When we conceive of learner as knowmad, the traditional roles assigned to teacher and student become less relevant, necessary, and linear. The knowmad is mobile and learns with anybody, anywhere, anytime. As such, the place we now know as school may be too small and perhaps unable to contain the range of learning engagements necessary for those with nomadic tendencies. Rather, think of the extended community--one that is physical, virtual, and blended-- as potential learning spaces that our knowmadic traveler composes, accesses, participates in, abandons, and changes.
Three weeks ago I added another layer to our digital writing workshop: I introduced students to Google Docs, and with it learned the power and potential of yet another space that again is changing writing instruction as I know it.
Educators like Greg Green of Clintondale High School are flipping their school's teaching model upside down with TechSmith tools. Discover what the flipped classroom model is and how it can benefit any school.
As its name suggests, flipping describes the inversion of expectations in the traditional college lecture. It takes many forms, including interactive engagement, just-in-time teaching (in which students respond to Web-based questions before class, and the professor uses this feedback to inform his or her teaching), and peer instruction.
But the techniques all share the same underlying imperative: Students cannot passively receive material in class, which is one reason some students dislike flipping. Instead they gather the information largely outside of class, by reading, watching recorded lectures, or listening to podcasts.
Traditional use of the Web (i.e. non-mobile and non-video usage) is shrinking. Per-person consumption of traditional Web content fell by 3 percent between March 2010 and March 2011 in terms of minutes.
Within that shrinking slice of online time, Facebook is increasingly the portal for everything. While the "document Web" (as author Ben Elowitz terms the old-style Web) shrank by 9 percent overall, Facebook consumption increased by 69 percent, essentially stealing time from everything else. It now accounts for 1 out of every 8 minutes of online time, as opposed to 1 out of 13 at the beginning of the year. Search engines, once the gatekeepers to the Web, are giving way to Facebook. Google and everything it represents is facing the first stages of irrelevancy.
I opted to have students use Google Sites to create their portfolios, for several reasons.
Students were already using Google Documents for their essays, so the interface was reasonably familiar to them.
Google Documents integrates well with Google Sites, so it was very easy for students to embed their essays in their portfolios.
Google Sites allows for easy customization, for any student who might want to get creative with site design.
Using Google Sites along with Google Documents makes it very easy for students to control who's allowed to see what.
This post has two purposes: (1) Present a model you can use for your own students' portfolios. It is critical to know what you want students to present before you begin. (2) Provide videos that show you, step-by-step, how to set up portfolios using Google sites.
An introduction and links to a study by the Apollo Research Institute that list 6 cultural shifts and 10 skills that help people handle those shifts as productively as possible.
In an effort to help schools become more reflective learning environments, I've developed this "Taxonomy of Reflection." - modeled on Bloom's approach. It's posted in four installments:
1. A Taxonomy of Reflection
2. The Reflective Student
3. The Reflective Teacher
4. The Reflective Principal
This website has been designed to describe mobile learning and technology-based activities that facilitate a sense of community in a variety of educational and training settings. The links in the menu lead to descriptions of the individual activities. They rely mostly on texting, emailing, and photo-taking activities. Free, group sharing internet sites are also used which require access to the Internet via a smartphone or computer. Sites such as Flickr Photo Sharing, Google Docs, and Web 2.0 tools supplement some of the activities.
Reflection can be a challenging endeavor. It's not something that's fostered in school - typically someone else tells you how you're doing! At best, students can narrate what they did, but have trouble thinking abstractly about their learning - patterns, connections and progress.
Reflection is the hallmark of many thoughtfully developed portfolios. Reflections on the products within a portfolio allow the audience to understand why these items were chosen to represent the student and his / her capacities and can provide some of the best indicators of student growth. However many students often have a difficult time thinking about their own learning when confronted by teachers to do so without guidance or support. When asked to reflect on their learning, students often don't know quite what to say or write - as much of the thinking that has gone on has been either subconscious or nonverbal.
The Stanford University professor who taught an online artificial intelligence course to more than 160,000 students has abandoned his tenured position to aim for an even bigger audience.
The ePI study is exploring large-scale implementations of e-portfolio use in Higher and Further Education and professional organisations in the UK . It is JISC funded and led by the University of Nottingham.
I am one of two coordinators for Albany State University's (Albany, GA, USA) Quality Enhancement Plan (QEP), which centers about an online writing across the curriculum program.