools or districts." I can't imagine that there isn't a person among us that wouldn't agree with the concepts he puts forward here. I think we as a group already have the pieces in place to implement what he proposes. If we were to come together as a true PLC I think that we could not only greatly help with transformation in our individual schools, but could have a profound and powerful impact on education across Vermont.
Jason Finley

Daniel M. French : Vermont Needs A World Class Public Education System - 2 views

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    "Lately, there has been more discussion over what is meant by a world class education system. Last week the US Department of Education put out its white paper on international education strategy entitled, Succeeding Globally Through International Education and Engagement, and in 2012 several books on the topic were published. ... I thought I would synthesize the key concepts of these books in order to formulate policy design principles for Vermont as we begin to think about transforming our current educational system into a world class system."
Jason Finley

Bring Nomadic Employees Back to the Mothership - Philip Tidd - Harvard Business Review - 2 views

  • By 2015, 1.3 billion people worldwide will be working remotely. That's almost 40% of the entire global workforce.
  • the power of physical place. A good workplace bonds employees to one another in ways that virtual communication cannot replicate.
  • An evolving need for collaborative and private space. The open-plan office promised increased collaboration, economies of space, and cost savings. What it's delivered is a dilemma: visually exciting offices with lots of buzz on the one hand, and on the other, a lack of privacy and quiet.
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  • To function well, an office must provide a healthy mix of spaces — quiet, collaborative, and social.
  • one of the key roles of the new generation of modern executive is to create a more emotionally open, collaborative working environment, then we should be designing physical space that supports that mandate.
  • Generation whY in the workplace.
  • embracing self-customized office space which employees can furnish as they like.
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    Article that makes me question how schools and classrooms are physically designed. This is a direct reflection of how we do what we do. Would you try to play tennis on a beach volleyball court? If we really are going to change the sport we need to change the venue too.
Jason Finley

A Year at Mission Hill Wrap: Chapters 2 and 3 - 0 views

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    "Charting a new path forward in education by sharing positive stories of change, providing perspective on key issues, and giving you the news and analysis you need to take action."
Jason Finley

Teaching Adolescents to Become Learners: The Role of Noncognitive Factors in Shaping Sc... - 3 views

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    "...summarizes the research on five categories of noncognitive factors that are related to academic performance: academic behaviors, academic perseverance, academic mindsets, learning strategies, and social skills..."
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    Publication Summary Page of CCSR Report http://ccsr.uchicago.edu/publications/teaching-adolescents-become-learners-role-noncognitive-factors-shaping-school Great related blog post on Grit by Jonathan Martin "Developing Grit via Mindset and Learning Strategies: Learning from the CCSR report" http://21k12blog.net/2013/05/19/developing-grit-via-mindset-and-learning-strategies-learning-from-the-ccsr-report/
Peter McConville

(Extra)Ordinary People - Of, By, For: In Search of the Civic Mission of K-12 Schools - ... - 3 views

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    Sam Chaltain provides commentary on the final installment of the Year At Mission School series focusing on the Boston elementary and middle school founded by Deborah Meier. Video is embedded. Spend the time to watch all 10 installments (most are around 5 minutes - this one is 10).   
Jill Prado

Who Studies Abroad, Who Stays Put and Why - 2 views

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    Many American students may say that they would like to go overseas. But according to the Institute of International Education, only 1 percent of U.S. students study abroad during any academic year.
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    Really interesting Jill. Thanks!
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