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dawn pendergrass

5 Essential Questions About ePortfolios - Getting Smart by Susan Lucille Davis - edchat... - 18 views

    • smithfraney
       
      Look twitter!
  • digital portfolios could be used as a “parking lot”
    • smithfraney
       
      Interesting concept.
    • dawn pendergrass
       
      for college applications or the parking lot?
    • rcusteau3
       
      If students have a choice they will be motivated.
    • dawn pendergrass
       
      Yes, yes and yes.  I think that is why students really buy into the portfolio process.  They get to choose!!
  • ...15 more annotations...
    • bedlingtongirl
       
      wow!
    • dawn pendergrass
       
      so easy to do.......www.wordle.com....if you've never seen it.  :)
    • Laurie Sevigny
       
      We hope this is the case that the portfolio is owned by the students w/sharing w/ others
    • dawn pendergrass
       
      This idea -- the students need to take ownership, sift through their learning and make sense of their triumphs and challenges.  We feel that this is a VERY meaningful learning experience.
    • Mary Bellavance
       
      Amen!
    • Laurie Sevigny
       
      One of the most important aspects for us about portfolios is that reflection happens - putting portfolio together is not just making a checklist - it is thinking about your learning - the metacognition.
    • Mary Bellavance
       
      Great question!
    • jkelly72
       
      Good idea!
    • hmclean
       
      I agree
    • Laurie Sevigny
       
      The audience should be defined ahead of time so students can develop the portfolio w/this audience in mind
    • Martha Vignola
       
      authentic audience, yes
    • Laurie Sevigny
       
      Pre teach HOW TO curate and organize, maybe develop a template for this - but then it is up to the student to take this on - it is their work
    • Martha Vignola
       
      Display an exemplar (teacher made)
    • bedlingtongirl
       
      Move student from passive learner to active learner. Making authentic meaning of their respective learning, student directed, not teacher lead...
    • Martha Vignola
       
      I agree.
    • dawn pendergrass
       
      One of the BEST parts of my job!!!  
    • dawn pendergrass
       
      Holy Cow!  Now I think that I need to create my own digital portfolio!  Yikes.  This may cause some marital strife ;)  I tend to dive into these things and then not come up for air until I am done and it is perfect.
    • bedlingtongirl
       
      Yes!! Can't wait to try it so I can show my students.
  • What is the teacher’s role?
    • Nancy Grose
       
      Creating a personal portfolio as an exemplar to model for students would be a way to guide students' learning
    • dawn pendergrass
       
      That is great!  I kept my portfolio from ETEP and have often shown them my own portfolio.  But perhaps creating my own writing portfolio would be helpful and show that this is something that writers do -- not just students.
  • in other words, a place for gathering all of one’s academic, artistic, athletic, or other achievements from kindergarten to twelfth grade.
    • smithfraney
       
      As a content area teacher, I use e-portfolios in place of lab notebooks.  All the students lab reports are housed in a digital setting.  So my goals and vision for e-portfolios are much more singular.
    • Laurie Jacques
       
      Something our district is looking at doing. Spotty digital portfolios now. MYP and IB require reflection!
    • Laurie Sevigny
       
      Some students will take the bull by the horns and make the most of the features of the portfolio process and program. Of course others will just go through the motions to get it done. Either way, the process of creating is what's important - the generation of a body of work that the student will consider and the process of accomplishing the task as well.
    • Susan Dee
       
      This is my concern with moving in the direction of an ePortfolio. I've seen this happen with "paper" portfolios time and time again. Lots of work is put into it and when it's finished parents see it as a "keepsake" and still want a "grade". How do we change this culture? How do we assist parent and administrators.
seth_mitchell

6 powerful strategies for paradigm-shifting teacher PD | Connected Principals - 4 views

  •  
    Ha! I saw this on twitter last night too and was going to post it today. I think this would be a great thing for the pd team to look at. Though I think we are successfully doing most of these things, I think there are some we could learn from.
  •  
    The pecha kucha model is so interesting and would be a great idea for SMWP large groups to showcase work.
seth_mitchell

