Teachers learn to teach primarily by recalling their memories of having been taught, an average of 13,000 hours of instruction over a typical childhood.
A Picture Of Language: The Fading Art Of Diagramming Sentences : NPR Ed : NPR - 0 views
Zabaware - Text-to-Speech Reader - 0 views
How Google Impacts The Way Students Think - 0 views
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I agree with the theme of this argument but not the points used to present it. I believe students have become less adept when it comes to forming and framing questions for research, and because of that, they either misunderstand their goals or readily lose sight of them, especially as a process. However, the argument that because a question is able to be google means it's a bad question is both a logical fallacy and a specious claim. Also, the interdependence position effaces the culture of criticism students use to derive context in even the most trivial situation because that's what Google is - trivia. I think the writer misses the phenomenon that Google, and social media, act as both a closed and open narrative, but either way, it's continuous and interdependent.
An Updated List Of Education-Relevant MOOCs For May 2014 - 0 views
50 Inspiring TED Talks For Teachers: An Updated List For 2014 - 1 views
The Best Education Blogs For 2014: One List - 0 views
22 Easy Formative Assessment Techniques for Measuring Student Learning - 2 views
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Last year about this time in an AAS/NZAS meeting an article about 10 short assessments was looked at. The team then created some suggested applications of these. This article has extended that list and has some good ideas for wrapping up the term. PS If anyone wants a copy of the concrete ideas from last year, let me know.
Homework ban proposed by councillors in Swedish city of Hallstahammar - Europe - World ... - 1 views
Why Do Americans Stink at Math? - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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Left to their own devices, teachers are once again trying to incorporate new ideas into old scripts, often botching them in the process.
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how rarely teachers discussed their teaching methods
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Health Check: sitting versus standing - 0 views
MOOCs: a massive opportunity for higher education, or digital hype? | Higher Education ... - 1 views
Using a foreign language changes moral decisions | UChicago News - 0 views
Why Do I Teach? - NYTimes.com - 1 views
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Overall, college education seems a matter of mastering a complex body of knowledge for a very short time only to rather soon forget everything
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I’ve concluded that the goal of most college courses should not be knowledge but engaging in certain intellectual exercises.
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We should judge teaching not by the amount of knowledge it passes on, but by the enduring excitement it generates. Knowledge, when it comes, is a later arrival, flaring up, when the time is right, from the sparks good teachers have implanted in their students’ souls.
Educational Leadership:Feedback for Learning:Seven Keys to Effective Feedback - 0 views
The 31 most influential classic books in education - a crowd-sourced list « G... - 2 views
How do you plan? On templates and instructional planning « Granted, but… - 3 views
Teaching Students to Ask Questions Instead of Answering Them by Matthew H. Bowker - 2 views
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This is pretty direct, and it hits on the point of education as transformative instead of distributive or directive. I think his reference to Winnicot's "holding environment", and it's awkward maternalism could be supplemented by good ol' Vygotsky's ZPD, Zone of Proximal Development, and his general theory of intersubjectivity, which provides us with the common term "scaffolding". Plus, I like that both Vygotsky and Piaget regard this portion of cognitive development as continuous and culturally recursive.
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