We love these teachers and but the message can often be interpreted that these tools are easy and you too can be a master teacher and technology ninja by joining twitter and starting a blog. It ain't that easy, but that sometimes gets lost in the excitement a reimagined classroom.
The design-thinking philosophy requires the designer to put his or her ego to the side and seek to meet the unmet needs, both rational and emotional, of the user,
Once the student designers have gathered all their research together, they must organize and make sense of it all
Finally, design thinking requires designers to generate ideas—lots of ideas—and prototype them
the key elements of design thinking will be familiar to any teacher well-versed in the basics of effective teaching: start with empathy, move ego to the side, and support students in the process of failing often and early on their way to learning
bulk of the information exchange available on Twitter for instance comes in the form of links, or URL’s, which are internet addresses to pages of information.
Twitter offers us is the ability to respond to ideas and have a general discussion about those responses.
A big, big Twitter plus is the access educators have to education experts.
gateway to many free online webinars and online conference
On Twitter there are constant discussions and references to pedagogy and methodology in education
Twitter is only one source for teachers to connect. It is the easiest to use, and the hardest to understand. Teachers need to get started connecting to other teachers
This post started life as the second part of an item intended to explain twitter to novices. In that piece I suggested that the first thing to note is that twitter is an information resource.
In a growing number of schools, educators are echoing Papert's assertion that engaging students by starting with the concrete and solving hands-on, real-world problems is a great motivator.
LearnZillion is a learning platform that combines video lessons, assessments, and progress reporting.
Each lesson highlights a Common Core standard, starting with math in grades 3-9