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newlearningonline.com newlearningonline.com
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Rather than address the specificities meaning-making systems (which we tended to do earlier), we propose that the conventions of any domain be addressed with open-ended questions about meaning, such as:•Representational: What do the meanings refer to?•Social: How do the meanings connect the persons they involve?•Structural: How are the meanings organised?•Intertextual: How do the meanings fit into the larger world of meaning?•Ideological: Whose interests are the meanings skewed to serve?
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The Multiliteracies view of design has three aspects: Available Designs (found representational forms); the Designing one does (the work you do when you make meaning, how you appropriate and revoice and transform Available Designs); and The Redesigned (how, through the act of Designing, the world and the person are transformed)
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pedagogy of Multiliteracies, in contrast, requires that the enormous role of agency in the meaning making process be recognised, and in that recognition, it seeks to create a more productive, relevant, innovative, creative and even perhaps emancipatory, pedagogy. Literacy teaching is not about skills and competence; it is aimed a creating a kind of person, an active designer of meaning, with a sensibility open to differences, change and innovation. The logic of Multiliteracies is one which recognises that meaning making is an active, transformative process, and a pedagogy based on that recognition is more likely to open up viable lifecourses for a world of change and diversity.
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n a pedagogy of Multiliteracies, all forms of representation, including language, should be regarded as dynamic processes of transformation rather than processes of reproduction.
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Is the information easy to use? Limit the number of messages, use plain language, and focus on action.3, 4 Keep it simple. The number of messages will depend on the information needs of the intended users. As a general guideline, use no more than four main messages. Give the user specific actions and recommendations. Clearly state the actions you want the person to take. Focus on behavior rather than the underlying medical principles. Use familiar language and an active voice. Avoid long or run-on sentences. Organize similar information into several smaller groups. Many of the same plain language techniques that make the written word understandable also work with verbal messages, such as avoiding jargon and using everyday examples to explain technical or medical terms the first time they are used. For more information on plain language, visit www.plainlanguage.gov. Supplement instructions with pictures. Individual learning styles differ. For many people, visuals are a preferred style, especially for technical information.3 Simple line drawings can help users understand complicated or abstract medical concepts. Make sure to place images in context. When illustrating internal body parts, for example, include the outside of the body. For print communication, use captions or cues to point out key information.3 Show the main message on the front of the materials. Use visuals that help convey your message. (Don't just “decorate,” as this will distract users.) Make visuals culturally relevant and use images that are familiar to your audience. Back to Top Make written communication look easy to read.3-5 Use at least 12-point font. Avoid using all capital letters, italics, and fancy script. Keep line length between 40 and 50 characters. Use headings and bullets to break up text. Be sure to leave plenty of white space around the margins and between sections. Improve the usability of information on the Internet. Remember Refer to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Policies for Federal Public Websites for further guidance. Studies show that people cannot find the information they seek on Web sites about 60 percent of the time.6 This percentage may be significantly higher for persons with limited literacy skills. Many of the elements that improve written and oral communication can be applied to online information, including using plain language, large font, white space, and simple graphics.7 Other elements are specific to the Internet. These include: Enhancing text with video or audio files Including interactive features and personalized content Using uniform navigation Organizing information to minimize searching and scrolling6 Giving users the option to navigate from simple to complex information A critical way to make information on the Internet more accessible to persons with limited literacy and health literacy skills is to apply user-centered design principles and conduct usability testing. Usability is a measure of several factors that affect a user's experience interacting with a product, such as a Web page. These factors include: How fast can the user learn how to use the site? How fast can the user accomplish tasks? Can the user remember how to use the site the next time he or she visits? How often do users make mistakes? How much does the user like the site? To learn more about usability, visit www.usability.gov.
All of these are questions doctors and nurses should be asking themselves when sharing information.
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Health information can overwhelm even persons with advanced literacy skills. Medical science progresses rapidly. What people may have learned about health or biology during their school years often becomes outdated or forgotten, or it is incomplete. Moreover, health information provided in a stressful or unfamiliar situation is unlikely to be retained.
Exactly! Health information requires more specific knowledge.
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www.ascd.org www.ascd.org
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Teacher modeling in the beginning of the phase gives way to student modeling in the latter half. Students take responsibility for teaching their peers a variety of online reading comprehension strategies. Instruction also begins to move from search skills to critical evaluation and synthesis skills. (
Students taking responsibility in there education by collaboration and teaching themselves and others the material
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Reciprocal teaching revolves around four global comprehension strategies: predicting, questioning, clarifying, and summarizing. The teacher explains these strategies to small groups using a shared text, first modeling their use, and then asking students to lead the groups. Internet reciprocal teaching builds on the same principles; however, the teacher first instructs students in a whole-class setting with each person constructing his or her own text while building the online reading comprehension strategies of questioning, locating, evaluating, synthesizing, and communicating.
It is import for teachers to explain to student how to use something but it also important for students to play and figure out something with their peers in a group or on there own
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During Phase 3, students work both individually and in small groups at using strategies and skills from the previous phases to develop lines of inquiry around curricular topics.
In the last phase, students work in small groups to develop their inquiry
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Phase 2 is a collaborative phase during which both teachers and students conduct think-aloud demonstrations and minilessons
In the second phase of internet inquires, students and teachers come together to evaluate the information that students have found online.
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questioning, locating, evaluating, synthesizing, and communicating.
the online reading comprehension strategies include questioning, evaluating, syntehsizing, and communicating
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The teacher explains these strategies to small groups using a shared text, first modeling their use, and then asking students to lead the groups.
in order for teachers to use the global comprehension stragies, they must introduce them to students and let students branch out into small groups
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Reciprocal teaching revolves around four global comprehension strategies: predicting, questioning, clarifying, and summarizing.
the four global comprehension strategies are predicitng, questioning, clarifying, and summarizing
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In addition, the rise of the Internet means that teachers must shift how they teach reading and writing (
In order for teachers to adapt to the forever changing digital age, they must change how they teach their subjects to better incorporate technology and internet inquiries
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These Cs include such skills as creativity, communication, collaboration, critical thinking, and comprehension.
The 5 "C's of change" for the 21st century
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Students needed a sextant, a tool for navigation, to guide them.
students need a tool for navigation to help guide their inquiry online and promote deeper thinking
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Creativity: Students use divergent-thinking skills to generate their own questions and keywords for online searches. Their final projects require them to creatively express their own point of view. Communication: Students share what they learn as they work in small groups and with the whole class. They communicate with a wider audience by posting on a class blog. Collaboration: Students create collaborative knowledge through Internet inquiry and social interactions. They comment on one another's work using technologies such as VoiceThread and support one another through instant messaging. Critical Thinking: When using the Internet, students build the text they read, choosing which links to follow and which to ignore. The nonlinear nature of online reading helps support critical thinking. Students also learn to question the perspective and bias of online sources. Comprehension: Students learn important online reading skills, such as how to distinguish news articles from blog posts and editorials. They carefully read texts they encounter online to understand and evaluate different perspectives.
5 C's overview
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Students take responsibility for teaching their peers a variety of online reading comprehension strategies.
