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Diane Kasaczun

Engagement v. Empowerment -- Some Early Thoughts... - Practical Theory - 0 views

  • mpowerment feels better to me. It, in the end, is the word -- the idea -- that sets us up for a more student-centered classroom because it is about what the students get from the experience once the class is done, not what happens during the class. It also allows us to do away with the notion that the classroom is always fun. It's not. Let's look at coaching for a moment... a coach who is worried about engagement as the goal lets the kids scrimmage most practices because it is engaging and fun. But an empowering coach puts the kids through smart drills that allows them to play their best basketball during the games. Those days when you walk through the offenses and the defenses 100 times aren't always engaging... in fact, they can feel like a lot of work. But they pay off. And that's what we want in our classes. It's o.k. if there are days when the work that kids do feels like work. We have to be o.k. with that. And we have to understand that school is work... but that it can be meaningful, powerful, empowering (and even engaging) work. And that the work we do together in school means that kids can apply that work to their own lives in ways they see fit and that allow them to thrive.
  • This brings to mind a few other pieces in play with the coaching/sports analogy. -Common vision -Knowledge by all of the common goal they are reaching for -Choice to be present and selecting the team or sport they are playing (usually, one that plays to strengths/abilities of players) -The necessity to ensure all members are working toward the good of the whole, because you're only as strong as your weakest link -Gender specific-does/should this play more of a role in the classroom -Knowledge that if you don't show up or work hard, you're off the team
Randy Ziegenfuss

Study tests effectiveness of podcasts vs. lectures - 0 views

  • The results showed that the podcast viewers did considerably better than those who attended the lecture in person. The podcast group averaged nine points (out of 100) higher on the test than those in the live audience. Moreover, those who took notes during the podcast scored even higher, averaging 15 points higher than their live-lecture counterparts.
    • Randy Ziegenfuss
       
      Not exactly the best pedagogical practice, but the idea of lectures being done differently is pretty significant.
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    It's not often that a professor tells her students to skip class. But that's what SUNY Fredonia Psychology professor Dani McKinney did to support a recent study - and its results have thrust her into the national spotlight, with stories appearing in media ranging from the "New York Times" to "New Scientist" magazine.
Randy Ziegenfuss

A Manifesto for EduChange on the Eve of Hacking Education | The eduFire Blog - 0 views

  • Every action you take to change education either helps us do the wrong thing “righter” or helps us to do the right things
  • We don’t need more teachers. We need more talented teachers.
  • revolves around credentialing
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • Move towards efficient markets
  • actually change it.
  • Recognize that arguing over offline edu vs. online edu is like arguing whether it’s better to have arms or legs.
  • Revel in the Power of the Tail
  • “students teaching students”
  • empowering students to teach each other
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    A Manifesto for EduChange
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