Contents contributed and discussions participated by Kenneth Jones
Mrs. Yollis' Classroom Blog: Video: Using a Creative Commons License - 1 views
What the Heck is a 'Teacherpreneur'? | MindShift - 2 views
60 Educational Game Sites That You've Probably Never Seen « Tech:-)Happy - 2 views
Chris Jordan - E Pluribus Unum - 3 views
Rollyo: Roll Your Own Search Engine - 0 views
My start page - 0 views
Common Core - News | 21st Century Skills: An Old Familiar Song - 2 views
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The latest fad to sweep the wonderful world of pedagogy is called 21st Century Skills
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In the land of American pedagogy, innovation is frequently confused with progress, and whatever is thought to be new is always embraced more readily than what is known to be true.
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old-fashioned or traditional, these terms being the worst sort of opprobrium that can be hurled at any educator.
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diane.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views
Senechal.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views
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This brings the other side of the argument. Is this argument necessary?
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I ran across this in AFT's American Journal. It sites Dianne Ravitch's essay "A Century of Skills Movements". I'd like to take a closer look at the arguments made re skills vs. content as the focus. It this creating a straw person? I thought the goal was that student's learn modern day skills while acquiring the content.
http://show.mappingworlds.com/ - 0 views
Restoring Our Schools | The Nation - 1 views
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We need to take the education of poor children as seriously as we take the education of the rich, and we need to create systems that routinely guarantee all the elements of educational investment to all children.
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"don't simply measure whether students can fill in a bubble on a test but whether they possess twenty-first-century skills like problem-solving and critical thinking and entrepreneurship and creativity."
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This is the challenge that Obama pledged to take on, and the one we should hope he will vigorously pursue.
Restoring Our Schools | The Nation - 0 views
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This is partly because the international assessments demand more advanced analysis than do most US tests. They require students to weigh and balance evidence, apply what they know to new problems and explain and defend their answers. These higher-order skills are emphasized in other nations' curriculums and assessment systems but have been discouraged by the kind of lower-level multiple-choice testing favored by NCLB.
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