Helps build confidence in their own web literacy skills when they have to share it with others .
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Patricia Reilly Giff's Pictures of Hollis Woods
I love this book so much
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Boolean search terms.
AND, OR and NOT can refine your search by combining or limiting terms. Boolean logic is a system of showing relationships between sets by using the words AND, OR, and NOT. (The term Boolean comes from the name of the man who invented this system, George Boole. https://library.uaf.edu/ls101-boolean
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the teacher first instructs students in a whole-class setting with each person constructing his or her own text while building the online reading comprehension strategies of questioning, locating, evaluating, synthesizing, and communicating.
Helps them become both web consumers and web creators.
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By creating a curriculum that allows for problem-based inquiry learning, high-level discussion, and collaboration. One approach, Internet reciprocal teaching, involves problem-based tasks in which readers create their own text. This provides students a path for navigating the Cs of change. (See "Internet Reciprocal Teaching Promotes the Five Cs.")
Allows them to develop these skills through hands on experience.
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These Cs include such skills as creativity, communication, collaboration, critical thinking, and comprehension.
The 5 C's
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No one gave students a map for Internet inquiry. Students needed a sextant, a tool for navigation, to guide them.
this would be helpful but sadly it doesn't exist .
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Deliberately teaching online reading and research skills is one way to keep students from foundering on their way to the future.
If they don't learn these skills, they may nt being using the internet to it's full potential or may be misusing it
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We then demonstrated how to use basic Boolean search terms.
one method of web searching with a purpose
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Cs of change" that the 21st century has brought us. These Cs include such skills as creativity, communication, collaboration, critical thinking, and comprehension.
c's of change; skills needed to navigate the internet
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We discussed the differences among news articles, blogs, and editorials. Then the students had to post comments on the classroom blog about whether they thought the zoo or the patron was at fault for the attack
Is there any bias in the articles? This could sway the way that the articles portray the information.
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Another technique is to create Internet scavenger hunts connected to the curriculum. On completing the challenge, students share their searching strategies with the class
Great way to incorporate search engine skills! This helps to keep students engaged and interested in learning about how to navigate the internet properly.
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They chose real-life issues that they face every day as at-risk youth. Sure, the school dress code and the school lunch were favorites, but many students chose such crucial issues as how to stop bullying, reducing drug use in school, stopping domestic and relationship violence, and keeping students in school
By allowing student to choose their own topics, they will delve into the issues revolving their lives. It is important to get them to ask these questions and focus on resolving these issues because it shows them that just because a problem persists, it does not mean that there is no solution.
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During Phase 3, students work both individually and in small groups at using strategies and skills from the previous phases to develop lines of inquiry around curricular topics. This type of project requires clear questions, multiple reliable sources, citations, and a final product that communicates that information to others.
Student-centered learning aids in the student taking the responsibility of the own learning. By allowing students to question on their own about a topic, they are producing their own thought process on how to acquire knowledge.
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Making meaning during online reading requires students to combine multiple streams of information from text, video, and audio sources.
Multimodal learning to help students understand the content and how to relay the information that they learned. With many different facets of information retrieval, students can help to reinforce the information that they are learning.
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Students take responsibility for teaching their peers a variety of online reading comprehension strategies. Instruction also begins to move from search skills to critical evaluation and synthesis skills
In this model, students will help to teach their classmates so that all students can know and better understand the content. When students teach their peers, they are reinforcing the information they already know and they are helping their classmates to better understand the information that they may not fully comprehend yet.
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Phase 1 centers on computer basics, word processing skills, Web searching, navigation basics, and e-mail
Basic skills that students should first know when navigating the internet. Some may already have these skills but it is important to still teach them so that they can have a full understanding of the information they are trying to find.
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Reciprocal teaching revolves around four global comprehension strategies: predicting, questioning, clarifying, and summarizing. The teacher explains these strategies to small groups using a shared text, first modeling their use, and then asking students to lead the groups
Using reciprocal teaching to explain to students about internet use and information finding. These types of teaching methods refer to understanding a text of information, which helps when searching for information. Internet reciprocal teaching takes this pedagogy to the next step by including internet literacy and student-based learning techniques.
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These Cs include such skills as creativity, communication, collaboration, critical thinking, and comprehension
The C's of Change
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"You do not simply answer these questions. It is not answer number one; then answer number two. These are questions you keep in the back of your mind as you work."
Internet inquiry is not based on a simple "question and answer" framework, to use the internet to research students have to keep in mind the questions and build up information that they find from credible sources to explain the topic that they are researching.
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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To improve quality of care and reduce disparities, patients’ literacy skills must be acknowledged and addressed within the health care setting. The National Call to Action to Promote Health Literacy, released by the CDC in May, 2010, views limited health literacy as a public health problem (section1) and has articulated 7 goals to deliver person-centered health information and services.
Good argument.
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wiobyrne.com wiobyrne.com
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Open learning, also known as open education, can be defined as a set of practices, resources, and scholarship that are openly accessible, free to use and access, and to re-purpose.
open learning defined
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Open learning, also known as open education, can be defined as a set of practices, resources, and scholarship that are openly accessible, free to use and access, and to re-purpose.
good definition of open learning
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Open learning, also known as open education, can be defined as a set of practices, resources, and scholarship that are openly accessible, free to use and access, and to re-purpose.
This is essential to expanding education and getting the whole picture.
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Open learning, also known as open education, can be defined as a set of practices, resources, and scholarship that are openly accessible, free to use and access, and to re-purpose.
Having access to resources that are able to be re-purposed offer educators and students to use the SAMR model and modify or redefine whatever the learning material is.
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Two heads are always better than one, and it is a good idea to share, compare and contrast ideas with other teachers who may be in other districts, towns, states, and even countries from you.
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this is a reoccurring worry we have we using technology in the classroom
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Making sure reposted media on your website fits legal licensing standards is important to remember.
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Open learning, also known as open education, can be defined as a set of practices, resources, and scholarship that are openly accessible, free to use and access, and to re-purpose.
I can see how this concept is growing with the increased use of technology and the accessibility provided by the internet.
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pre-publication draft
- "OER are teaching, learning, and research resources that reside in the public domain or have been released under an intellectual property license permitting their free use or re-purposing by others"- finding free tools to use is a good way to keep the cost down while integrating technology in our classrooms
- "The Internet can be an empowering tool that allows individuals to create, share, connect, and learn with other like-minded individuals around the globe"- connecting to people around the world can help us to get our students engaged and interested in the topics we are discussing. it can also help them to learn more information.
- "Central to the challenges associated with the use of OER in the classroom are questions about the credibility, value, reliability, and permanence of access of these online materials"- we have to make sure that we are teaching our students to use their critical thinking skills to investigate sources.
- "Many school policies are vague, unclear, or generally do not permit students to construct and share digital content openly online"- it can be difficult in some cases to integrate the internet in our classrooms. If this happens, then we have to be careful about what we introduce to our students
- "The use of OERs has the potential to help teachers find quality resources while encouraging them to share resources. This curation and sharing promotes dialogue about thoughtful teaching and learning within an educator’s PLN"- creating and sharing Open Education Resources can be beneficial to how we set up our classroom learning environment. It can also promote the sharing pedagogical ideas and theories. Teachers helping teachers gain perspective of different teaching and learning ideas.
