3,928 Matching Annotations
  1. Jul 2018
    1. will understand the nature of prejudice,

      Understanding is not measurable

    2. we also consider the needs of our students when designing learning experiences

      Needs of our students more important than standards

    3. Clearly, students are our primary clients,

      students as clients

    4. did the students learn and understand the desired knowledge

      I like that there is a distinction between learn and understand. A bunch of passing grades on a quiz is one thing, but assessment should be able to see how well the students actually understand

    5. Given that there typically is more content than can reasonably be addressed, we are obliged to make choices. A useful framework for establishing curricular priorities may be depicted using the three nested rings shown in Figure 1.2

      This is useful to recognize. The 3 ring model is useful in sifting through what it most important in setting the learning outcomes.

    1. we must “mobilize educators, policymakers, and others to address this threat to democracy.

      Threat to democracy...

    2. we should also be engaging them in discussions about how they should react when presented with a new source and what kinds of questions to be asking (going beyond “who wrote this?” for example, to “who’s behind this URL?”). The most important aspect for educators to embrace is that every text used in a classroom is constructed, so we must be aware of not only the authors’ biases, but of our own.

      Teaching bias awareness

    3. what is real from what is fake, be aware of the hazy lines between entertainment and news, and be adept at applying these skills to the mountain of information we are constantly exposed to.

      SO IMPORTANT

    4. I’ve found it helpful to focus on what the National Association for Media Literacy in Education defines as “the core principles of media literacy education.” Essentially, this is as close as we have to a set of standards for media literacy.

      Helpful guidelines. Should there be media literacy standards?

    5. is a powerful call to action for all educators, not just those of us in media-focused classrooms: media literacy must be valued and taught right alongside the traditional reading, writing, and listening standards.

      Must be taught, everywhere!

    6. “Overall, young people’s ability to reason about the information on the internet can be summed up in one word: bleak,” the report reads. In other words, my students are far from the only ones taking the internet’s word for it.

      Bleak, indeed.

    7. “Fake news” is everywhere, and unfortunately we have not prepared our students, parents, and teachers to fully understand the risks of this new and increasingly influential type of media.

      Something that is not real can be influential--scary

    8. create a dialogue based on inaccuracies

      So powerful

    9. We were quickly able to debunk the killer clown story, but it’s not always so easy to help students tell fact from fiction.

      One of the many reasons why media literacy is important

    1. Media Literacy Education affirms that people use their individual skills, beliefs and experiences to construct their own meanings from media messages.

      individualization

    2. Media Literacy Education recognizes that media are a part of culture and function as agents of socialization.

      HUGE part of modern culture

    3. Media Literacy Education builds and reinforces skills for learners of all ages.

      Integrate early

    4. The purpose of media literacy education is to help individuals of all ages develop the habits of inquiry and skills of expression that they need to be critical thinkers, effective communicators and active citizens in today’s world.

      Media literacy promotes active citizenship

    1. Digital literacy is not about the skills of using technologies, but how we use our judgment to maintain awareness of what we are reading and writing, why we are doing it, and whom we are addressing.

      Teaching our students to use judgment.

    2. powerful authors block alternative viewpoints.

      Power dynamics--present everywhere. Censoring what information gets to the public.

    3. It means opening dialogue about why we write in public, to what end, and for whose benefit.

      the "why"

    4. I avoid putting my students in high-risk situations, but this does not mean avoiding teaching digital literacy.

      Teaching may be more meaningful in a low risk situation--but it's important to teach them about high-risk situations so they can handle them in the future. Teaching digital literacy does that

    5. Do our students recognize the ways in which Facebook’s privacy settings continually shift without user permission, and what posting a photo today might mean for their future employment opportunities?

      Consequences and dangers of tech presence

    6. When they tweet to people from another country in another time zone, what kind of context do they need to consider?

      cultural awareness and sensitivity

    7. Instead of teaching how to use a hashtag and how to tweet and retweet, I give my students meaningful tasks to help their learning

      Meaningful tasks facilitate learning

    8. Who puts themselves at risk when they do so?

      Important to recognize potential risk in using a public platform

    9. Digital skills focus on what and how. Digital literacy focuses on why, when, who, and for whom.

      Both must be present for learning and growing

    10. Digital literacies are not solely about technical proficiency but about the issues, norms, and habits of mind surrounding technologies used for a particular purpose.

