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Sara Wilkie

Flocabulary - Five Things (Elements of a Short Story) - YouTube - 0 views

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    "Get the complete lesson plan for this video at http://flocabulary.com/fivethings Flocabulary teaches about the 5 elements of the short story in this song. That's plot, character, conflict, theme and setting."
Sara Wilkie

T. S. Eliot on Idea Incubation, Inhibition, and the Mystical Quality of Creativity + a ... - 0 views

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    "Poet, playwright, and cultural critic T. S. Eliot was born 124 years ago today. In this passage from The Use of Poetry and the Use of Criticism (public library), cited in the 1942 gem Anatomy of Inspiration, Eliot adds to previously explored theories of how creativity works by taking a curious look at how physical illness brings a near-mystical quality of poetry, driven by two key elements of creativity: the presence of an incubation period when unconscious processing of existing ideas takes place, and the removal of habitual inhibitions, or something John Keats has termed "negative capability"."
Sara Wilkie

BalancEdTech - Mini Biographies - 1 views

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    "Student pairs or groups will research and report on an important historical figure. This could either be done to review people already studied, to seed background knowledge of upcoming people, or just people the students are interested in. Students will use the project to learn about or practice wiki page creation with the basic elements of text, images, and hyperlinks. They will also get an opportunity to explore writing their own questions, which will become the core skill in later inquiry projects."
Sara Wilkie

BalancEdTech - Critical Friends Feedback - 0 views

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    "The goal is to move beyond superficial peer conferencing and commenting, to dig into feedback that helps the "author" grow and improve in whatever form they are using. Too often the feedback students provide is superficial, commenting on what they liked without explaining why, offering generic improvement ideas, or focusing on less important elements (i.e. spelling, punctuation, etc.). How do we help students provide each other meaningful, productive feedback? How do we help students internalize those conversations to become their own best critical friend? "
anonymous

Is It Really Hip to Flip? -- THE Journal - 0 views

  • Rather, educators should ask "how to apply the elements of effective instruction to teach students both deep conceptual understanding and procedural fluency.
  • "Any sufficiently important mathematics topic requires students to learn the topic in four dimensions: procedurally, conceptually, contextually, and investigatively"
anonymous

Connectedness: The New Standard - 0 views

  • PLNs can be defined as collections of like-minded people with whom one exchanges information and engages in conversation. Those exchanges— whether they are held in physical or virtual environments—focus on mutual interests and goals, and their main objective is professional growth and improvement.
  • Those who are connected to greater social networks are more informed about their practices, beliefs, and perceptions regarding education. Perhaps more importantly, those educators engage in both consumption and publication. Knowledge is shared and exchanged, not simply taken.
  • It is the consistent give and take at the individual level that makes a collective PLN exponentially stronger, more knowledgeable, and wiser. No leader should miss the opportunity to be part of this human-generated portal of information.
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  • A PLN is a two-way mechanism for constructive feedback, support, and advice.
  • A PLN can provide the seeds of change, but is up to each respective leader to plant and cultivate them to witness their growth and development into transformative culture elements. Through modeling and sharing the benefits of my PLN, I encourage my teachers to use PLNs for their own learning and growth.
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    "It is essential that principals and other school leaders develop professional learning networks (PLNs) both within and beyond their local organizations. Although colleagues at the local level are often generous in their offerings of support, current technologies enable school leaders to reach far beyond the walls of their schools to access the expertise of school administrators and teachers from around the world and bring a wealth of resources to their schools."
anonymous

I Just Can't Do It All: The Connected Educator Letdown | Ditch That Textbook - 0 views

  • Vicki introduces one major new digital focus in her class each year. One. (Well, maybe two … she has blogged about this and I couldn’t find the post.)
    • anonymous
       
      Reminds me of a conversation from Early adopters yesterday!
  • If a great teacher like Vicki Davis only adds one major element to her ed tech repertoire each year, then I’m OK with that being my guide.
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    "I see posts and videos about great educators and the great things that they're doing almost every day. And, being the self-reflective person that I am, it often makes me have the same reaction: "Wow, that's great! Look at what that teacher is doing. Look what her students have created. Look at the impact his classroom is having on the world. "Why am I not doing that? Why aren't my students doing that? Man, what kind of a teacher am I if we're not doing that?"
anonymous

http://net.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ELI7112.pdf - 0 views

shared by anonymous on 29 Sep 14 - No Cached
  • These and other innova-tions require an LMS that can get beyond semesters and courses, concentrating instead on individual learners and what they need over the course of their education and into their professional lives.
  • Because they will center on students, LMSs will likely become more personalized and customizable and will need to work well on a broadening pool of mobile devices.
  • With a stronger focus on learners, LMSs might enable deeper engagement and collaboration between learners and instruc-tors, and a new generation of LMSs should allow colleges and universities to build learning ecosystems that promote those kinds of interactions.
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  • Canvas by Instructure bills itself as a platform-based approach, and the company has launched the EduAppCenter, a site that sup-ports learning applications and resources that can be com-bined to create a learning ecosystem.
  • the model of a single, large installation or a suite of tools from the same vendor is in-creasingly giving way to systems composed of elements from many sources.
  • Moreover, an LMS that only accommodates courses and credit hours will not be able to support a growing number of educational models.
  • nstead, CfA adapted a customer relationship management system to function as an LMS.
  • but it is evolving to put learners at the center of what it does.
  • unlikely that such a system can meet the needs of institutions and learners.
  • LMSs are evolving into learner-focused systems that can better meet the changing needs of both institutions and learners
  • The LMS became ubiquitous but in many ways retains its course-centric structure.
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