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Cally Flickinger

Cool Tools for 21st Century Learners: Grab a ThingLink Account for Your School District - 0 views

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     Great tutorial about using Thinglink for curricula and student curation and collaboration in creative and authentic ways. 
Kate Frisbie

Mixtapes: The Future of Curation? - Cuepoint - Medium - 0 views

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    A very interesting essay comparing curation to mixed tapes. As a child of the 80s and maker of many mixed tapes, the analogy works for me. It helped me visualize the beauty and effect of Storify or Diigo. Warning: the writer is promoting his next product, but regardless his analogy works.
Kate Frisbie

Social Media for Teachers: Guides, Resources, and Ideas | Edutopia - 0 views

  • n a 2014 survey of 1,000 teachers, just one in five said they use social media regularly with students.
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    Social media can provide great tools for education. Matt Davis has gathered some of the best resources to help teachers get started.
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    Good resources for using the social media tools in your classroom. As I become more comfortable in this social media world, I feel I need to incorporate it into my classes.
Kate Frisbie

Storify · Make the web tell a story - 1 views

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    This is a really cool curation tool.
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    I'm trying Storify as a new curation tool. It looks to be a great way to expose students to topics yet enable them to explore in various ways.
Cally Flickinger

A Guidebook for Social Media in the Classroom | Edutopia - 0 views

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    Great examples of actual use of technology on classrooms by Vicki Davis through Edutopia. 
leahammond

Visual Arts | Scoop.it - 1 views

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    my Scoop.it
leahammond

True Grit: The Best Measure of Success and How to Teach It | Edutopia - 0 views

  • predict academic success
  • “Grit Scale”
  • grit is a better indicator of GPA and graduation rates. (IQ, however, is very predictive of standardized test scores.)
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  • Some would argue that grit is inherent in Albert Bandura’s research on self-efficacy, and that resilience is also part of i
  • tackling grit in my classroom and school.
  • Read Books About Grit
  • Talk About Grit
  • Share Examples
  • elp Students Develop a Growth Mindset
  • rol Dweck from Stanford University teaches us that students who have a growth mindset are more successful than those who think that intelligence is fixed. 5. Reframe Problems Using stories and examples from Malcom Gladwell's book David and Goliath, we talk about "desirable difficulties." Students need perspective about problems to prevent them from giving up, quitting or losing hope. 6. Find a Framework I use Angela Maiers' Classroom Habitudes as my framework. The KIPP framework specifically includes grit as one of its seven traits. Find one that works for your school and includes clear performance values. 7. Live Grittily You teach with your life. Perhaps that is why Randy Pausch's Last Lecture and David Menasche's Priority List resonate. These teachers used their own battle with death itself as a way to teach. But you don't have to die to be an effective teacher. Our own work ethic yells so loudly that kids know exactly what we think about grit. 8. Foster Safe Circumstances That Encourage Grit Never mistake engaging, fun or even interesting for easy. We don't jump up and down when we tear off a piece of tape because "I did it." No one celebrates easy, but everyone celebrates championships and winners because those take grit (and more). We need more circumstances to help kids to develop grit before they can "have it." Tough academic requirements, sports and outdoor opportunities are all ways to provide opportunities for developing grit. Verena Roberts, Chief Innovation Officer of CANeLearn says: One of the best ways to learn about grit is to focus on outdoor education and go out into the wild. Grit is about not freaking out, taking a deep breath, and moving on. 9. Help Students Develop Intentional Habits Read about best practices for creating habits, because habits and self-control require grit. 10. Acknowledge the Sacrifice Grit Requires Grit takes time, and many students aren't giving it. In their 2010 paper "The Falling Time Cost of College", Babcock and Marks demonstrate that, in 1961, U.S. undergraduates studied 24 hours a week outside of class. In 1981, that fell to 20 hours, and in 2003, it was 14 hours per week. This is not to create a blame or generation gap discussion, but rather to point out the cost of being well educated. We are what we do, and if we study less and work less, then we will learn less. Educators Need Grit Now we as teachers just need the grit to do whatever it takes to turn education around, and that starts with hard work and our own modern version of true grit. Teaching it and living it is now front and center in the education conversation. Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher's Profile Sign in or register to post Sign in to vote! (3) The Educational Benefits of GritThe character traits of determination, adaptability and reflection add up to a critical 21st century skill.<< Previous Next >> Learn More About Education Trends Latest Reconnecting Adults With Playful Learning A New Must-Read for All Educators Google for Educators: The Best Features for Busy Teachers What Is Personalization, Really? 20 Top Pinterest Tips Vicki Davis @coolcatteacher Computer Fundamentals, Computer Science and IT Integrator from Camilla, GA follow: http://www.facebook.com/coolcatteacherhttp://www.twitter.com/coolcatteacherhttps://plus.google.com/+VickiDavishttp://www.youtube.com/coolcatteacher/http://www.linkedin.com/in/coolcatteacher/http://www.pinterest.com/coolcatteacher Related Tags: Education TrendsCollege ReadinessResilience and GritCharacter EducationAll Grades In This Series T
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    How and why to teach students grit
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    Grit! Who knew?!
leahammond

