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Sara Wilkie

The challenge of responding to off-the-mark comments | Granted, and... - 1 views

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    I have been thinking a lot lately about the challenge we face as educators when well-intentioned learners make incorrect, inscrutable, thoughtless, or otherwise off-the-mark comments. It's a crucial moment in teaching: how do you respond to an unhelpful remark in a way that 1) dignifies the attempt while 2) making sure that no one leaves thinking that the remark is true or useful? Summer is a great time to think about the challenge of developing new routines and habits in class, and this is a vital issue that gets precious little attention in training and staff development. Here is a famous Saturday Night Live skit, with Jerry Seinfeld as a HS history teacher, that painfully demonstrates the challenge and a less than exemplary response. Don't misunderstand me: I am not saying that we are always correct in our judgment about participant remarks. Sometimes a seemingly dumb comment turns out to be quite insightful. Nor am I talking about merely inchoate or poorly-worded contributions. That is a separate teaching challenge: how to unpack or invite others to unpack a potentially-useful but poorly articulated idea. No, I am talking about those comments that are just clunkers in some way; seemingly dead-end offerings that tempt us to drop our jaws or make some snarky remark back. My favorite example of the challenge and how to meet it comes from watching my old mentor Ted Sizer in action in front of 360 educators in Louisville 25 years ago. We had travelled as the staff of the Coalition of Essential Schools from Providence to Louisville to pitch the emerging Coalition reform effort locally. Ted gave a rousing speech about the need to transform the American high school. After a long round of applause, Ted took questions. The first questioner asked, and I quote: "Mr Sizer, what do you think about these girls and their skimpy halter tops in school?" (You have to also imagine the voice: very good-ol'-boy). Without missing a beat or making a face, Ted said "Deco
Sara Wilkie

Reflective Practice - 1 views

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    "Reflective practice is an important sub-component of teacher research. It includes journaling and talking about one's instructional practice. However, doing reflective practice is not the same as doing teacher research. Teacher researchers hypothesize and systematically test their ideas. They look to triangulate their ideas with multiple forms of evidence multiple perspectives (inside and outside of their research group) the research literature on this topic Teacher researchers also write about their projects. Writing is an important part of the process because it requires organization of ideas within a framework."
Sara Wilkie

A Biography Study: Using Role-Play to Explore Authors' Lives - ReadWriteThink - 0 views

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    "Dramatizing life stories provides students with an engaging way to become more critical readers and researchers. In this lesson, students select American authors to research, create timelines and biopoems, and then collaborate on teams to design and perform a panel presentation in which they role-play as their authors. The final project requires each student to synthesize information about his or her author in an essay."
anonymous

Va. students use GIS software to solve real-world problems | SmartBlogs SmartBlogs - 0 views

  • She decided that she would use geographic information systems software to find out how the Washington, D.C., metro affects development.
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    Real-world problem solving: She decided that she would use geographic information systems software to find out how the Washington, D.C., metro affects development. An opportunity that required analysis of lots of data.
Sara Wilkie

What You Need to Be an Innovative Educator | Edutopia - 0 views

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    "Project-based learning is an example of innovation, but probably not the way you'd expect. While learning through projects is indeed innovative compared to sit-and-get, drill-and-kill, teacher-led and textbook-sourced instruction, PBL's primary innovation is probably its flexibility. There's almost no other learning trend or innovation than can not only co-exist with PBL, but also fit seamlessly and entirely within it. PBL promotes innovation in education by making room for it. But creating that innovation -- what does that require? What kinds of ingredients can you put into the tin, shake up, and end up with innovation? "
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

OPINION: How to Move PD Forward | EdSurge News - 1 views

  • The goal should be helping them to develop the profession themselves.
  • And this hints at the deeper reality: teachers--in the classrooms and in the Twitter chats--are the ones with the firsthand knowledge of what’s really going on. It’s time to engage them and bring them into the process.
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    How do we engage more teachers in the conversation? We are doing it one by one...is that the only way? How do we get teachers to see themselves as professionals that need to be interested in not only their content but in their pedagogy as well?
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    You give me the chance and I will take it! Essential Quote: "If you want teacher buy-in, let the teachers buy!" - Damn straight, better-believe-it-buddy! What is this really saying? Give educators the chance to determine their own needs and allow them to create their own PD - WOW, democracy in the work place, professional autonomy, release of control...Stop right there Mister Radical Man! All this student centered, student owning the learning may be the cool buzz words of the day, and we may wave its flag high and proud, but we ain't goin' to apply it to the employee serfs charged with implementing that pith! Pahleese, teachers in control - teachers deciding how best to teach and facilitate learning? Chaos, Anarchy, Socialism! Dog and Cats living together, mass hysteria...Ain't happenin'...not now, not ever! I actually know this to be true. I designed, proposed, pleaded for a number of programs incorporating this approach and was rebuffed (vehemently and sternly) in two districts, ignored in two others in favor of completely top down, admin centered, and strictly dictated, carrot and stick approach of standard seat time, nothing required but attention or comment, 11, 23, (whatever) Tools! Shocking that we have the PD results we have? Hardly - Continuing to do the same things we have always done and expecting a different result is the definition of insanity - A. Einstein - what an idiot!
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.
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • 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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