- "As open learning practices and development of OERs continue to expand and impact practice in K-12 classrooms, issues of ownership, quality, and relevancy must be addressed by education leaders"- we must teach our students about the proper ways to share and search for information online so that they don't have to worry about infringing on copyright or obtaining false information.
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wiobyrne.com wiobyrne.com
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“credibility” and “relevance”…but they do understand words like “truthful” and “useful.”
very important statement for student understanding
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Students collaboratively (with the instructor) identify an area of interest and co-construct a driving question to guide inquiry
teachers step in to help students come up with a subject that interests them and create a driving question to help guide their research
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student interest driven
This is a very important statement because every project that students do will be easier for them to complete if it geniuenly interests them
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As students expand beyond the WebQuest, the next step is to engage in an Internet Inquiry Project.
After students develop WebQuests, they should engage in an Internet Inquiry Project
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Student engage in online content construction by synthesizing what they have learned and selecting the best digital text or tool before sharing this answer.
I think it's important to help students interpret what they read and to guide them in becoming web content creators themselves.
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he Internet Inquiry Project is an online research project that helps students develop the important digital knowledge and skills needed as they build their web literacies.
It's important that students are well versed in how to explore the web and do research in order to obtain accurate knowledge.
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The design, focus, and length of the Internet Inquiry Project should be determined by your student learning objectives, as well as your own technological, pedagogical, and content area knowledge (TPACK) and objectives
To develop lesson plans that use the internet as a learning tool, we must tailor it to our students needs. We have to find out what our students already know and use that as a base to start our lesson plans. If things do not end up working out in a lesson, then we have to fix it so that all of our students can understand the information we are teaching them.
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Another takeaway was that K-12 students don’t understand “credibility” and “relevance”…but they do understand words like “truthful” and “useful.”
Providing simpler language to our students can help them to gain a better understanding of the correct ways of using technology. Making the information less complicated will help them to grasp the concept easier. We can also use our students' lack of knowledge about the internet lingo to teach them how to understand words like "credibility" and "relevance".
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Please note that each of these phases offers its own challenges and may provide opportunities to slow down and focus, or revisit some of these phases over the school year.
We can teach this throughout the school year and with different topics and subjects. Integrating technology across curiculum can help students to better understand how to use their technology resources
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Students critically evaluate online information by considering the credibility (truthfulness) and validity (usefulness) of the information obtained
We teach them how to evaluate their sources so when they get to this point they will know what to look for. (Talk about this with other article- "Prior knowledge we bring to a text profoundly shapes our interpretation"- New Literacies)
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Students collaboratively (with the instructor) identify an area of interest and co-construct a driving question to guide inquiry.
Driving questions help to solidify what kinds of information that we are trying to acquire. It is important to establish these driving questions before conducting research so that students can understand what information they need to be looking for.
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WebQuests typically contain an introduction, task, process, evaluation, and conclusion
The process of obtaining information from the web which can help students to understand the type of information they are recieving and deciding if it is relevant and accurate
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Students collaboratively (with the instructor) identify an area of interest and co-construct a driving question to guide inquiry. Students engage in online collaborative inquiry as they search and sift through online texts using digital tools to address their focus of inquiry. Students critically evaluate online information by considering the credibility (truthfulness) and validity (usefulness) of the information obtained. Students synthesize what they have learned during their online inquiry by actively curating and synthesizing information across multiple, multimodal sources. Student engage in online content construction by synthesizing what they have learned and selecting the best digital text or tool before sharing this answer.
Phases of IIP
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Internet Inquiry Projects are student interest driven, and are more authentic as a learning activity than traditional WebQuests.
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newliteracies.uconn.edu newliteracies.uconn.edu
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Finally, each online tool regularly is updated; each time this happens new affordances appear, requiring addi-tional skills and strategies. It is clear that the nature of literacy regularly and continuously changes in online spaces.
When a website is updated, it comes along with having to learn the new updates.
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To be ready for college, workforce training, and life in a technologi-cal society, students need the ability to gather, comprehend, evaluate, synthesize, and report on information and ideas, to conduct original research in order to answer questions or solve problems, and to analyze and create a high volume and extensive range of print and nonprint texts in media forms old and new. The need to conduct research and to produce and consume media is embedded into every aspect of today’s curriculum.
This is why we have required computer classes
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First, they focus directly on information use and learning, so these skills are central to education at all levels. Second, the ability to read and use online information effectively to solve problems defines success in both life and work
super essential both in and out of the classroom
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In a context in which anyone may publish anything, higher-level thinking skills such as critical evaluation of source material become especially important online
you never know how accurate the things we consume online actually are. There's too much fake news
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1) reading to identify important questions, (2) reading to locate information, (3) reading to evaluate information criti-cally, (4) reading to synthesize information, and (5) reading and writing to communicate information.
important skill set
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How can we develop adequate understanding when the very object that we seek to study continuously changes?
this could open doors to new subject matter that may not have been taught before.
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our students are already “digital natives,” skilled in online literacies (Prensky, 2001)
This is true, but they aren't proficient in the academic side of online literacy, more so just they social media aspect.
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Finally, each online tool regularly is updated; each time this happens new affordances appear, requiring addi-tional skills and strategies. It is clear that the nature of literacy regularly and continuously changes in online spaces.
Once you think you have an understanding of something, it completely changes
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Most importantly, it is reshap-ing the nature of literacy education, providing us with many new and exciting opportunities for our classrooms
I agree. There are now so many new resources to teach with, even just compared to when I was in high school 3 years ago.
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The Internet is a very disruptive technology (Christensen, 1997), alter-ing traditional elements of our society from newspapers to music
never really thought about it this way, but it makes sense
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Studies show that stu-dents lack critical evaluation skills when reading online (Bennet, Maton, & Kervin, 2008; Forzani & Maykel, 2013; Graham & Metaxas, 2003) and that they are not especially skilled with reading to locate information online (Kuiper & Volman, 2008).
Some areas of improvement with literacy.
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Each requires additional reading and/or writing skills to take full advantage of its affordances. In addition, new tools for lit-eracy will appear on the Internet tomorrow with additional, New Litera-cies required to use them effectively.
The definition of literacy changes as new advancements come along.
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requiring additional skills to effectively read, write, and learn, sometimes on a daily basis
yes, with the abundance of media in the form of text comes yet another reason for literacy
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Critically evaluating online information includes the ability to read and evaluate the level of accuracy, reliability, and bias of information
Students need to be able to recognize quality content.
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These sites teach early offline reading skills while they also provide important early experiences with navigating an online interface.
Today's students need to begin using online content from the start of their educational careers.
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Finally, and perhaps most importantly, online reading may require even greater amounts of higher-level thinking than offline reading. In a context in which anyone may publish anything, higher-level thinking skills such as critical evaluation of source material become especially important online.
