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Lois Whipple

Learn to Code, Code to Learn | MindShift - 0 views

  • “As kids are creating projects like this, they’re learning to code, but even more importantly, they’re coding to learn. Because as they learn to code, it enables them to learn many other things, opens up many new opportunities for learning. Again, it’s useful to make an analogy to reading and writing. When you learn to read and write, it opens up opportunities for you to learn so many other things. When you learn to read, you can then read to learn. And it’s the same thing with coding. If you learn to code, you can code to learn. Now some of the things you can learn are sort of obvious. You learn more about how computers work. But that’s just where it starts. When you learn to code, it opens up for you to learn many other things.”
    • Lois Whipple
       
      Is there a connection between coding and reading
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    In this demo-filled talk MIT's Mitch Resnick, one of the main creators of the kids coding program called Scratch, outlines the benefits of teaching kids to code, so they can do more than just "read" new technologies - but also create them
Kelly OLeary

The Marshall Memo - A Weekly Roundup of Important Ideas and Research in K-12 Education - 0 views

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    "Reading the Marshall Memo provides top-notch professional development and keeps educators on the cutting edge" and takes only 20min a week to read!
Alan November

Promoting Student Self-Assessment - ReadWriteThink - 0 views

  • Student Created Rubrics: Ask students to contribute to the creation of a rubric that defines success. A reading response task, a multi-modal presentation, or a group discussion leads to higher levels of learning when students are included in defining success. Learning Contract: Ask students to create and agree to a learning contract at the beginning of a unit. The learning contract can define the learning goals, the "photo album" of evidence of learning, and agreed upon activities. At numerous times during the unit, ask students to revisit the contract, record new learning or muddy points and to get feedback from you or other peers. Muddy Point Board: Designate an area in the room or a board for students to pin questions, muddy points, or topics they'd like the class to revisit. Asking students to periodically pick a question or comment from the board to discuss can build student ownership of learning.
  • Student Created Rubrics: Ask students to contribute to the creation of a rubric that defines success. A reading response task, a multi-modal presentation, or a group discussion leads to higher levels of learning when students are included in defining success. Learning Contract: Ask students to create and agree to a learning contract at the beginning of a unit. The learning contract can define the learning goals, the "photo album" of evidence of learning, and agreed upon activities. At numerous times during the unit, ask students to revisit the contract, record new learning or muddy points and to get feedback from you or other peers. Muddy Point Board: Designate an area in the room or a board for students to pin questions, muddy points, or topics they'd like the class to revisit. Asking students to periodically pick a question or comment from the board to discuss can build student ownership of learning.
  • Student Created Rubrics: Ask students to contribute to the creation of a rubric that defines success. A reading response task, a multi-modal presentation, or a group discussion leads to higher levels of learning when students are included in defining success. Learning Contract: Ask students to create and agree to a learning contract at the beginning of a unit. The learning contract can define the learning goals, the "photo album" of evidence of learning, and agreed upon activities. At numerous times during the unit, ask students to revisit the contract, record new learning or muddy points and to get feedback from you or other peers. Muddy Point Board: Designate an area in the room or a board for students to pin questions, muddy points, or topics they'd like the class to revisit. Asking students to periodically pick a question or comment from the board to discuss can build student ownership of learning.
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  • Student Created Rubrics: Ask students to contribute to the creation of a rubric that defines success. A reading response task, a multi-modal presentation, or a group discussion leads to higher levels of learning when students are included in defining success. Learning Contract: Ask students to create and agree to a learning contract at the beginning of a unit. The learning contract can define the learning goals, the "photo album" of evidence of learning, and agreed upon activities. At numerous times during the unit, ask students to revisit the contract, record new learning or muddy points and to get feedback from you or other peers. Muddy Point Board: Designate an area in the room or a board for students to pin questions, muddy points, or topics they'd like the class to revisit. Asking students to periodically pick a question or comment from the board to discuss can build student ownership of learning.
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    promoting self assessment
Barbara Powers

Preparing Students To Write Persuasive Speeches With Scaffolding Reading - 0 views

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    ELA for ELL: Scaffolding Understanding for Complex Text Series, Interacting with Complex Texts: Scaffolding Reading
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    Very relevant to Common Core....thanks for sharing Barb.
meredith fox

