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Michele Mathieson

Global Design Day 2019 - 0 views

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    Check this out - free Design Thinking activities you can use with your students to get familiar with the Design Thinking process.
Michele Mathieson

5-Minute Film Festival: Design Thinking in Schools | Edutopia - 0 views

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    Check this out - ideas to incorporate design thinking in the classroom. Might help jump start a FAB Lab project or class activity. Erica and Megan saw this in action this past summer. Ask them about it.
john russell

Applying PBL fundamental skills - 41 views

In art, I have been using the DQ,driving questions, recently with my unit on the self portrait, and in the Red Grooms project. In the self portrait unit, students are creating 3D images about who t...

PBL TLT

lisacetroni

Understanding by Design: Essential Questions | huffenglish.com - 2 views

  • Our students need a curriculum that treats them more like potential performers than sideline observers
  • Essential questions “keep us focused on inquiry as opposed to just answers” (124).
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    This article speaks to me about EQ's. Do you feel the same?
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    I like the idea that there is no definitive answer to a well crafted essential question. That depending on where/when/whom it is asked, the answer will always be different.
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    I see there is a lot of confusion or disagreement about what a good essential question is.
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    The EQ reminds me how a curious learner might approach a topic or subject. As they learn more they can still ask the same question. It's not about mastery but about the joy of research, inquiry, thinking, deducing or inferring and all driven by the EQ.
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    As I read this article, I found that it connected project-based learning and EQ's together. It emphasized the importance of general questions that require inquiry, thought, and group discussions. It makes me want to look at my unit and come up with one-two over arching questions, and put them up in the classroom. Throughout the unit, I would reference the question and as we learned/discovered more about our topic of study, the students would be able to dig deeper and deeper into the EQ. (Just like project-based learning, where students are given problems and work to find a solution over time). By the way, I am pretty sure that I own the book that was referenced in this article. If anyone wants to borrow it, please let me know.
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    I find Wiggins and McTighe's views thought provoking. I've read some of their book...Understanding by Design. The framework they use is backwards. They recommend beginning with the essential questions which link to the understanding, then determine the assessment, and lastly develop your activities. I like this idea...it forces the designer to focus on the understandings and essential questions throughout the entire design process. I would like to keep my focus on my essential questions and what I want my students to truly understand.
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    I think this article reflects the importance of learning through inquiry and exploration that many of us value, especially as teachers of younger learners. The idea of an essential question being something pointed but allowing for a lifetime of thought or study is one that I'm sure many of us would hope our essential questions might capture. However, I struggle to visualize how this would look in a first grade classroom. When would we share these questions with our students, or would we not? Are these questions for us to build our lessons around or are they something we would like our students to attempt to answer in a concrete way at some point during a unit? Must they be subject specific or are there more general lines of inquiry that could be applied across the curriculum? I would be interested to read examples of effective essential questions that fall within this description that have been used with younger students, and what kind of learning this has led to.
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    Parts of the article made me want to reread dewey and eisner.....there is a great quote from eisner about viewing as curriculum not as something to be covered....makes me wonder what it would be like to have some large essential questions for the whole school..... And then more narrowed ones for each class..... Creating life long learners should be our goal.....i always find it disheartening when i ask students at the end of the unit of study what they are still wondering and they write "nothing"..., then i feel that i have not taught well.... But then maybe as the article states we feel that we shouldnt have questions at the end of a lesson....we have been "trained" to think that sitting through a lesson should answer all of our questions answered, when in fact the opposite is true. Sorry for the lack of punctuation and upper case letters, but i am wedding prep exhausted.
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    I like the concept that education "is not about learning the answer but about learning how to learn". I also like the idea of having the students try and personalize the questions, trying to relate the essential questions to their lives and experiences or ideas they have had.
lisacetroni

Educational Leadership: Making Thinking Visible - 5 views

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    Great article. Straightforward ways to help students understand more deeply by speaking, writing or drawing their ideas. Learn about "thinking routines" designed by researchers at Project Zero at Harvard. Let me know if you want to borrow the book.
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    Fascinating article. Got me thinking...!
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    I like the part at the end of the article titled "Thinking Routines: Tools for Making Thinking Visible". It gives you a quick reference on how you could incorporate this into your lessons.
lisacetroni

Authentic Education - What Is an Essential Question? - 1 views

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    Grant Wiggins is considered the guru of Essential Questions. Does this article confuse or clarify?
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    We liked the question "How do the best writers hook and hold readers?" as a possibility for generating discussion that connects mentor texts with student writing in Writing workshop. We think the above question could also be used in RLA. Lisa posed the question "What makes a story good?" at the beginning of the year in her third grade RLA class. Karen and Lisa think both are possibilities for overarching questions that may help our students make significant connections between what they read and what and how they write. ( Lisa Keeler and Karen LeMaire worked together because Lisa forgot her iPad.)
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    Good article, very concise, easy to follow. I think it clarifies things pretty nicely. I found it helpful.
Michele Mathieson

Innovative Teaching Toolbox - 0 views

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    More PBL, Design Thinking and Innovative ideas and projects
Michele Mathieson

Introducing Design Thinking to Elementary Learners | User Generated Education - 0 views

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    Examples that can be used during our FabLab times.
francisatemo

Doing School "Different" vs "Better" - A.J. JULIANI - 0 views

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    A good reminder that we do not need to change what has been working, we just need to think about how to do it different to suit the current context.
lisacetroni

8 Essentials for Project-Based Learning (by BIE) | Project Based Learning | BIE - 2 views

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    If you haven't already joined BIE, I suggest you do it now. (Free, of course.) Download this article as a PDF to your iBooks. It is straightforward and clear. It will help you upgrade your practice from "doing projects" to engaging students in designing and creating meaningful projects to address real questions, issues and problems.
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    What this article has to say is 'spot on' but its tone is a little smug and patronizing.
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    Two quotes from the article that stuck with me: In terms of making a project feel meaningful to students, the more voice and choice, the better. In writing journals, students reflected on their thinking and problem-solving processes...
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    I've been using their resources this year in my 7/8 classroom. I've found them really helpful!
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    Thanks Lisa.
Michele Mathieson

The Bestselling Kickstarter Board Game of All Time Teaches Your Kids Basic Programming ... - 1 views

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    Preschool, Kindergarten or 1st interested in this?
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    Sounds like a great alternative to an app! Just when you thought board games were fading away and this one looks so interactive, fun, and provides early coding experiences. It would require too much teacher attention in preschool but Jr/k, K or 1st could handle it. We should purchase at least one game to share.
Michele Mathieson

AltSchool - 0 views

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    Ideas for FAB lab - from Erica
john russell

MAEDASTUDIO - 0 views

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    check out tangrams section ....won't work on iPad because of an old Java script... see the interface of math, design, "digital thinking", art, and ancient cultures...
Michele Mathieson

Classroom Ideas for Learning with an iPad - iPads for Learning - Department of Educatio... - 1 views

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    Some good ideas for creative iPad lessons that could work for us.
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    Several lesson ideas using only a few different iPad apps (Strip Designer, Idea Sketch, Numbers, etc.) so it's not overwhelming to think about :)
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