Students have to know what is quality information.
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(1) reading to identify important questions, (2) reading to locate information, (3) reading to evaluate information criti-cally, (4) reading to synthesize information, and (5) reading and writing to communicate information.
Steps to ensure that we are getting the most out of the content we read online.
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The new literacies of online research and comprehension frames online reading comprehension as a process of problem-based inquiry involving the skills, strategies, dispositions, and social practices that take place as we use the Internet to conduct research, solve problems, and answer ques-tions.
What can we learn from the online readings and research
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Lowercase theories of new literacies explore several types of elements: (1) a set of new literacies required by a specific technology and its social practices such as text messaging (Lewis & Fabos, 2005); (2) a disciplinary base, such as the semiotics of multimodality in online media (Kress, 2003); or (3) a distinctive, conceptual approach such as new literacy studies (Street, 2003). Lowercase theories of new literacy are better able to keep up with the rapidly changing nature of literacy since they are closer to the specific types of changes that rapidly take place.
Lowercase literacies are easier to learn and are continual.
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However, this does not nec-essarily mean they are skilled in the effective use of online information, perhaps the most important aspect of the Internet. Studies show that stu-dents lack critical evaluation skills when reading online (Bennet, Maton, & Kervin, 2008; Forzani & Maykel, 2013; Graham & Metaxas, 2003) and that they are not especially skilled with reading to locate information
Students may know how to use the technology but they may not understand the material they are using.
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Finally, each online tool regularly is updated; each time this happens new affordances appear, requiring addi-tional skills and strategies.
New skills have to constantly be learned.
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Internet is also altering the nature of literacy, generating New Literacies that require additional skills and strategies. Most importantly, it is reshap-ing the nature of literacy education, providing us with many new and exciting opportunities for our classrooms.
With technology comes new abilities.
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Recognize That aNew Literacies Journey Is One ofContinuousLearning
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Use Performance‑Based Assessments forEvaluating Students’ Ability withNewLiteracies
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Integrate Online Communication intoLessons
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Use Online Reading Experiences toDevelop Critical Thinking Skills andaGeneration of“HealthySkeptics
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Teach Online Search Skills Since These Are Important toSuccess intheNew Literacies ofOnline Research andComprehension
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Begin Teaching andLearning New Literacies as Early asPossible
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348PERSPECTIVES ON SPECIAL ISSUESThe UnitedStatesIn the United States, the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) Initia-tive (2012) establishes more uniform standards across states to prepare students for college and careers in the 21st century. One of the key design principles in the CCSS, research and media skills, focuses on the integra-tion of online research and comprehension skills within the classroom such as locating, evaluating, synthesizing, and communicating:To be ready for college, workforce training, and life in a technologi-cal society, students need the ability to gather, comprehend, evaluate, synthesize, and report on information and ideas, to conduct original research in order to answer questions or solve problems, and to analyze and create a high volume and extensive range of print and nonprint texts in media forms old and new. The need to conduct research and to produce and consume media is embedded into every aspect of today’s curriculum. (
United States Standards
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The Internet is this generation’s defining technology for literacy and learning within our global community.2.The Internet and related technologies require new literacies to fully access their potential.3.New literacies are deictic; they rapidly change.4.New literacies are multiple, multimodal, and multifaceted, and, as a result, our understanding of them benefits from multiple points of view.5.Critical literacies are central to new literacies.6.New forms of strategic knowledge are required with new litera-cies.7.New social practices are a central element of new literacies.8.Teachers become more important, though their role changes, within new literacy classrooms. (p.11
New Literacy
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soe.unc.edu soe.unc.edu
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The Wayback Machine records snapshots of a website's pages throughout its history. Those snapshots gather some or all of the pages on the website.
overview of what it does
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The page will appear as it was at the time the snapshot was recorded. The links on the page may or may not work depending on whether or not those URLs were also recorded by the Wayback Machine. If you find that an internal page link does not work, try entering that URL into the Wayback Machine search bar at the top of the page.The search bar within the LEARN page will not work. If this is a page that you intend to access in the future, you may want to bookmark the Wayback Machine URL so you can easily return to it later.
Steps 4 and 5
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The calendar will automatically update to the most recent snapshot of that page.Scroll down to where you see a colored circle around the a date and click on that date for a link to the recorded snapshot from that date.You will be taken to the archive of that webpage.
Step 3
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Point your browser to the LEARN NC archive on the Wayback Machine: http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://www.learnnc.org/ Copy and paste the URL into the search bar on the top of the page.
Steps 1 & 2
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www.edutopia.org www.edutopia.org
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potential to fuel collaboration, encourage the improvement of available materials, and aid in the dissemination of best practices.
could be a really cool way teachers from all over can collaborate. Also, could potentially help streamline what students are being taught in schools and make curriculums more universal
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lms.cofc.edu lms.cofc.edu
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video
- Read- questioning, locating, synthesizing, and communicating information duing online problem based reading tasks
- Changing nature of literacy- new literacies are central to civic, economic and personal participation in a globalized community and, as a result, the education of all students-constantly thinking about and problematizing information we are teaching our students
- the internet as a text- the use of internet in schools extends the boundaries of literature/ transforms instructional practices
- Questioning- can students restate questions in their own words? can they form keywords from this question? can they understand when they have gotten all the information they need?
- Locating- using different search engines, using internal search engines (search engine within a website), how to find infrmation on a webpage, hot to ignore information they don't need to think about
- Evaluate- know when information meets their needs, know how to identify an author or publisher of online information, judge an author's authority on a subject, can see how an author supports ther argument
- Synthesize- know how to select and construct the information they need, know which information to ignore while reading, know how images and numbers help contruct meaning, know when they have the answer
- Communicate- know how to select the most appropriate communication tool for their purpose, know what information to submit, and what to leave out, share all information needed to completely answer the question
- Scaffolding online readers- Google Forms, Blogger or EDUblogs, Diigo, Google Custom Search Engine
- Why is this important? Students that need it the most may be receiving it the least, little known about differences between online and offline reading, authentic, web-based learning assessments
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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Five Keys to Comprehensive Assessment
- Assessments need to evolve to reflect the skills and knowledge that we actually value
- Meaningful Goals and Measures- clear goals help to get students to understand the information
- Formative Feedback- checking for understanding throughout the lessons- steering students to gaining understanding-keep working with them to make sure that they are staying on track, reflecting, and gaining a full understanding of the information that they are learning
- Summative Assessments- summative assessments don't have to be a unit test at the end of a lesson. Having them do a project, write an essay, explain what they have learned so that we can understand how to assess their knowledge of the curriculum
- Performance assessment- collaborting with other effectively, communicate in multiple forms, be critical and creative problem solvers- blend of cognitive and non-cognitive skills and abilities- teaching them to use these skills and abilities so that they can use them in life outside of the classroom- model assessments after real life experience
- Student ownership- When a student takes ownership of their own learning then we can ensure that every student is learning the information- continually engaged in self-assessment and peer assessment- when students have the ability to take ownership of their learning then they begin to value assessment
- Produce a learner that is self-initiating, self-motivated, understands the standards internally, continually driving towards excellence, continually developing their own learning skills, and is able to learn on their own and collaborately with others
- Comprehensive Assessment- improve writing and critical-thinking skills, support engagement and academic performance in a range of subjects, be the most ccost-effective educational intervention
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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Middle School Project: Public Art
Kinetic Sculptures
- Using different classes to teach about curriculum- shop class, english, math, and computer
- Engaging and taking ownership of the information that the students are learning
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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Keeping Assessment Relevant and "Authentic"
authenntic assessment- hit the skills and the needs of the student population identify common mistakes using mistakes to assess connecting math to real life- instead of "here's the formula" use "this is how the ormula works" make tasks authentic anticipate problems emphasis on the "how" of learning assessment as teaching tool
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.comYouTube1
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Eli Pariser
Every person gets different news and search results that are tailored to them. Filter bubble- whats in it is based on who you are and what you do and we don't have control over what is in our filter bubbles.
