If You Want Innovation, You Have to Invest in People - 5 views
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Another piece that puts the focus of Innovation on People rather than Programs. My personal belief is that #EdReform should start and end with empowering PD which is Personal and Purposeful. With that, what if schools modeled their PD on the Rowland Foundation's model of #EdReform? What would it look like if PD were not determined and delivered but instead supported and shared? What if PD were about providing resources and teaching teachers to be data collectors, researchers, developers of innovation? 2 year Action Research cycle? What if every teacher in a school spent a school year coming up with a hunch, collecting data, researching ideas around their hunch...then spent the second year testing it out/implementing it in the classroom, more data collection, presenting outcomes to their peers, and collecting feedback for reflection and refinement?
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"What has proved to matter is...the building of knowledge and innovation skills, which are much harder and take longer to get in place and maintain. Leading-edge competency in one's area of practice is indispensable; practice at turning ideas into reality is a must." "...while learning is hard work, and the value is not quantifiable, it is the only way to remain valuable in an economy that thrives on innovation. The more you invest in your people's knowledge, the more innovation you can expect to reap."
What's the Big Idea? - 1 views
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The education wide-ranging ideas - presented in snapshots from principals, professors, policy makers, students, and others - really speak toward the Rowland community's drive toward shaking up the status quo in education. My personal favorite: scrap business-as-usual twelfth grade in favor of universal pre-school.
An Argument for Teaching Literary Fiction - 1 views
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The Common Core emphasizes the instruction of nonfiction. I'm all for that push in general. Nonfiction is the genre where I spend the vast majority of my (ridiculously limited) free reading time. It offers so many rich texts through which we may integrate the traditional disciplines. Still my two degrees in English have served me very well in helping me understand context, motivation, and complexity in the world around me. This little NPR article discusses a study that offers empirical evidence for the power of reading literary fiction. As we de-emphasize the arts and literature, how many opportunities do we lose to teach and foster empathy?
A Patchwork of Financing Complicates Foreign Study - 2 views
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This month, the European Association for International Education adopted a charter that said: "National student loans and grants should always be portable. Students on grants that cover tuition and expenses while studying abroad should be provided with safeguards against arbitrary withdrawal of their funding."
"Single most valuable piece of advice..." - 10 views
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IMHO Single most valuable piece of advice for successful #EdReform. As amazing as all of our programs are, I truly believe that programs have very little to do with successful EdReform. I believe that it is about people more than programs, about the freedom to teach, and especially about administrators supporting an entrepreneurial spirit in the classroom. It is not too much of a stretch to grasp the connection between ownership and passion. And, when we love what we do...we simply do it better.
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A note. I am not saying the work we are doing isn't important...what I am saying is that you are the most important piece to making your work...work.
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Agreed!
Using Twitter to Develop an Online Professional Learning Network - 1 views
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"Twitter has emerged both as an important source of news, information, and resources for educators, as well as a valuable way to engage in a meaningful professional learning network. This webinar will provide a useful overview of Twitter and how it can inform and support the ongoing development and networking of K- 12 educators." Webinar THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 | 3:00-4:00 PM EST
Beyond mere talk: how to really help first-generation college students - 0 views
Disruptions: Minecraft, an Obsession and an Educational Tool - 1 views
The Power of Introverts: A Manifesto for Quiet Brilliance - 2 views
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Author Susan Cain explains the fallacy of "groupwork," and points to research showing that it can reduce creativity and productivity
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Wondering if focus on collaboration, group work stifles creativity and individuals ...Do some approaches to education reward those students who are simply more extroverted. Do we often, inadvertently, value Personalities over Substance in our classrooms?
The Quiet Power of Introverts - 2 views
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"...as a culture, our collective bias is toward extroverts. The popularity of work environments with 'open plans' that have no, or low walls and constant noise are completely focused on extroverts. She also notes the current popularity of what she calls, 'new group think', which revolves around work being done in groups and highly valuing collective thinking."
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Interesting blog, great book. Really makes me think about how we design learning experiences...especially when we attempt to foster creative thinking.
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"If you mistakenly believe that the most effective leaders are Extroverts, that using teams to brainstorm is the best way to foster innovation, or more simply, that Extroversion is a choice, you must read this book. Drawing on the latest research in neuroscience and psychology as well as relevant case studies, Cain effectively debunks the Extrovert Ideal, and equally important, helps us to better understand and value many of the attributes and behaviors associated with Introversion."
The Ten Most Important Questions In Science - 1 views
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I have a BA and MA in English, but in my doc degree I'm focusing on the inter- and trans-disciplinary studies of complex systems. I'm reading a ton about math, science, and computer programming lately and find myself questioning why I chose English over a STEM field so many years ago. One reason: the science classes I did take in high school sure didn't seem to be pointing me toward profound questions like these.
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These ARE great questions, and I'll share them with my district Diigo. As students begin to take ownership of their learning, creating big questions is important.
School is a prison - and damaging our kids - 3 views
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"... research and others' research in these settings has convinced me, beyond any doubt, that the natural drives and abilities of young people to learn are fully sufficient to motivate their entire education. When they want or need help from others, they ask for it. We don't have to force people to learn; all we need to do is provide them the freedom and opportunities to do so."
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Interesting, and for lots of reasons of course. In the EDLP course this summer, we noted the similar architectural styles of two of our schools, as seen in presentation photos. Then someone (Mike M.?) mentioned that some schools and prisons from a particular era had the same architects. I'd love to discover more about that. The metaphorical implications are too loaded.
How I went from Tony Blair's adviser to free school head - 1 views
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"Peter Hyman's article on the importance of reinventing education and moving away from the prevalent exam-factory model"
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"I believe that we are part of a growing movement of teachers out there who know our schools must change, who know the current system leaves so much untapped potential, who believe that it is possible to create a school experience that has a life and a depth and an emotional power that leaves our children wanting more, not less."
Great Schools Partnership - 2 views
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The Great Schools Partnership, Inc. is a nonprofit school-support organization committed to redesigning public education to improve the quality of learning for all students. Our focus is not on a single classroom, school, or district, but we work at all levels of the educational system-from the classroom to the statehouse-in the effort to shape America's finest secondary schools.
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This web site offers great resources and webinars on various topics relevant to our work!
Re-Inventing Schools Coalition - 4 views
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

BigThink.Com - 5 views
I came across this website recently. It has many videos and articles that may interest Rowland Fellows. For example, Colin you may like this one about iphones making us less human: http://bigthink....