Teaching Technology to Teachers: I Used to Think... but Now I Think... - EdTech Researc... - 4 views

  • workshops should begin and end by having people think and write about their learning goals. Workshops and series should be named after learning goals rather than tools.
  • involves introducing tools not by the unconscionably boring "click-along-with-the-presenter" method, but by giving participants a logical series of steps to perform and having them figure out how to do them through play, exploration, peer and facilitator support.
  • professional development plans ultimately need to build towards creating environments where teachers are coaching, guiding, supporting and inspiring one another.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Outside consultants and technology coaches can provide a boost, but really sustained change happens when teachers are teaching each other.
  • It's not about technology, it about learning. It's not about tools, it's about goals. It's not about new gizmos, it's about enduring pedagogy.
seth_mitchell

Chippewa River Writing Project - WHOAAA_Webinar_Oct_2011 - 1 views

  •  
    Excellent resource to help us think about how to structure tech PD.
thebda

ThumbScribes - Collaborative Writing Community - Login - 1 views

  •  
    On line community for collaboration.  More of a high school thing I think but it seems like you can set up your own private group.
Suzanne Tighe

The Writing Revolution - Peg Tyre - The Atlantic - 4 views

  • “How could they get passed along and end up in high school without understanding how to use the word although?”
    • Elizabeth Tewksbury
       
      EXACTLY
  • Literacy, which once consisted of the ability to read for knowledge, write coherently, and express complex thoughts about the written word, has become synonymous with reading. Formal writing instruction has become even more of an after­thought.
    • Elizabeth Tewksbury
       
      SO sad.
    • Hannah Rohner
       
      What a bummer. 
    • Alyssa Littlefield
       
      I think it's interesting that the focus is only on expository and grammar. Isn't there room for everything? 
  • ...5 more annotations...
    • Alyssa Littlefield
       
      I agree with early instruction, the how to, for writing. I can't help but allow creativity in there as well. 
  • Kids who come from poverty, who had weak early instruction, or who have learning difficulties, he explains, “can’t catch anywhere near what they need” to write an essay.
  • The harder they looked, the teachers began to realize, the harder it was to determine whether the students were smart or not—the tools they had to express their thoughts were so limited that such a judgment was nearly impossible.
    • Suzanne Tighe
       
      Sometimes its not whether a child is "smart" or not, but if they have the ability to express their thinking (verbally or written)
  • understanding
  • don’t learn how to teach writing
thebda

Creativity Becomes an Academic Discipline - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  •  
    Learning to Think Outside the Box
Susan Inman

Why K-12 schools are failing by not teaching SEARCH | The Thinking Stick - 3 views

  •  
    Interesting article about teaching students how to search on the web...with k-12 lesson plans for teaching search techniques
seth_mitchell

14 Steps to Meaningful Student Blogging - 2 views

  • Teach them how to blog first. We did an excellent paper blogging lesson first (found on the blog of McTeach), which brought up why we were blogging and how to do it appropriately.  This got the students excited, interested as well as got them thinking about what great comments look and sound like.
    • seth_mitchell
       
      This is such a crucial step.  My own failed attempts at creating a classroom of bloggers can be traced back to this missing step. The paper idea is worth exploring.
  • Talk safety!
    • seth_mitchell
       
      It would be worth offering some of Common Sense Media's lessons here: http://www.commonsensemedia.org/educators/curriculum
  • They taught each other how to do anything fancy and also let each other know when font or color choices were poor.
    • seth_mitchell
       
      There's an untaught rhetoric here.
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  • Don't grade!
seth_mitchell

At the Teacher's Desk: Blogging Isn't the Answer to Your Students' Writing Needs - 2 views

  • for teaching writing, blogging isn't the best choice. Your students will learn much more and be less likely personalize their mistakes if you have those conversations face to face. Where blogging shines is through the ideas shared and the conversations created by posting online. If that isn't the goal of your writing assignment, perhaps you need to rethink the medium you have chosen for your students to use.
    • seth_mitchell
       
      Blogging as shared thinking -- an excellent point.  Makes me rethink some things before leaping back into blogging projects next year.
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