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www.washingtonpost.com www.washingtonpost.com
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“Search is not used to set a political agenda and we don’t bias our results toward any political ideology,”
This is very interesting and seems like the opposite of what is really happening.
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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Strategy Exchange
When students share what they found with each other, they are helping each other to find more information.
By figuring out what is the best out of all the MP3 players, they are comprehending the information that is being presented on each website.
Collaborating with each other to boost their comprehending skills.
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searchenginewatch.com searchenginewatch.com
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That kind of blind trust may be dangerous for content creators and consumers alike, both in terms of what we see and what we get.
I have been a little naive when it comes to this. I feel like others would be very surprised as well to find that their search results were being thrown off by an algorithm.
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- Feb 2019
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Connected learning is realized when a young person is able to pursue a personal interest or passion with the support of friends and caring adults, and is in turn able to link this learning and interest to academic achievement, career success or civic engagement.
their are so many opportunities and all can be learned by the click of a button about a personal interest
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This model is based on evidence that the most resilient, adaptive, and effective learning involves individual interest as well as social support to overcome adversity and provide recognition.
I thoroughly believe that students need a strong support system in order to really excel in school
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Connected learning is realized when a young person is able to pursue a personal interest or passion with the support of friends and caring adults, and is in turn able to link this learning and interest to academic achievement, career success or civic engagement.
great definition of what connected learning is, helps broaden understanding on how a student can develop connected learning skills
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the most resilient, adaptive, and effective learning involves individual interest as well as social support to overcome adversity and provide recognition.
"Resilient" and "adaptive" are very important words here. Social support is essential as well. Are we teaching people skills and knowledge they can carry outside of the learning environment, and are we giving them the support they need to sustain and implement this knowledge into their lives?
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Connected learning is realized when a young person is able to pursue a personal interest or passion with the support of friends and caring adults, and is in turn able to link this learning and interest to academic achievement, career success or civic engagement
Helping students to have a relatable interest with their learning can help them to succeed in their futures. Making our lessons more understandable and related to their interests is important when setting up their learning environment.
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clalliance.org clalliance.org
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Learning is irresistible and life-changing when it connects personal interests to meaningful relationships and real-world opportunity.
shows how education can make a difference when one makes a personal connection
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Learning is irresistible and life-changing when it connects personal interests to meaningful relationships and real-world opportunity.
how learning can make an impact
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Groups that foster connected learning have shared culture and values, are welcoming to newcomers, and encourage sharing, feedback and learning among all participants.
This statement implies that students who are introduced to connected learning are more welcoming and more open to sharing and communicating with peers
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Feeling emotionally and physically safe and a sense of belonging
This is a HUGE statement. I believe that good mental health is a key aspect to having the best education possible so this statement really shows that YOUmedia students are really getting the best results.
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A survey of 30,000 college graduates found that a strong connection to a faculty member doubled the positive life outcomes of graduates.
This is such an important concept because college is incredibly stressful when going through it by yourself. But when you have a good support system encouraging you to get through the tough classes, it is easier to get through them
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Learning is irresistible and life-changing when it connects personal interests to meaningful relationships and real-world opportunity.
the diagram below this comment demonstrated how aspects of life are connected through connected learning
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Based on her experiences writing online, Abigail decides she wants to become a professional writer.
It is a good example that because she was exposed to fan finction, she develops a want to become a professional writer
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Connected learning combines personal interests, supportive relationships, and opportunities. It is learning in an age of abundant access to information and social connection that embraces the diverse backgrounds and interests of all young people.
This is a good definition of what connected learning is
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In order to support diverse learner pathways, organizations and caring adults can form partnerships, broker connections across settings, and share on openly networked platforms and portfolios.
connections made across different settings
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Learners need to feel a sense of belonging and be able to make meaningful contributions to a community in order to experience connected learning
learners need a shared purpose
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They do this by being sponsors of what youth are genuinely interested in — recognizing diverse interests and providing mentorship, space, and other resources.
adults connecting to youth's interests
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Ongoing shared activities are the backbone of connected learning.
shared practices
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Connected learning does not rely on a single technology or technique. Rather, it is fostered over time through a combination of supports for developing interests, relationships, skills, and a sense of purpose.
elements of connected learning
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It is learning in an age of abundant access to information and social connection that embraces the diverse backgrounds and interests of all young people.
definition of connected learning
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A survey of 30,000 college graduates found that a strong connection to a faculty member doubled the positive life outcomes of graduates.
At every stage of a child's life they need one friend/close teacher or mentor and at least one thing they're good at. This furthers that belief, and shows how students will do better in their education if they have that strong personal connection with a faculty members
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Learning is irresistible and life-changing when it connects personal interests to meaningful relationships and real-world opportunity.
Learning has proven to be deeper and more engaging when connections are formed with students' community, passions/ interests and daily experiences.
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Based on her experiences writing online, Abigail decides she wants to become a professional writer. She applies and gets accepted to a specialized creative writing program at a magnet high school.
By further researching her interest online Abigail was able to find a supportive community that furthered her resources and passion for writing.
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Success beyond the classroom requires tangible connections to real-world career and civic opportunities.
opportunities promote learning
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Learners need support from peers and mentors to persist through setbacks and challenges
mentors help students stay on track and keep up with their studies
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interest helps us pay attention, make connections, persist and engage in deeper learning
interest keeps people focused and wanting to learn
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is learning in an age of abundant access to information and social connection that embraces the diverse backgrounds and interests of all young people.
connected learning defined
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Based on her experiences writing online, Abigail decides she wants to become a professional writer. She applies and gets accepted to a specialized creative writing program at a magnet high school.
By using the internet and online resources Abigail was able to find what she is passionate about. She knows that she wants to become a professional writer and without her discovery of fanfiction she might not of found this.
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Learners need support from peers and mentors to persist through setbacks and challenges.
When it comes to learning about improving one's health, this kind of support is particularly essential because it is often a sensitive subject and can feel like a very long road.
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Learning is irresistible and life-changing when it connects personal interests to meaningful relationships and real-world opportunity.
