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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
Kelly OLeary

Should More Low-Income Students Apply to Highly Selective Colleges? - 0 views

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    Conceptual and Methodological Problems in Research on College Undermatch "Access to the nation's most selective colleges remains starkly unequal, with students in the lowest income quartile constituting less than 4% of enrollment," say Michael Bastedo and Allyson Flaster (University of Michigan/Ann Arbor) in this article in Educational Researcher. "Students in the top SES quartile comprise 69% of enrollment at institutions that admit fewer than a third of their applicants…" One increasingly popular explanation for this enrollment gap is undermatching - academically able low-income students not applying to selective colleges for which they are qualified, settling instead for lower-tier institutions. Bastedo and Flaster are skeptical about this theory for three reasons First, they don't believe there is good evidence about the life benefits of attending different tiers of college, and most measures of college "quality" are quite unscientific. Life advantages might accrue at the extremes - going to a highly selective college versus a low-quality community college - but the evidence about the whole middle range is "quite muddy," say Bastedo and Flaster. Among the factors that need to be looked at more carefully are a college's graduation rate, students' debt burden, placement in graduate or professional schools, and post-graduate earnings. Second, the authors question whether it's possible for researchers to predict which low-income students will get into selective colleges to which they haven't yet applied. Competition for seats in these colleges has become much more intense in recent years, and extra-curricular activities, alumni parents, athletic prowess, and other intangibles play an increasingly important part. In many of these areas, higher-SES students have great advantages. Third, even if we look only at SAT scores and GPAs, high-achieving disadvantaged students are still not as competitive as the undermatching advocate
Gina Cinotti

Types of Feedback - 1 views

  • Figure 2.1. Feedback Timing
  • Purpose: For students to get feedback while they are still mindful of the learning target For students to get feedback while there is still time for them to act on it
  • Examples of Good Amounts of Feedback Examples of Bad Amounts of Feedback
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  • Figure 2.2. Amount of Feedback Purpose: For students to get enough feedback so that they understand what to do but not so much that the work has been done for them (differs case by case) For students to get feedback on "teachable moment" points but not an overwhelming number
  • Examples of Good Amounts of Feedback Examples of Bad Amounts of Feedback
  • Figure 2.4. Feedback Mode
  • Figure 2.5. Feedback Audience Purpose: To reach the appropriate students with specific feedback To communicate, through feedback, that student learning is valued
  • Examples of Good Feedback Focus Examples of Bad Feedback Focus
  • Making comments that bypass the student (e.g., "This is hard" instead of "You did a good job because …") Making criticisms without offering any insights into how to improve Making personal compliments or digs (e.g., "How could you do that?" or "You idiot!")
  • Making comments about the strengths and weaknesses of a performance Making comments about the work process you observed or recommendations about a work process or study strategy that would help improve the work Making comments that position the student as the one who chooses to do the work Avoiding personal comments
  • Figure 2.7. Kinds of Comparisons Used in Feedback
  • Purpose: Usually, to compare student work with established criteria Sometimes, to compare a student's work with his or her own past performance Rarely, to compare a student's work with the work of other students
  • Examples of Good Kinds of Comparisons Examples of Bad Kinds of Comparisons
  • Purpose (for Formative Assessment): To describe student work To avoid evaluating or "judging" student work in a way that would stop students from trying to improve
  • Examples of Good Feedback Function Examples of Bad Feedback Function
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    ASCD article. Provides charts to define types and give examples. I might print this and give to principals to share with teachers
Alicia Koster

http://www.oecd.org/pisa/keyfindings/PISA-2012-results-US.pdf - 0 views

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    he Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) is an ongoing triennial survey that assesses the extent to which 15-year-olds students near the end of compulsory education have acquired key knowledge and skills that are essential for full participation in modern societies. The assessment does not just ascertain whether students can reproduce knowledge; it also examines how well students can extrapolate from what they have learned and apply that knowledge in unfamiliar settings, both in and outside of school. This approach reflects the fact that modern economies reward individuals not for what they know, but for what they can do with what they know. PISA offers insights for education policy and practice, and helps monitor trends in students' acquisition of knowledge and skills across countries and in different demographic subgroups within each country. The findings allow policy makers around the world to gauge the knowledge and skills of students in their
meredith fox

LMS Solutions to Empower Teachers | Schoology - 0 views

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    to give you the tools and connections to engage students more efficiently and improve educational effectiveness on both a large and small scale.
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    Teaching isn't easy. All too often educators are asked to achieve high goals with meager resources and distracted students. No technology alone can improve learning, but an intimate partnership between educational institutions and technology developers can. Our mission is to empower you-to give you the tools and connections to engage students more efficiently and improve educational effectiveness on both a large and small scale. Schoology isn't just an LMS. It's a living, breathing educational community that can adjust to changing student needs, learn from collective experiences, and continually improve as education and technology advance. We strive to provide an unparalleled educational experience that improves student outcomes by providing educators information and insights that were never before possible. Schoology hopes not only to illuminate why particular students learn the way they do, but also to provide support and personalized content that is tailored to them. Schoology is transforming learning through the collaboration of passionate individuals. We're on a unique journey, and this is just the beginning.
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:"
mccahillk