      I like that he mentions a purpose for the use of technology. Technology as a tool to serve a specific purpose, not just to pass time

    11. It means opening dialogue about why we write in public, to what end, and for whose benefit.

      This could also assist in bridging the gap between the way students communicate in school and outside of school. #cofcedu

    12. Teaching digital literacy does not mean teaching digital skills in a vacuum, but doing so in an authentic context that makes sense to students.

      And the context that makes sense to each student will vary. #cofcedu

    13. means talking about audience—whom they are addressing and who are people who might accidentally come across their blogs or tweets.

      Recognizing audience is key to remember

    14. Digital skills focus on what and how. Digital literacy focuses on why, when, who, and for whom.

      Digital skills involve knowing how to execute tasks on the computer. Digital Literacy involves searching and analyzing deeper into content in order to apply appropriate criteria.

    1. Knowing how to read, write, and participate in the digital world has become the 4th basic foundational skill next to the three Rs—reading, writing, and arithmetic

      These skills give our students the power to enter the world.

    2. Examples of these skills include collaboration, communication, creativity, and problem-solving.

      Skills that are also learned in theatre education! Integrating tech and theatre education could be powerful in developing these skills

    3. open access to the skills and know-how needed to use the web to improve their lives, careers, and organizations.

      Teaching media literacy is an important skill!

    4. eb remains a healthy open and public resource fo

      I love this idea of the web being a "healthy" resource

    5. these digital-age skills help us live and work in today’s world.

      Letting school be a place that actually gives students the tools needed when they become adults.

    6. They can evaluate web content, and identify what is useful and trustworthy.

      This is a research skill that I wish I had learned in high school.

      cofcedu

    7. 21C Skills emerge as skills critical to success in today’s world. They enable individuals to become teachers, advocates, and community leaders to leverage and advance the web as an open and public resource.

      Learning to navigate/use the web is essential to professionals today who aim to succeed in the job market.

    1. In my own experience I frequently come back and revise my six words as my career and life changes.

      This is a super cool technique to use for reanalyzing life goals as well. Am I where or who I want to be? What I'd always imagined I'd become?

    1. Identify the major parts of the digestive system(e.g., esophagus, intestine, mouth, stomach

      SC State Standard G-3.1.4 One of main lesson topics (digestive system)

    2. D-3.1.1Identify the basic parts of the respiratory system (e.g., lungs, bronchioles, diaphragm)

      1 of 2 Main Science/Health Objectives 3rd Grade health standard

    1. D3.1-7Demonstrate accurate memorization and replication of brief movement sequences

      Movement dance/activity for respiratory and digestive systems. (one dance/mime combination for each body system)

    1. VA3-6.1Identify similarities and connections between the visual arts and other subjects in the school curriculum

      Standard VA3-6.1

    2. the ways that his or her use of organizational principles and expressive features evoke the ideas he or she intended to convey in a work of visual art

      For Unit Plan- connecting health/science lesson to visual arts

    3. Use his or her own ideas in creatingworks of visual art

      Grade 3- Standard VA3-1.1 Drawing and object representations for digestive and respiratory systems activity

    1. Is anything important slip-ping through the cracks because it is not being assessed?

      This seems easy to do in an arts class. The subjectivity of certain arts grading shouldn't prevent a teacher from assessing all that is important

    2. alignment
    3. Doing so invariably sharpens and focuses teaching.
    4. but to be able to use one’s learning in other settings.

      Generalize

    5. but to be able to use one’s learning in other settings.
    6. clarity about priorities.

      There really are too many standards to focus on at once, this allows the teacher to hone in and create a better, more focused lesson.

    7. without offering a rigid process or prescriptive recipe

      This is great- I hate feeling tied down to a template.

    8. Understanding cannot simply be told; the learner has to actively construct meaning (or misconceptions and forget-fulness will ensue)

      Teachers must teach for understanding and this can only by done through giving students a chance to analyze and relate/transfer the information in a way that they understand.

    9. three-stage design process (Desired Results, Evidence, and Learning Plan). This process helps avoid the common problems of treating the textbook as the curriculum rather than a resource, and activity-oriented teaching in which no clear priorities and purposes are apparent.

      This is a great point. Good teachers use the textbook as a resource and not an exact recipe- they check for student understanding and have flexibility to scope the lesson towards student needs.