Irresistible, life-changing learning should always be the goal, and learning is sustained when the learner is interested and provided with supportive relationships and opportunities. Oftentimes, the toughest part is getting the learner motivated and interested in the subject matter, so it is up to the educator to spark that interest early on.
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learning in an age of abundant access to information and social connection
This abundant access can be both good and bad... it is great that we are able to access information more quickly and easily than ever before, but the tricky part is being able to sift through all the information and determine what is credible.
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Groups that foster connected learning have shared culture and values, are welcoming to newcomers, and encourage sharing, feedback and learning among all participants
Teaching our students to be open with others' differences is important when setting up their learning environment. We need to have a safe space for every single one of our students no matter who they are.
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Sponsorship of Youth Interests
It is important to get on our students levels when we are teaching them information. We need to find out what their favorite things are and try to base our lesson plans on incorporating what they like along with the curriculum that we need to teach them.
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Connected learning does not rely on a single technology or technique. Rather, it is fostered over time through a combination of supports for developing interests, relationships, skills, and a sense of purpose.
When we start off the year using different teaching methods and establishing healthy relationships with our students, we can help them to grow immensely in the small amount of time that we know them.
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Opportunities
Providing our students with opportunities to learn outside the classroom or using technology as a tool when we are teaching are good ways to get them involved in their learning and can eventually help them to take control of their learning experience all together, with us being the facilitators of knowledge.
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www.gettingsmart.com www.gettingsmart.com
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SAMR
(S)ubstitution, (A)ugmentation, (M)odification, (R)edefinition.
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Substitution The SAMR Ladder: Questions and Transitions What will I gain by replacing the older technology with the new technology? Augmentation The SAMR Ladder: Questions and Transitions Substitution to Augmentation Have I added an improvement to the task process that could not be accomplished with the older technology at a fundamental level? How does this feature contribute to my design? Modification The SAMR Ladder: Questions and Transitions Augmentation to Modification How is the original task being modified? Does this modification fundamentally depend upon the new technology? How does this modification contribute to my design? Redefinition The SAMR Ladder: Questions and Transitions Modification to Redefinition What is the new task? Will any portion of the original task be retained? How is the new task uniquely made possible by the new technology? How does it contribute to my design?
It is important for teachers to ask themselves these questions when thinking about integrating technology into there lesson
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The key to successful technology integration is the efficient use of digital tools tools that are appropriate for the task. Technology provides us all with the ability to develop our own toolkit of flexible resources for use when needed.
Good way of looking at it
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Teachers in the substitution and augmentation phase can use technology to accomplish traditional tasks, but the real learning gains result from engaging students in learning experiences that could not be accomplished without technology. At the Modification and Redefinition level, the task changes and extends the walls of the classroom
Using the whole SAMR model can help our students to use autonomy to learn information and helps us to differentiate their learning experiences.
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Researchers have determined that technology integration typically moves through specific levels. The higher the level of an activity the greater the educational benefit.
The more technology is integrated into our lessons, the more learning will occur. It is important to remember that technology helps us to make content more relatable and interesting to our students.
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www.citejournal.org www.citejournal.org
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Thus, teachers need to develop fluency and cognitive flexibility not just in each of the key domains (T, P, and C), but also in the manner in which these domains and contextual parameters interrelate, so that they can construct effective solutions.
emphasis on fluency and cognitive flexibility
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. Teachers need to reject functional fixedness
It's possible to incorporate sources that aren't typically viewed as "educational" and make the use of those resources beneficial to the classroom.
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Content knowledge (CK) is teachers’ knowledge about the subject matter to be learned or taught.
Aspect 1: Content knowledge
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produces the types of flexible knowledge needed to successfully integrate technology use into teaching.
purpose of tpack
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technological pedagogical content knowledge (originally TPCK, now known as TPACK, or technology, pedagogy, and content knowledge)
definition of tpack
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Pedagogical knowledge (PK) is teachers’ deep knowledge about the processes and practices or methods of teaching and learning.
not only should teachers have knowledge on the subject, they should also have knowledge about the process and methods of teaching the content.
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t the heart of good teaching with technology are three core components: content, pedagogy, and technology, plus the relationships among and between them.
the three components of teaching with technology are content, pedagogy, and technology
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There is no “one best way” to integrate technology into curriculum. Rather, integration efforts should be creatively designed or structured for particular subject matter ideas in specific classroom contexts.
technology in the classroom should be specifically altered to fit the subject matter for that class
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this knowledge is unlikely to be used unless teachers can conceive of technology uses that are consistent with their existing pedagogical beliefs
teachers are most likely not going to use new technological advances if it does not correspond to their pedagogical beliefs.
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Many teachers earned degrees at a time when educational technology was at a very different stage of development than it is today
Technology is constantly changing and teachers learned how to use different forms of technology in the classroom that have transformed today
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Digital technologies—such as computers, handheld devices, and software applications—by contrast, are protean (usable in many different ways; Papert, 1980); unstable (rapidly changing); and opaque (the inner workings are hidden from users;
digital technologies are said to be unstable since they arent part of the basic technologies
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specificity (a pencil is for writing, while a microscope is for viewing small objects); stability (pencils, pendulums, and chalkboards have not changed a great deal over time); and transparency of function (the inner workings of the pencil or the pendulum are simple and directly related to their function)
these three are pedagogical technologies
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effective teaching depends on flexible access to rich, well-organized and integrated knowledge from different domains
technology is one of the domains required for teaching
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The TPACK framework for teacher knowledge is described in detail, as a complex interaction among three bodies of knowledge: Content, pedagogy, and technology. The interaction of these bodies of knowledge, both theoretically and in practice, produces the types of flexible knowledge needed to successfully integrate technology use into teaching.
the knowledge and practice of the three bodies of knowledge is essential for integrating technology into teaching
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Most traditional pedagogical technologies are characterized by specificity (a pencil is for writing, while a microscope is for viewing small objects); stability (pencils, pendulums, and chalkboards have not changed a great deal over time); and transparency of function (the inner workings of the pencil or the pendulum are simple and directly related to their function) (Simon, 1969). Over time, these technologies achieve a transparency of perception (Bruce & Hogan, 1998); they become commonplace and, in most cases, are not even considered to be technologies. Digital technologies—such as computers, handheld devices, and software applications—by contrast, are protean (usable in many different ways; Papert, 1980); unstable (rapidly changing); and opaque (the inner workings are hidden from users; Turkle, 1995).On an academic level, it is easy to argue that a pencil and a software simulation are both technologies. The latter, however, is qualitatively different in that its functioning is more opaque to teachers and offers fundamentally less stability than more traditional technologies. By their very nature, newer digital technologies, which are protean, unstable, and opaque, present new challenges to teachers who are struggling to use more technology in their teaching.
technologies used in in education
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effective teaching depends on flexible access to rich, well-organized and integrated knowledge from different domains (Glaser, 1984; Putnam & Borko, 2000; Shulman, 1986, 1987), including knowledge of student thinking and learning, knowledge of subject matter, and increasingly, knowledge of technology.
the components of effective teaching
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TPACK framework for teacher knowledge is described in detail, as a complex interaction among three bodies of knowledge: Content, pedagogy, and technology. The interaction of these bodies of knowledge, both theoretically and in practice, produces the types of flexible knowledge needed to successfully integrate technology use into teaching.