Prism | Home - 0 views

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    Whole class input analysis with visuals
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    Tool for CCSS--close reading
Kelly OLeary

Good-Bye Round Robin - 0 views

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    25 Effective Oral Reading Strategies
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    This is a great resource to share with principals....thanks.
Barbara Powers

One-Page Nonfiction Reading/Thinking Passages Aligned with Core Priorities - 0 views

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    Common core aligned passages for each grade level, including paired passages.
Julia Leong

Newsela | Nonfiction Literacy and Current Events - 1 views

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    Reading level articles of current events
Lois Whipple

Department of Education - NJ School Law - 0 views

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    "Welcome to the Department of Education's school law decisions page. Here you will be able to access recent legal decisions of the Commissioner of Education, the State Board of Education, the School Ethics Commission and the State Board of Examiners, Also included are the cases decided by the panel of permanent arbitrators responsible for deciding streamline tenure charges in charter schools. The decisions are in Adobe PDF (version 3.0) format. You will need Adobe Acrobat Reader version 3.0 or higher to view them. Be sure to read the instructions that come with the reader carefully for information on viewing and printing documents"
Lois Whipple

Prism | About - 0 views

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    Prism
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    Prism is a tool for "crowdsourcing interpretation." Users are invited to provide an interpretation of a text by highlighting words according to different categories, or "facets." Each individual interpretation then contributes to the generation of a visualization which demonstrates the combined interpretation of all the users. We envision Prism as a tool for both pedagogical use and scholarly exploration, revealing patterns that exist in the subjective experience of reading a text.
Gina Cinotti

Oral Formative Feedback - Top Ten Strategies | HuntingEnglishHuntingEnglish - 0 views

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    A must read for teachers and principals......its a bit long but the details are worthwhile
mccahillk

Educational Leadership:What Students Need to Learn:High-Stakes Testing Narrows the Curr... - 0 views

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    "Are science, social studies, the arts, and physical education really disappearing from elementary schools? Are critical thinking and deep reading of literature fading from the high school curriculum?"
Gina Cinotti

ASCD Book: Personalizing the High School Experience for Each Student - 0 views

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    Seen this a few times.....sit and read it....worth it.
Tobi Knehr

Great Opinion Piece in NY Times: "Save Us from the SAT" | Diane Ravitch's blog - 1 views

    • Tobi Knehr
       
      Interesting read.
  • A wonderful article appeared in today’s New York Times about the SAT.
Gina Cinotti

Can't We Do Better? - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • So now let’s look at the latest PISA. It found that the most successful students are those who feel real “ownership” of their education. In all the best performing school systems, said Schleicher, “students feel they personally can make a difference in their own outcomes and that education will make a difference for their future
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    Read the middle paragraph on "ownership" of learning
Adriana Coppola

Blogs on Technology Integration | Edutopia - 1 views

  • Below is my curated collection of videos for general Common Core info, as well as videos to teach the close reading, text complexity and informational texts standards
ShaeBrie Dow

Talking with Students through Screencasting: Experimentations with Video Feedback to Im... - 0 views

  • The National Council of English Teachers (NCTE) position statement on teaching composition argues that students “need guidance and support throughout the writing process, not merely comments on the written product,” and that “effective comments do not focus on pointing out errors, but go on to the more productive task of encouraging revision” (CCCC 2004).
  • feedback serves as a pedagogical tool to improve learning by motivating students to rethink and rework their ideas rather than simply proofread and edit for errors.
  • “feedback should focus on improving the skills needed for the construction of end products more than on the end products themselves”
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  • By talking to students and reading their work aloud, instructors can engage students on an interpersonal level that is absent in written comments.
  • comparison between feedback forms within one class is to use both forms to respond to the same type of assignment
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    "Talking with Students through Screencasting:"
Barbara Powers

Help meet Common Core State Standards with our Paired Books! - 0 views

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    Paired Books and lessons for grades 1 through 5 provide students with opportunities to see connections and differences across literary and informational texts in three different types of pairings: fiction-fiction, nonfiction-nonfiction, and fiction-nonfiction.
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