  2. Mar 2018
    1. The TPACK framework for teacher knowledge is described in detail, as a complex interaction among three bodies of knowledge: Content, pedagogy, and technology.

      All 3 need to be to be understood to work together for a solid outcome.

    1. When workplaces and our civic and educational institutions draw from and connect to young people’s peer culture, communities and interest-driven pursuits, learners flourish and realize their true potential.

      Academically Oriented

    2. Connected learning environments link learning in school, home and community because learners achieve best when their learning is reinforced and supported in multiple settings. Online platforms can make learning resources abundant, accessible and visible across all learner settings.

      Open Networks

    3. The most engaged learning happens while doing something for a meaningful goal or purpose, whether that is creating something, contributing to a community, or engaging in a friendly competition.

      Shared Purpose, Having a real purpose behind what the students are doing can make things alot more interesting for them.

    4. Powered with possibilities made available by today’s social media, this peer culture can produce learning that’s engaging and powerful.

      Peer Supported

    5. Connected learning prizes the learning that comes from actively producing, creating, experimenting and designing because it promotes skills and dispositions for lifelong learning and for making meaningful contributions to today’s rapidly changing work and social conditions.

      Production Centered

    6. Interests foster the drive to gain knowledge and expertise. Research has repeatedly shown that when the topic is personally interesting and relevant, learners achieve much higher-order learning outcomes. Connected learning views interests and passions that are developed in a social context as essential elements.

      The more interesting the student finds the subject, the more they will be engaged in learning about it.

    7. Traditional education is failing to engage many students as they enter their middle school, high school, and college years. The culture clash between formal education and interest-driven, out-of-school learning is escalating in today’s world where social communication and interactive content is always at our fingertips. We need to harness these new technologies for learning rather than distraction.

      This recaps what I previously just wrote about how the traditional classroom is proving to not be as effective as PBL.

    8. The “connected” in connected learning is about human connection as well as tapping the power of connected technologies. Rather than see technology as a means toward more efficient and automated forms of education, connected learning puts progressive, experiential, and learner-centered approaches at the center of technology-enhanced learning.

      This is a totally different form of learning then what is considered a traitional style of learning. This method seems to work much better.

    9. Connected learning is when someone is pursuing a personal interest with the support of peers, mentors and caring adults, and in ways that open up opportunities for them

      Define connected learning

  3. Feb 2018
    1. Traditional education is failing to engage many students as they enter their middle school, high school, and college years. The culture clash between formal education and interest-driven, out-of-school learning is escalating in today’s world where social communication and interactive content is always at our fingertips. We need to harness these new technologies for learning rather than distraction.

      This is very accurate. As students progress through different levels of academia the content and instruction often becomes overwhelming and students lose interest and drive to engage.

    2. Young people learn best when actively engaged, creating, and solving problems they care about, and supported by peers who appreciate and recognize their accomplishments.

      I couldn't agree more

    3. YouMedia l

      Love this idea.

    4. The “connected” in connected learning is about human connection as well as tapping the power of connected technologies. Rather than see technology as a means toward more efficient and automated forms of education, connected learning puts progressive, experiential, and learner-centered approaches at the center of technology-enhanced learning.

      Connected learning isn't about technology, but connecting with other people.

    5. Connected learning is when someone is pursuing a personal interest with the support of peers, mentors and caring adults, and in ways that open up opportunities for them.

      What is connected learning?

    1. “When am I ever going to use this stuff in real life?”

      truer words have never been spoken...

    2. With project based learning, the content is baked inside of a long-term project, a real-world problem students need to solve in a creative and authentic way. In the process of solving the problem, students also meet required standards, but this work is integrated into the project, not separate from it.

      creativity is key

    3. Careful, though: The “project” in many cases is often something like a poster that merely regurgitates the facts students were taught in the unit.

      I feel like this is the most common type of assessment, which is what project based learning is trying to step away from.

    4. he research on project based learning tells us that it closes the achievement gap for underserved populations, improves understanding and retention of content, and increases motivation for all students.

      Positive research on PBL

    5. It is becoming abundantly clear to educators and employers that students need to be able to do more than spit out facts.

      I like this point

    6. Even if we are able to design a project that has them apply their knowledge in real-world ways, the project is often hypothetical—students know it’s still a school assignment, so they aren’t as engaged as they would be if it were real. Project based learning doesn’t just add a dose of relevance to the standard model; it builds the learning within a relevant context from the very start, so students are naturally more engaged.