TPACK defined
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a framework for teacher knowledge for technology integration called technological pedagogical content knowledge (originally TPCK, now known as TPACK, or technology, pedagogy, and content knowledge)
technological pedagogical content knowledge
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using a new educational technology suddenly forces teachers to confront basic educational issues and reconstruct the dynamic equilibrium among all three elements
This is important to note that technology can enhance teaching and learning and is a useful resource.
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Many teachers earned degrees at a time when educational technology was at a very different stage of development than it is today
I think it would be a good idea to educate these teachers in the usefulness of technology.
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Teachers practice their craft in highly complex, dynamic classroom contexts (Leinhardt & Greeno, 1986) that require them constantly to shift and evolve their understanding.
Teachers are in a room full of students of all different backgrounds and interests. It is important that teachers change and evolve so that we can understand what they need to succeed and we can teach in their zone of proximal development.
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Also complicating teaching with technology is an understanding that technologies are neither neutral nor unbiased. Rather, particular technologies have their own propensities, potentials, affordances, and constraints that make them more suitable for certain tasks than others (Bromley, 1998; Bruce, 1993; Koehler & Mishra, 2008).
Technology is never neutral or unbiased, meaning that there is always a deeper message or meaning behind how you use technology and hat type of technology you use.
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The TPACK framework builds on Shulman’s (1987, 1986) descriptions of PCK to describe how teachers’ understanding of educational technologies and PCK interact with one another to produce effective teaching with technology
Effective teaching with tech. What does that look like?
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There is no “one best way” to integrate technology into curriculum. Rather, integration efforts should be creatively designed or structured for particular subject matter ideas in specific classroom contexts.
Integrating tech into every lesson may not be something that is realistic for teachers. This might not be the best approach when it comes to every lesson.
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Rather, particular technologies have their own propensities, potentials, affordances, and constraints that make them more suitable for certain tasks than others
Since technology is our reality what will I future classrooms look like with these technologies? What's a form of technology that will help support our future students grow and learn? What are the pros and cons to chromebooks or having ipads in the classroom?
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A primary goal of this research is to understand the relationships between two key domains: (a) teacher thought processes and knowledge and (b) teachers’ actions and their observable effects. The current work on the TPACK framework seeks to extend this tradition of research and scholarship by bringing technology integration into the kinds of knowledge that teachers need to consider when teaching
How can teachers instruct using what they know about teaching, their content knowledge about a subject, and their knowledge about technology tools that will help them to gain full student understanding?
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Each situation presented to teachers is a unique combination of these three factors, and accordingly, there is no single technological solution that applies for every teacher, every course, or every view of teaching. Rather, solutions lie in the ability of a teacher to flexibly navigate the spaces defined by the three elements of content, pedagogy, and technology and the complex interactions among these elements in specific contexts
Every teacher is student and every group of students are different. The way to use this information is to base it on how we teach the best and how our students learn the best. There is no "right" or "wrong" way but there are many different ways that work for different teachers and students
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Instead, TPACK is the basis of effective teaching with technology, requiring an understanding of the representation of concepts using technologies; pedagogical techniques that use technologies in constructive ways to teach content; knowledge of what makes concepts difficult or easy to learn and how technology can help redress some of the problems that students face; knowledge of students’ prior knowledge and theories of epistemology; and knowledge of how technologies can be used to build on existing knowledge to develop new epistemologies or strengthen old ones.
Using technology to incorporate content knowledge and teaching strategies in our lessons will help students to better understand the information that we are trying to teach them.
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As such, pedagogical knowledge requires an understanding of cognitive, social, and developmental theories of learning and how they apply to students in the classroom
Theories help us relate what we are teaching to the learning abilities of our students. Every student learns in a different way so it is important to understand the ways that have worked in the past and relate them to our students now.
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A teacher with deep pedagogical knowledge understands how students construct knowledge and acquire skills and how they develop habits of mind and positive dispositions toward learning
(Maybe use this quote). Understanding students and how they learn helps us to incorporate technology and teach content so that they can get a full understanding of what we are trying to teach.
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The cost of not having a comprehensive base of content knowledge can be prohibitive; for example, students can receive incorrect information and develop misconceptions about the content area (National Research Council, 2000; Pfundt, & Duit, 2000)
The importance of understanding the full extent of the content we are teaching is to give our students correct information. Learning incorrect information and having "misconceptions about the content area" is detrimental to our students' learning.
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As Shulman (1986) noted, this knowledge would include knowledge of concepts, theories, ideas, organizational frameworks, knowledge of evidence and proof, as well as established practices and approaches toward developing such knowledge. Knowledge and the nature of inquiry differ greatly between fields, and teachers should understand the deeper knowledge fundamentals of the disciplines in which they teach
It is important to not only understand what the content is that we are teaching but to understand what goes into the content that we are teaching. The article gives exampled of art and science; the importance is not only on the art or science it is the history and understanding of artists and their meaning and "knowledge of scientific facts and theories, the scientific method, and evidence-based reasoning"
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Equally important to the model are the interactions between and among these bodies of knowledge, represented as PCK, TCK (technological content knowledge), TPK (technological pedagogicalknowledge), and TPACK
The interaction of all three areas is important because it will help us to understand technology when it comes to lesson planning and content knowledge. Knowing what types of technology to use based on our pedagogical methods and the content that we are teaching our students will help us to implement them to ensure full understanding from our students.
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At the heart of good teaching with technology are three core components: content, pedagogy, and technology, plus the relationships among and between them. The interactions between and among the three components, playing out differently across diverse contexts, account for the wide variations seen in the extent and quality of educational technology integration
Incorporating technology on its own will not be helpful to us when we are teaching. We must also base what tools we use around the content that we are teaching, our teaching methods and ability to differentiate a lesson, and the type of technology we are trying to incorporate. Technoology is useful when used correctly and wisely, so when we lesson plan, we must think about these before implementing our instruction.
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There is no “one best way” to integrate technology into curriculum. Rather, integration efforts should be creatively designed or structured for particular subject matter ideas in specific classroom contexts
We should find ways to incorporate technology based on the content that we are teaching, the students' abilities in our classes, and our understanding of the technology that we are using. If we don't understand a certain technology or it doesn't relate to what we are teaching or the technology is too advanced for our students then incorporating the technology will be unuseful in our lessons.
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Furthermore, teachers have often been provided with inadequate training for this task. Many approaches to teachers’ professional development offer a one-size-fits-all approach to technology integration when, in fact, teachers operate in diverse contexts of teaching and learning
Technology is always changing, how will we keep up with the changes and how will we incorporate tools that we are unsure about? It is understandable that in college, we learn about the current technology of that time, but it is our responsibility to understand that technology will always change and that we should try to keep up-to-date on what tools we can use to teach our lessons.
