Schools: The Disaster Movie - 0 views
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Whereas the best public-school systems in the world—Finland, Singapore, South Korea—recruit all of their teachers from the top third or better of their college graduates, in America the majority come from the bottom two-thirds, with just 14 percent of those entering teaching each year in high-needs schools coming from the upper third. And the numbers may be getting worse. According to a recent survey conducted by McKinsey, a meager 9 percent of top-third graduates have any interest in teaching whatsoever.
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teacher quality is a national priority: Educators are paid competitively; education schools are highly selective; jobs are guaranteed for those credentialed; and professional development is ample and subsidized.
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“If you want to change public education, you have to do something that feels like a threat to the status quo,” says Canada. “If we don’t fight about this, if we can shake and be friends, we ain’t going to change. And if we don’t change, huge numbers of kids ain’t going to make it. There is no Superman coming to save them. All they have is us.”
Writers Contest | PBS KIDS GO! - 0 views
Innovation Weblog - Trends, resources, viewpoints from Chuck Frey at InnovationTools - 0 views
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Teachers as project managers means they can establish the curriculum for a course, and point the students to outrageously cool and interesting on-line spaces to discover what the teacher is aiming for them to learn. On-line testing can be interactive, embed many visuals, and allow the student to better define what they have learned. The teacher can serve as the organizer and teach the students to work together in teams to define answers to complex problems
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y understand
Education Week: All of My Favorite Students Cheat - 0 views
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Savvy students denigrate that plagiarist. “It’s stupid to get caught taking things from the Internet,” one told me. “No one should be doing that” because it lacks subtlety. They rationalize other forms of cheating as more acceptable. Some claim thoughtless pedagogy justifies their own copying of homework. “We aren’t going to respect teachers who give us photocopied worksheets as ‘busywork.’ We’re not going to waste our time doing that.” Others assert they are “sticking it to the man,” who makes them overwork. Still others say that “as long as we do well on the tests, the homework doesn’t matter.” Grades are “the bottom line.”
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They would not do it, they say, “if the school worked better.”
Leadership in the age of social media - 0 views
Mind Mapping - Mindomo - 0 views
Growth of online learning in Chicago schools draws cheers, worries - chicagotribune.com - 0 views
On The Rocky Road To Strong Global Culture - Forbes.com - 0 views
Best Embeds for Educational Wikis and Blogs - 4 views
Class sizes are getting bigger, but does it really matter? - USATODAY.com - 1 views
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Conventional wisdom says the smaller the classes, the better the education, because teachers can pay more attention to each child. But while smaller classes are popular, decades of research has found that the relationship between class size and student outcomes is murky.
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A study released in May by the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University found that the Florida program had no effect on student achievement.
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"They intuitively believe that small class sizes will allow more individual attention."
Making Connections with Skype - 1 views
Co-Teaching on Edmodo - 0 views
Internet Safety Curriculum - 1 views
Van Meter | Dangerously Irrelevant - 1 views
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