digital portfolios could be used as a “parking lot”
5 Essential Questions About ePortfolios - Getting Smart by Susan Lucille Davis - edchat... - 18 views
6 powerful strategies for paradigm-shifting teacher PD | Connected Principals - 4 views
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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.
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The pecha kucha model is so interesting and would be a great idea for SMWP large groups to showcase work.
Teaching Technology to Teachers: I Used to Think... but Now I Think... - EdTech Researc... - 4 views
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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.
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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.
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professional development plans ultimately need to build towards creating environments where teachers are coaching, guiding, supporting and inspiring one another.
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Chippewa River Writing Project - WHOAAA_Webinar_Oct_2011 - 1 views
The Writing Revolution - Peg Tyre - The Atlantic - 4 views
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“How could they get passed along and end up in high school without understanding how to use the word although?”
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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.
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Why K-12 schools are failing by not teaching SEARCH | The Thinking Stick - 3 views
14 Steps to Meaningful Student Blogging - 2 views
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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.
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Talk safety!
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It would be worth offering some of Common Sense Media's lessons here: http://www.commonsensemedia.org/educators/curriculum
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They taught each other how to do anything fancy and also let each other know when font or color choices were poor.
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At the Teacher's Desk: Blogging Isn't the Answer to Your Students' Writing Needs - 2 views
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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.
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