For many individuals working in higher education, it is the subject level where most networking and exchange takes place. That is why support at the subject level remains at the heart of our work.
We continue to develop and deliver the subject-specific services that are most valued by the sector, including: workshops and seminars, teaching development grants, journals, support and guidance for staff new to teaching, resources and networking opportunities.
"A curated bibliography of quality digital image collections spanning ~85 subjects, including ~950 digital collections, that have been culled primarily from the LibGuides Community, and several subject areas have been further refined by 20 subject liaison librarians at the University of Minnesota - Twin Cities. To browse by 8 general discipline areas see: https://www.lib.umn.edu/media/imageguide (non-editable). The goal of the site is to share this work with the visual resources community, hopefully making the resource stronger through participation for others to repurpose."
This publication and its wider project draw upon several years of ESCalate activity focusing upon the development of learning and teaching in relation to the use of technology. Practitioner-focused workshops, held over the past 3 years, have proved successful in the dissemination of innovative use of emergent technologies and pedagogies in education subjects. Increasingly the presenters and audiences for these events were drawn from wider subject and curriculum areas. This particular project builds upon 2 years of workshops and seeks to collect and disseminate innovative activity in Education subject areas.
Zoom-In Inquiry is often an introduction portion of a lesson. During this activity, students uncover a primary source image piece by piece in order to understand a big idea or theme related to curriculum standards. An investigative question starts the exploration and guiding questions focused on observation, interpretation, and evaluation follow as pieces of the image are revealed one at a time. Students use evidence and subject specific vocabulary to support their hypotheses. Students reflect on their understanding of the primary source and its relationship to "the big picture" or a large scale understanding that is overarching and essential to the subject. Finally, other related primary sources are presented that ask students to apply knowledge and understanding from the Zoom-In Inquiry to a new source or problem.
Slideshare presentation by Buffy Hamilton providing rich information and guidance on how to create 21st Century subject guides/pathfinders. Lots of great tools highlighted.
The more students read, the better they'll read So, why limit their reading to a pre-set reading level with limited titles available?
Students need opportunities to read easy books to build fluency - This is ratified in Appendix A, Page 9, of the CCSS standards. We shouldn't have to define what level they should read at -- whether easy or hard -- for independent reading.
Students need experience reading complex text to improve their ability to decode meaning when they encounter difficult material - This is based on the research of Marilyn Jager Rand, PhD. Brown University
Students will shift from easy --> hard material if it's on a subject of their interest. - So let them choose what they want and their innate curiosity will compel them to read and achieve understanding, thus raising their reading ability.
Students need curiosity to inspire reading. They will either have natural curiosity or stirred up curiosity (stirred up by the educator)
Students need a reason to read that is not about 'assignment' - a quest for knowledge or an answer to find.
In fact, the common skills that are expected to become a personal trainer are best communication abilities with the candidates, patience and encouraging behavior. It means you need to assure the students that they should struggle to have success in the specific subject.
In fact, the common skills that are expected to become a personal trainer are best communication abilities with the candidates, patience and encouraging behavior. It means you need to assure the students that they should struggle to have success in the specific subject.
As you already know, English (ELA) is a broad subject that encompasses a variety of topics including grammar, literature, reading, writing, vocabulary and more. Due to the nature of the discipline, there are thousands of great eBooks-but, which are the best?
Several Nebraska educators and a school librarian review iPad apps for education. Everything is laid out in an easy-to-read grid format, with different pages for various subjects.
WebCHECK Professional, designed for educators and Web designers to use for (1) assessing the quality of Web sites used for assignments and learning activities and (2) determining how to improve the quality of locally-designed personal, classroom, library and/or school Websites.
· WebCHECK Senior, designed for high school students (grades 9-12)
· WebCHECK Middle, designed for middle school students (grade 5-8)
· WebCHECK Junior, designed for elementary school students (grades 2-4)
· WebCHECK for Facilitors, designed for K-12 educators, administrators and higher education faculty to use when assigning a single Web site to be evaluated by groups or classes of students or by educators in an in-service or professional development workshop.
What makes WebCHECK unique:
· based on a foundation of instructional design and motivation theory.
· available online, fully automated, and free.
· both fun and easy-to-use.
· a powerful instructional and learning tool.
· generates a full evaluation report to share results with teachers, administrators, students, parents, etc.
· uses graphs for visual representation of scores and text for details and interpretations.
· On the WebCHECK Web site, you will find all of the instruments, as well as more than 30 lesson plans, designed by school librarians nationwide, that incorporate WebCHECK at various levels and subject areas.
"Although Wikipedia is a great place to find information, it's subject to incomplete citations, biased views, and inaccuracies. And when you absolutely have to have undisputable facts, that's just not good enough. Fortunately, there are plenty of alternatives out there that can deliver with high quality accuracy, and we've listed 25 of the best here."
You are interested in a subject, but you don't know what hashtag people are using. No problem. Use Hashtagify.me. Say you were interested in the "flipped classroom." Type that term into Hashtagify.me and see what happens.