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Jen Kravitz

If I Don't Grade It, The Students Won't Do It! - 3 views

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    The experience of a middle school teacher moving away from grading towards comments and her finding that this creates a better environment for all... and more work is being done
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    Thanks for posting! I have heard this statement come out of more than one teacher's mouth. It will take time, but if we can create common language around proficiency based standards and learning and be consistent in its use, kids will catch on. My hope is that more and more of our classrooms begin to look like the one described.
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/
Jim Mooney

Forget What You Know About History - 2 views

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    An absolutely fabulous article about teaching history well.
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    Excellent article.
Jim Mooney

Ken Robinson - How to escape education's Death Valley - 0 views

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    Sir Ken at his best
Karen Budde

10 Expectations That Students Have of Schools - 3 views

shared by Karen Budde on 14 May 13 - No Cached
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    Here's an interesting video that Esther Wojcicki shared on Google+. Most of these are things that many of us have heard before, but it's nice to have a reminder.
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    This was a nice reminder, it is also reassuring as so much of this we are already doing at Peoples Academy!
Jim Mooney

TEDx - The Future of Creativity - June 22 in Manchester, VT - 1 views

shared by Jim Mooney on 14 May 13 - No Cached
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    There are some great presenters confirmed.
Jill Prado

The Incredible Way A Michigan Physics Teacher Uses Google Glass - 2 views

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    I know we at Edudemic get excited (probably overly so) about new technology. We try to figure out how and if it belongs in the classroom or what else can be done with each new tool. So it's no surprise that we're over the moon about Google Glass and it's potential for education.
Jill Prado

What Is the Purpose of Foreign-Language Education? - 0 views

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    What if we treated foreign language in America the way we treat sports. It is not unusual to see kids in high school spending two hours after school, every day, in football or basketball practice.
Mike McRaith

Project Based Learning Quick Video Explanation - 3 views

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LMCZvGesRz8 This is handy little video for a simple explanation of project based learning.

project based learning good teaching blended instruction

started by Mike McRaith on 25 Jun 13 no follow-up yet
Jason Finley

Advent of Google means we must rethink our approach to education - 2 views

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    "If examinations challenge learners to solve problems the way they are solved in real life today, the educational system will change for ever. It is a small policy change that is required. Allow the use of the internet and collaboration during an examination. If we did that to exams, the curriculum would have to be different. We would not need to emphasise facts or figures or dates. The curriculum would have to become questions that have strange and interesting answers. "Where did language come from?", "Why were the pyramids built?", "Is life on Earth sustainable?", "What is the purpose of theatre?" Questions that engage learners in a world of unknowns. Questions that will occupy their minds through their waking hours and sometimes their dreams. Teaching in an environment where the internet and discussion are allowed in exams would be different. The ability to find things out quickly and accurately would become the predominant skill. The ability to discriminate between alternatives, then put facts together to solve problems would be critical. AThat's a skill that future employers would admire immensely."
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    "We have a romantic attachment to skills from the past which are no longer relevant on a curriculum for today's children."
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    If you have not seen doctopus and Google docs used in conjunction with assessments you ought to check it out! It is so phenomenal that I cannot express how super fantastic a tool it will be for you.
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!
Jason Finley

Is Google Making Us Stupid?: What the Internet is doing to our brains - 1 views

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    "...Thanks to the ubiquity of text on the Internet, not to mention the popularity of text-messaging on cell phones, we may well be reading more today than we did in the 1970s or 1980s, when television was our medium of choice. But it's a different kind of reading, and behind it lies a different kind of thinking..."
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    Colin, I immediately thought of your work when I read this article.
Jason Finley

The fiction of most school mission statements - 5 views

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    It appears that we are not the only group having this conversation. Here is an article that parallels our own. (It is actually eerily similar in its stream of thought.)
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    "...it's easy to see why students are disengaged from the learning tasks that we give them. The big question is whether we care. So far, most of our school systems don't seem too bothered by their environmental deficiencies when it comes to fostering internal motivation. Our actions put the lie to our school mission statements that state that we're about creating 'self-motivated, life-long learners.'" "As school leaders and classroom teachers, how long can we continue to ignore core principles of intrinsic motivation?"
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    I could not agree more and this is a critical topic for the independent schools with which I work.
Alison Bromage

YES in BHS is like the Folk High School model - 9 views

Colin and all, Foxfire looks so cool! I wasn't familiar with this place or project or the publications, but it seems really interesting. (Seems also similar to the Folk Live Center Community Proj...

school change good teaching Rowland blended instruction

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).   
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.
Karen Budde

we need teachers involved in transformation - 3 views

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    improving our professional development - as Lauren and Laura's project involves - and creating more student-centric learning opportunities would move educators from behind the desk and students away from test preparation packets
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    A see a future Rowland fellow!
Jason Finley

The Legal Implications of Gender Bias in Standardized Testing - 1 views

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    About standardized Aptitude Tests and Interest Inventories. "A child who holds a preconceived idea they were born 'less-able' will never pursue mastery and may even avoid the perception of interest in a subject area or career field." "...interest inventories perpetuate stereotyped socialization patterns and a segregated workforce because they typically compare an individual's likes and dislikes to those of persons already in the workforce. Given the extreme sex and race segregation common in the workplace, this concern is significant." "...rather than expand vocational options, aptitude tests and inventories heighten the other systemic pressures that make a young woman's pursuit of nontraditional vocational training extremely unlikely." These three articles highlight the need for educators to be cognizant of bias in guiding students in the exploring classes, college majors, and career interests. Society informs and pressures young men and women to think of these things in terms of either being male or female-centric. These articles also show through studies that young women's performance on aptitude test is linked directly to societal perceptions of gender competence. With that it has implications on their interests or perceived non-interests.
Rowland Foundation

Is Having Grit The Key To Success? - 0 views

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    NPR story: Angela Duckworth explains her theory of "grit" as a predictor of success.
Rowland Foundation

Duckworth Lab Website at UPENN - 0 views

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    "The Duckworth Lab focuses on two traits that predict success in life: grit and self-control. Grit is the tendency to sustain interest in and effort toward very long-term goals. Self-control is the voluntary regulation of behavioral, emotional, and attentional impulses in the presence of momentarily gratifying temptations or diversions."
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