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Daniel Lang

I Had Asperger Syndrome. Briefly. - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Great article on Asperger Syndrome, and the flexible nature of the autistic spectrum. 
Robin Galloway

Harvard and M.I.T. Offer Free Online Courses - 1 views

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    The latest partnership to offer free massively open online courses (MOOCs). Good article outlining the history of such initiatives.
Robin Galloway

Harvard and M.I.T. Offer Free Online Courses - 0 views

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    The latest partnership to offer free massively open online courses (MOOCs). Good article outlining the history of such initiatives. 
heather wendel

Students more likely to graduate at smaller schools- NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • New York City teenagers attending small public high schools with about 100 students per grade were more likely to graduate than their counterparts at larger schools
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    New York City teenagers attending small public high schools with 100 students per grade were more likely to graduate than their counterparts at larger schools
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    Graduating students
Daniel Lang

The Practice Round - Video Library - The New York Times - 0 views

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    A year with Justin Canha, a young man with autism who is part of an new transition program to ready him for an independent life as an adult.
Robin Galloway

Students Speak Up in Class, Silently, via Social Media - 0 views

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    Highlights Iowa teachers and students' use of backchannels in the classroom
Robin Galloway

Virtual and Artificial, but 58,000 Want Course - NYTimes - 1 views

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    58,000 people worldwide signed up for a free online course at Stanford University. 
Kim McCoy-Parker

Sir Ken Robinson: Why We Need to Reform Education Now - 0 views

  • In 1970, the U.S. had the highest rates of high school graduation in the world, now it has one of the lowest.
  • now around 75 percent, which puts America 23rd out of 28 countries surveyed.
  • They are mentors, coaches, motivators, and lifelong sources of inspiration to their students.
  • ...15 more annotations...
  • 'drop out'
  • high schools every day, close to 1.5 million a year.
  • According to one estimate, if the numbers of young people leaving school early could be cut by 50 percent, the net gain to the U.S. economy from savings in social programs and gains in additional tax revenues could be around $90 billion a year - that's almost $1 trillion in just over ten years.
  • One of the themes of TEDTalks Education is that current policies are based on a tragic misdiagnosis of the problem. They treat education as an industrial process rather than as a human one. They are driven by a culture of testing and standardization that has narrowed the curriculum and sees students as data points and teachers as functionaries rather than as living breathing people.
  • To improve our schools, we have to humanize them and make education personal to every student and teacher in the system.
  • The key to personalizing education is to invest properly in the professional development of educators. As Bill Gates argues, teachers need mentors too.
  • 7,000
  • Teaching is an art form. Great teachers know they have to cultivate curiosity, passion and creativity in their students.
  • achievement soars when teachers fire the imaginations of their students with a true spirit of inquiry.
  • All students have their own stories, motivations and circumstances and teachers have to connect with them personally.
  • "Everyone has a story," she says. "Everyone has a struggle and everyone needs help along the way."
  • We have millions of young people walking away from education, he says. But "right now, we could save them all," if we're prepared to innovate fundamentally and not just do more of the same.
  • "Every child," she says, "deserves a champion who will never give up on them... and insists they become the best they can possibly be."
  • give them the creative freedom to innovate and do their jobs within a proper framework of public accountability.
  • There are those who say that we can't afford to personalize education to every student. The fact is that we can't afford not to.
Damian See

Five Research-Driven Education Trends At Work in Classrooms | MindShift - 0 views

  • QUESTIONING HOMEWORK The growing movement against homework in the U.S. challenges the notion that the amount of homework a student is asked to do at home is an indication of rigor, and homework opponents argue that the increasing amount of “busy work” is unnecessarily taking up students’ out-of-school-time. They argue that downtime, free play, and family time are just as important to a child’s social and emotional development as what happens in school. Some research has shown that too much homework has “little to no impact” on student test scores. Other research on how brains work challenges the common method of asking students to practice one discreet skill at home. Overall, there’s a push to reevaluate the kinds of work students are being asked to do at home and to ask whether it adds value to their learning. If the work is repetitive or tangential, it may add no real value, and teachers across the country are starting to institute no-homework policies. Even principals are starting to revolt and schools are instituting “no homework” nights or substituting “goals” for homework.
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    A good article for ideas to use in the classroom.
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