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Understanding how these affordances and constraints of specific technologies influence what teachers do in their classrooms is not straightforward and may require rethinking teacher education and teacher professional development
We must continue to learn new information and about new technologies so that we can better teach our students. Professional development can help us to understand the problems that can arise when using technology so that we can easily work through them when they do happen.
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Rather, particular technologies have their own propensities, potentials, affordances, and constraints that make them more suitable for certain tasks than others
How will we use these technologies to help our students learn even though they will have problems that come along with it? How can we make sure that we limit the amount of problems that will occur in our lessons?
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By their very nature, newer digital technologies, which are protean, unstable, and opaque, present new challenges to teachers who are struggling to use more technology in their teaching
How do we incorporate new technology into our teaching? What are ways in which these new technology features can be used in other ways than instruction? There has to be some place that we can use the new technology that will be beneficial to our students.
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Teaching with technology is complicated further considering the challenges newer technologies present to teachers. In our work, the word technology applies equally to analog and digital, as well as new and old, technologies
We must always be prepared to learn about new information or new technology so that we can plan lessons around them. New technology and information will always come about so we must be ready when things do change (which is often).
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Teachers practice their craft in highly complex, dynamic classroom contexts (Leinhardt & Greeno, 1986) that require them constantly to shift and evolve their understanding
As teachers, we must be able to think on the fly and change the direction of the lesson if students are not understanding the information we are teaching them. When we lesson plan, we try to make sure that all the students in our class are learning the information. Sometimes it doesn't work out as planned, so we have to be ready for any type of mishap or misunderstanding.
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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The use of the automated Web-based ANODE e-coaching program in patients with T2DM and abdominal obesity was associated with a significant control-subtracted improvement in diet quality and several important cardiometabolic risk factors. The program can be delivered remotely with limited human resources, and therefore has potential for cost-effectiveness, and subsequently broad dissemination if generalizability and longer-term sustainability are demonstrated.
Excellent. More programs like this are needed. Perhaps adding a support group component could make it even better.
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fully automated but interactive
How can we develop and improve more programs like this?
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However, a high-intensity, multidisciplinary intervention (as recommended) is often impossible to implement in real life environments due to limited human resources and the high costs of long-term care. In addition, geographically isolated patients cannot easily access face-to-face education programs. Therefore, it is necessary to develop innovative approaches to improve the adoption of a healthy lifestyle.
Very real limitations. New methods of intervention are essential.
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Among patients with T2DM and abdominal obesity, the use of a fully automated Web-based program resulted in a significant improvement in dietary habits and favorable clinical and laboratory changes.
Wow. This could be the future of health education.
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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SAMR in 120 Second
Notes -framework for providing technology in the classroom -Substitution- same task. new tech replaces old tech but doesn't change the rules of how to use it (ex- microsoft word vs. gooogle docs) -Augmentation- same task. Provides more functionality (ex- sharing google doc and shares to cloud more easily) -Modification- midifies task. Technology is used to redesign parts of the task (students collaborating in google docs and commenting to each other) -Redefinition- design and create new tasks that were once unimaginable (connecting to a classroom across the world using google docs)
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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TPACK Example
Notes from video -pedagogy, content, and technological knowledge and the integration of all three in lessons -Combining and Creating the Lesson- let them do some research- relate to the plastic ban- research how it is harming wildlife in the area and make a commercial to promote a plastic ban to their area -Content area lesson- utilize a variety of research tools to find the information that they need to do the projects technology -Technology lesson- examples and instruction
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RSA ANIMATE: Drive: The surprising truth about what motivates us
Notes from Video -Group of students and gave them a set of challenges- to incentivize their performance 3 levels of rewards- High, middle, and lower levels of rewards -mechanical skills- bonuses worked as expected- higher pay brought better performance -rudimentary cognitive skills- larger reward led to poorer performance-rewards don't work that way once you get to rudimentary cognitive skills- defies laws of behavioral physics -did the experiment in india- small rewards (2 weeks salary) medium rewards (1 months salary) highest reward (2 months salary)- Higher incentive led to worse performance -replicated over and over again- simple straight forward tasks- rewards work
- when task get s more complicated and it requres some conceptual, creative thinking- rewards don't work -3 factors lead to better performance- (autonomy)- self direction is better- (mastery)- getting better at stuff- (purpose)- need to have a reason for doing something -more organizatoins want to have a purpose- not money or profit- -if we start treating people like people- we can build organizations to make the world a little better
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www.schoology.com www.schoology.com
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In this case, you ask yourself if the technology tools allow educators to redefine a traditional task in a way that would not be possible without the tech, creating a novel experience.
How has technology created a unique experience?
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this is an actual change to the design of the lesson and its learning outcome. The key question here—does the technology significantly alter the task?
Big changes to the lesson plan.
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but with significant enhancements to the student experience. In other words, you ask yourself if the technology increases or augments a student's productivity and potential in some way.
What is the purpose of the change?
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It is a simple, bare-bones, direct replacement.
Small replacements to start the change.
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Substitution, Augmentation, Modification, and Redefinition. Substitution and Augmentation are considered "Enhancement" steps, while Modification and Redefinition are termed "Transformation" steps
Moving from making learning better to creating a pedagogy change.
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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Motivating Learners
Notes from Video -embracing change -hardcore gamers- surprising things that you find- kids are incredibly bottom-line oriented- want to be measured to see how much they are improving -"if i am not learning, then i am not having fun"- embracing change, leveling up, higher order tasks, or the game is changing -Questioning position helps students to embrace change -Compete with each other and collaborate each other -Start looking at other people online to help them to learn new things -kids that have been turned on to learning- there is no stopping them -passionate community interest group that students can join -learning has to do with learning how to join a group with a common interest -what you are doing becomes a platform for something new -trajectories through life pace as opposed to fixed points -power and importance of play- how to I take an idea and play with it to become something new -learn that not everything works- need to be willing to realize that instead of being afraid of things not working- we need to be willing to change what hasnt worked to make it work for us
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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Will Richardson
Notes from video
-Students don't need to have official instruction to learn new information -interactions with online tools can help students to learn on their own and with the help of teachers can help them to learn even more information -"Sharing my work online has become a huge part of the way I learn. Those connections make it possible for me to gain a bigger audience, which means more feedback and more learning" -Teaching information can be facilitated in many different ways- incorporating technology can help students to better learn information than with just us teaching them. -Hard truth- formation of schools how they were established are not relevant in how students are learning today- schools have to be places for deep inquiry where they can solve big problems- create important work where they can collaborate with people around the world-LIFE PREP- getting our students ready for real life and helping them to solve future problems that may occur.
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www.edutopia.org www.edutopia.org
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Her aims are to help students visualize the concepts already introduced in the classroom and to reinforce the learning through group collaboration. The assignment requires teamwork, communication, and precision
Using tools outside the classroom to help students better understang the content that they have already learned.
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Encouraging students to reach out to each other to solve problems and share knowledge not only builds collaboration skills, it leads to deeper learning and understanding
Students can help each other learn by collaborating their efforts. Each student can bring a certain strength to the group so that they can all work out problems together
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