Educational Leadership:Strengthening Student Engagement:Engaging Students: What I Learn... - 0 views

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    Low grades on tests do not necessarily mean that students haven't studied. Some students may have been confused when the material was covered in class. Incomplete homework isn't always a sign that students don't care.
Lois Whipple

Products | Debbie Silver - 1 views

    • Lois Whipple
       
      different parenting paradigm
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    A fresh approach to getting kids to work smarter and better, not just harder As teachers and parents, our job is to teach students to tackle challenges rather than avoid them. Award-winning teacher and best-selling author Debbie Silver addresses the relationship between student motivation and risking failure, calling failure a temporary "glitch" that provides valuable learning opportunities. She explains motivational theory, provides down-to-earth-often humorous-real life examples, and outlines concrete, applicable guidelines for helping students overcome setbacks and failure to foster lifelong success
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    Interesting......how did you hear about this? Any feedback on how this approach is working by those who have implemented?
mccahillk

What Keeps Students Motivated to Learn? | MindShift - 0 views

  • Project-based learning is the norm among these students, but they also have a lot of ideas about what makes a good project work.
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    Project-based learning is the norm among these students, but they also have a lot of ideas about what makes a good project work.
Daniel Breiman

Club Academia | About - 0 views

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    Club Academia strives to organize existing knowledge in ways that make learning easily accessible while simultaneously inspiring people to discover and innovate.
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    Club Academia strives to organize existing knowledge in ways that make learning easily accessible while simultaneously inspiring people to discover and innovate.
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    Mission: Club Academia strives to organize existing knowledge in ways that make learning easily accessible while simultaneously inspiring people to discover and innovate. Since its founding, Club Academia has provided supplemental instruction to students who are struggling with a particular concept and are looking for further explanation. We recognize that often fellow students can most easily help peers understand difficult classroom material. Starting with only four high schoolers uploading videos to a YouTube account, Club Academia has expanded nearly exponentially, currently with 17 video makers and over 500 videos on our website. With the help of the $20,000 Westly Prize grant, we are able to provide equipment for our video-makers and thus create a strong video base. As a result, we are able to expand into more schools and recruit more volunteers to make high-quality videos for our learners!
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    Nice resource for both students and teachers...
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    Club Academia strives to organize existing knowledge in ways that make learning easily accessible while simultaneously inspiring people to discover and innovate.
meredith fox

Using ShowMe to Develop Student Created Math Tutorials | ShowMe Voice Blog | Interactiv... - 0 views

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    Using ShowMe to Develop Student Created Math Tutorials
Adriana Coppola

Teaching Students to Embrace Mistakes | Edutopia - 0 views

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    Teaching Students to Embrace Mistakes
debra joseph-charles

Student surveys to be used to rate teachers in pilot program - even in kindergarten cla... - 1 views

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    Student surveys to be used to rate teachers in pilot program - even in kindergarten classes
ShaeBrie Dow

Using Classroom Data to Give Systematic Feedback to Students to Improve Learning - 0 views

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    "Using Classroom Data to Give Systematic Feedback to Students to Improve Learning"
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    "Using Classroom Data to Give Systematic Feedback to Students to Improve Learning"
ShaeBrie Dow

Using Peer Review to Help Students Improve Writing | The Teaching Center | Washington U... - 0 views

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    "Using Peer Review to Help Students Improve Writing"
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    "Using Peer Review to Help Students Improve Writing"
Lois Whipple

10 Amazing Ways For Teachers & Tutors To Use Twitter In Education - 0 views

  • Teachers can connect to their students on a wider level as well as on a personal level.Interactions can be taken beyond the classroom as Twitter is omnipresent in our smartphones and laptops.Twitter allows for customization of learning depending on the student i.e. differentiating learning for different students.Twitter can be used to quickly connect to multimedia resources (e.g. YouTube or Vine) and turn education into edutainment.Twitter gives new opportunities to connect to other learning communities and new educational content.The very nature of Twitter – brief and to-the-point makes for rapid broadcast of learning
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    Why Should Teachers And Tutors Use Twitter in Education?Teachers can connect to their students on a wider level as well as on a personal level
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    Again, I agree but educational technologies are difficult to move forward in classrooms, at least I can say that it is tough this year with AchieveNJ, Common Core, & PARCC all being implemented at once. I think we are on the way and getting the word out....let's see how much we grow in 2 years.
Daniel Breiman

What factors help drive student engagement? | SmartBrief - 1 views

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    What factors help drive student engagement?
John Chandler

More Than Half of Students 'Engaged' in School, Says Poll - Education Week - 0 views

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    Students who have teachers who make them "feel excited about the future" and who attend schools that they see as committed to building their individual strengths are 30 times more likely than other students to show other signs of engagement in the classroom-a key predictor of academic success, according to a report released Wednesday by
Adriana Coppola

6 Steps to Help Students Find Order in Their Thinking | Edutopia - 0 views

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    6 Steps to Help Students Find Order in Their Thinking
Julia Leong

How can my feedback help students take action to improve their learning? - 0 views

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    How can my feedback help students take action to improve their learning?
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