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Katie Day

RSA - Opening Minds - British educational initiative - 0 views

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    "Opening Minds aims to help schools to provide young people with the real world skills or competencies they need to thrive in the real world. It is a broad framework through which schools can deliver the content of the national curriculum in a creative and flexible way so that young people leave school able to thrive in and to shape the real world. Opening Minds was developed by the RSA at the turn of the millennium in response to a belief that the way young students were being educated was becoming increasingly detached from their needs as citizens of the 21st century."
Sean McHugh

From Collecting Dots to Connecting Dots: Using Mind Maps to Improve Memory and Learning... - 0 views

  • Build your mind maps over time, such as before class, during class, and after class: this makes use of distributed practice.
Jeffrey Plaman

How The Mind Really Works: 10 Counterintuitive Psychology Studies - PsyBlog - 2 views

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    Interesting tidbits about how we learn.
Katie Day

Frontiers for Young Minds - science edited for kids, by kids - 0 views

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    Frontiers for Young Minds is a web-based scientific journal with an editorial board of kids.
Katie Day

Misunderstood Minds . Introduction | PBS - 0 views

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    "This site is a companion to the PBS special Misunderstood Minds, and profiles a variety of learning problems and expert opinions. It is designed to give parents and teachers a better understanding of learning processes, insights into difficulties, and strategies for responding. "
Mary van der Heijden

Play, Stress, and the Learning Brain - Dana Foundation - 0 views

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    Editor's note: An extraordinary number of species-from squid to lizards to humans-engage in play. But why? In this article, adapted from Dr. Sam Wang and Dr. Sandra Aamodt's book Welcome to Your Child's Brain: How the Mind Grows from Conception to College (Bloomsbury USA, 2011; OneWorld Publications, 2011), the authors explore how play enhances brain development in children. As Wang and Aamodt describe, play activates the brain's reward circuitry but not negative stress responses, which can facilitate attention and action. Through play, children practice social interaction and build skills and interests to draw upon in the years to come.
Louise Phinney

How To Integrate Education Technology With Scaffolding - 1 views

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    "Meeting with several teachers recently calls to mind a couple of instances that serve as a useful reminder why scaffolding not only applies to teaching content, but is also imperative to employ when introducing new technology into the classroom. I want to share experiences from two teachers that I work with and demonstrate how scaffolding would apply to each situation."
Katie Day

The Essay, an Exercise in Doubt - NYTimes.com - Philip Lopate - 1 views

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    "The essay's job is to track consciousness; if you are fully aware of your mind you will find your thoughts doubling back, registering little peeps of ambivalence or disbelief. According to Theodor Adorno, the iron law of the essay is heresy. What is heresy if not the expression of contrarian doubt about communal pieties or orthodox positions? This is sometimes called "critical thinking," an ostensible goal of education in a democracy. "
Louise Phinney

To Get Students Invested, Involve Them in Decisions Big and Small | MindShift - 0 views

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    "For teachers, in designing learning experiences for students that are embedded with technology, the wording and focus of the question are paramount.  The question needs to be deeper than simply "Should or shouldn't we use the iPad with this project." The question needs to be open ended, elastic and invite multiple interpretations. Learning outcomes based on the question need to be defined and articulated,  and experiences to achieve those outcomes need to be created with student engagement in mind. Engagement alone is not enough. But engagement matched with outcomes around a carefully worded question propels student learning."
Katie Day

Debatabase: a world of great debates | idebate.org - 0 views

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    "'Debatabase is an authoritative collection of over five hundred debates mostly written by experienced debaters. They cover topics from the affirmative action to Zimbabwe, on all sorts of themes including politics, economics, religion, culture, science and society. For debaters they may provide useful preparation materials and examples but the debates will be useful to everyone. Debatabase topics provide both sides of the debate rather than giving just one side of the argument as most blogs, newspapers and other articles you can find online do. We want you to make up your own mind on these important issues and believe you need both sides of the argument to make an informed choice."
Louise Phinney

7 Learning Apps You should not Miss - 1 views

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    Easy Bib, Bamboo Paper, Study Blue, Study Tracker, Simple Mind, My Homework, Paper
Louise Phinney

GraphWords.com - Visualize 'friend' word - 1 views

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    Interesting visual tool - you type in a word, it generates / finds words from the thesaurus and creates a mind map
Louise Phinney

The Discovernator : Discovery News - 0 views

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    Discovery News' "Discovernator" - generates a series of interesting facts.  Just reload the page to see what crazy fact comes up next.  This would be great for generating discussions in science and social studies.  Mind the comments below the generator - as with all sites that allow commenting, there is little control over what people contribute.
Katie Day

60-Second Adventures in Thought - OpenLearn - Open University - 0 views

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    "Can a cat be both alive and dead? Can a computer think? How does a tortoise beat Achilles in a race? Voiced by comedian David Mitchell, these fast-paced animations explain six famous thought experiments, from the ancient Greeks to Albert Einstein, that have changed the way we see the world. Subjects as vast as time travel, infinity, quantum mechanics and artificial intelligence, are squeezed into 60-second clips that will tickle your funny bone and blow your mind."
Louise Phinney

The Great Question Press - 3 views

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    this is an old post, but I like how it looks at changing questioning style i order to get the most out of our students No more trivial pursuit. No more topical research. No more hunts for simple facts - deadly, tiresome and lacking in value, mind-numbing activities without import. This article offers something like a cider press - but one that easily produces intriguing questions from the mass of curriculum content that usually inspires mere collection or varieties of trivial pursuit.
Jeffrey Plaman

Welcome To Focus Education - 1 views

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    Focus Education provides a global Professional Learning Service for educators, corporations, parents and students. The mission of the organisation is to provide the most current information about learning with the brain in mind as possible, at the most competitive rate achievable.
Katie Day

Neuroscience & the Classroom - 0 views

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    "Neuroscience & the Classroom: Making Connections is a self-contained distance-learning course distributed free of charge on the Web. The course is designed by Kurt Fischer, director of the Mind, Brain, and Education Program at Harvard University Graduate School of Education; Mary Helen Immordino-Yang, assistant professor of education at the Rossier School of Education and assistant professor of psychology at the Brain and Creativity Institute, University of Southern California; and Matthew H. Schneps, George E. Burch Fellow in Theoretic Medicine and Affiliated Sciences at the Smithsonian Institution and director of the Laboratory for Visual Learning at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA). The multimedia course consists of six units, with an introduction and a conclusion. Each unit contains many integrated videos and sidebars of additional information, as well as a list of resources."
Jeffrey Plaman

How to Fuel Students' Learning Through Their Interests | MindShift - 0 views

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    ""I still teach with standards in mind," he said. "I just teach inductively from the standards instead of using them as the ceiling.""
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