How Illinois State University Reimagined its Honors Program using Digital Credentials |... - 0 views
The Modern Learning Makerspace - 1 views
A radical idea to transform what kids learn in school - The Answer Sheet - The Washingt... - 0 views
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How many? The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics says, “Employment of mathematicians is expected to increase by 16 percent from 2010 to 2020…. There will be competition for jobs because of the small number of openings in this occupation.”
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1) Humankind’s hope for the future lies, as it always has, in the richness of human variability. We differ in experience, situation, aspirations, attitudes, abilities, interests, motivations, emotions, life chances, prospects, potential, and luck. To survive and prosper, these differences need to be exploited to the maximum. The core curriculum minimizes them. (2) Knowledge is exploding at an ever-accelerating rate. Whole new fields of study unimagined even a few years ago are emerging. The explosion isn’t just going to continue, it’s going to accelerate. Thinking we know enough to lock ANY curriculum in place — much less one that’s more than a hundred years old — is either naïve or malicious. (3) The future is unknowable. Period. Even if it were possible to standardize and program kids, we don’t know — NOBODY knows — what they’ll need to know next week, much less for the rest of their lives. They may need technical skills no one now has, or the ability to survive on edible weeds and a quart of water a day. Neither the Common Core nor the tests that manufacturers are able to write can take adequate account of an unknown future.
suny.edu - Generation SUNY Blog - 1 views
Deeper Learning Blog Carnival: Six Questions for Better Professional Development | Edut... - 1 views
10 Guidelines for Running Synchronous Web Teaching Sessions Read more: http://www.insi... - 2 views
Notes on Student Success - 0 views
The Workforce Institute » Blog Archive » The 'Learn and Earn' Baker's Dozen - 1 views
20 Top Educational Tweeters: EdTech | The Creative Education Blog - 1 views
10 Jaw-Droppingly Awesome Infographics on Education | Socrato Learning Analytics Blog - 0 views
A Neurologist Makes the Case for Teaching Teachers About the Brain | Edutopia - 0 views
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"Neuroscience should be required for all students [of education] . . . to familiarize them with the orienting concepts [of] the field, the culture of scientific inquiry, and the special demands of what qualifies as scientifically based education research." - Eisenhart & DeHaan, 2005
TP Msg. #1160 The Tipping Point for Online Science Is Now! | Tomorrow's Professor Blog - 0 views
ForAllBadges for Hackasaurus « The Forall Systems Blog - 0 views
Creativity on the Run: 18 Apps that Support the Creative Process | Edutopia - 0 views
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