Teacher: We Are Pawns in Someone Else's Game | Diane Ravitch's blog - 0 views

  • Teacher: We Are Pawns in Someone Else’s Game
  • Schools market a product. It’s called education. It’s called reading and writing and math and social studies and science. It is called college and career readiness. But most importantly, it’s called hope and dreams. It is the future we market.
  • Or at least we used to. Nowadays, we’re forced to market high test scores and low suspension rates.
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  • At the end of the day, public schools can be the saviors of a nation. As the only institution in America that routinely sees 50 million young people a day, we have a chance to redefine our future. But instead of leading the way, we have lost our way and our mission, once clear as a bright sunny day, has become muddied and incoherent. Business and politics have so polluted our ranks that it has become increasingly difficult to distinguish among educational, political and business leaders
  • We give lip service to what is best for kids, but operationally, we don’t follow through. We are not allowed to. If we did what was best for kids, we would enforce behavioral codes uniformly, restructure our secondary schools to create a relationship rich culture, reform funding structures to ensure equality in opportunity, build strong home school partnerships and reestablish the teaching profession as the expert in all matters educational.
  • Until we regain our leadership role, public education will continue to be bullied and dragged into the mud. Teachers’ unions at all levels must reinvent themselves as leaders in best practices, and until that occurs, they will continue to loose footing with both the public and legal infrastructures of our country. Education leaders have embraced the conversation about single data point testing, instead of fighting against the flawed logic driving it. In backroom conversations, we all talk about the absurdity of it, but in public view, we refuse to take the lead, instead ignoring common sense and the legions of evidence that undermine its credibility.
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    The product of today's public education system. Who is setting the standard and why?
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    I don't agree with everything in this article, but it is an interesting read.
leahammond

Teachers Vow Fight Against Proposed Spending Cap On Schools | Vermont Public Radio - 0 views

  • Teachers Vow Fight Against Proposed Spending Cap On Schools
  • curb the growth of property taxes
  • “It is an assault on voters’ intelligence to suggest that they don’t know how to analyze their own school budgets and vote accordingly,” says Darren Allen, spokesman for the Vermont teachers union
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  • Their new plan to impose spending caps on school budgets might help accomplish that goal
  • The cap means officials could not present to voters any budget plan that resulted in a more than 2 percent increase in per-pupil costs. And it’s this language that teachers object to the most. Allen says it’s a blunt policy instrument that will inflict serious harm on public schools.
  • If a vote for a community exceeds 2 percent per pupil in expenditures, it’s deemed to have failed,” Sharpe says
  • But the most contentious provision in the bill calls for a hard cap on per-pupil spending increases.
  • But even diehard proponents of education funding reform say the House Education Committee’s approach could do more harm than good.
  • “It’s unfortunate, taking away more authority from local school boards and local decision makers and local voters,” Scheuermann says.
  • The House Committee on Ways and Means will d
  • bate the proposed spending cap when lawmakers return to Montpelier next week. Sh
  • arpe says the version of the cap in the education committee’s bill is admittedly flawed, insofar as it fails to recognize various factors that might make a per-pupil spending increases of more than 2 percent necessary for some districts.
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    Cap on School Spending per pupil, Vermont
Cally Flickinger

All the Reasons Why | Connecting Our Literacy Lives Inside and Outside the Classroom - 0 views

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    I chose this because it reminded me on taking small steps to make change as it was discussed in Switch and also that it can be messy.  This is a very simple article that highlights the importance of connections, a messy time and creativity with growth.  
Cally Flickinger

NSBA NAMES '20 TO WATCH' EDUCATION TECHNOLOGY LEADERS | National School Boards Association - 0 views

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    This is a list from the National School Boards Association of "20 to watch education technology leaders" in March 2015.
Jeffrey Badillo

Google Cultural Institute - 0 views

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    Take your students to the google cultural institute! See this resource for curations (Art, History, Museum collections, etc...)
Jeffrey Badillo

Creating a web presence - 1 views

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    Resource outlining steps for creating a web presence, creating blogs
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    Resource outlining steps for creating a web presence.
Jeffrey Badillo

Jeffrey Badillo (jeff_badillo) - 0 views

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    Jeffrey Badillo | education, digital learning, just getting started
Jeffrey Badillo

Teacher Tech | Alice Keeler - 0 views

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    Follow Alice Keeler's blog and on twitter for google How-Tos and practical tip for integrating technology in the classroom.
Joy Ray

Joy Ray (joyray) on about.me - 1 views

shared by Joy Ray on 06 Mar 15 - No Cached
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    View Joy Ray on about.me. About.me makes it easy for you to learn about Joy Ray's background and interests.
Joy Ray

Organize your resources in an online binder - LiveBinders - 0 views

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    LiveBinders is your 3-ring binder for the web, create an online binder for content curation
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