      Why PBL appeals to students

    7. To do this, they would need to study microbiology to understand how viruses work, research prevention tools, then use their writing and speaking skills to determine the most effective means to convince their peers to change their habits; this may come in the form of a video or poster series.

      Steps to example above

    8. A PBL project might ask students to educate their peers on the best ways to prevent the spread of viruses in school.

      Example of a PBL question

    9. With project based learning, the content is baked inside of a long-term project, a real-world problem students need to solve in a creative and authentic way. In the process of solving the problem, students also meet required standards, but this work is integrated into the project, not separate from it.

      PBL Definition

    10. In a traditional classroom, we deliver content to students, give them opportunities to practice or apply what they learned, and eventually conduct a summative assessment—this could take the form of a test or it could be more of a performance assessment, like an essay, a speech, or a project of some kind.

      Traditional Instruction definition (used to compare to PBL)

    11. In the top 10 were qualities like the ability to work on a team, problem-solving skills, written and verbal communication skills, and initiative. All of these are developed beautifully in project based learning.

      I find this interesting that these skills are what employers are look for but in schools they aren't allowing you to put those skills to use and practice them.

    12. With project based learning, the content is baked inside of a long-term project, a real-world problem students need to solve in a creative and authentic way. In the process of solving the problem, students also meet required standards, but this work is integrated into the project, not separate from it.

      I really like the idea of PBL because for me whenever I did project I felt that I was learning more than when we would just sit through lectures, take notes, memorize the notes and take a test.

    1. PBL promotes educational equity.

      This article points out how great PBL is and how beneficial it is and says it is the time for it... however if it is so great, why is it not being used in every single school in the US???

    2. Project Based Learning’s time has come.

      Read this article to understand why PBL is so enjoyable to take part in

    1. Specifically, these skills are described as:

      Skills needed in web literacy

    2. how to read, write, and participate in the digital world has become the 4th basic foundational skill next to the three Rs—reading, writing, and arithmetic

      crazy but true fact

    3. we need to provide people with open access to the skills and know-how needed to use the web to improve their lives, careers, and organizations.

      I really like this point because in this day and age that is a huge necessity

    4. 1) develop more educators, advocates, and community leaders who can leverage and advance the web as an open and public resource, and 2) impact policies and practices to ensure the web remains a healthy open and public resource for all.

      Mozilla's goals to make people good citizens on the internet

    1. During the PBL assessment step, evaluate the groups’ products and performances. Use rubrics to determine whether students have clearly communicated the problem, background, research methods, solutions (feasible and research-based), and resources, and to decide whether all group members participated meaningfully. You should consider having your students fill out reflections about their learning (including what they’ve learned about the content and the research process) every day, and at the conclusion of the process.

      How to assess PBL

    2. After researching, the students create products and presentations that synthesize their research, solutions, and learning.

      Step 5 to teaching PBL

    3. PBL research begins with small-group brainstorming sessions where students define the problem and determine what they know about the problem (background knowledge), what they need to learn more about (topics to research), and where they need to look to find data (databases, interviews, etc.). Groups should write the problem as a statement or research question. They will likely need assistance.

      Step 4 to teaching PBL

    4. If PBL is new to your students, you can practice with an “easy problem,” such as a scenario about long lines in the dining hall.

      Step 3 to teaching PBL - Introduce it to your students

    5. Next you design the PBL scenario with an embedded problem that will emerge through student brainstorming. Think of a real, complex issue related to your course content. It’s seldom difficult to identify lots of problems in our fields; the key is writing a scenario for our students that will elicit the types of thinking, discussion, research, and learning that need to take place to meet the learning outcomes.

      Step 2 of PBL

    6. After determining whether your course has learning outcomes that fit with PBL, you will develop formative and summative assessments to measure student learning. Group contracts, self/peer-evaluation forms, learning reflections, writing samples, and rubrics are potential PBL assessments.

      Step 1 to teaching PBL

    7. By breaking down the PBL cycle into six steps, you can begin to design, implement, and assess PBL in your own courses.

      Note on how you can break teaching PBL down into 6 steps

    1. How will we know if stu-dents have achieved the desired results? What will we accept as evidence of stu-dent understanding and their ability to use (transfer) their learning in new situations? How will we evaluate student performance in fair and consistent ways?

      These are tough questions too. I don't necessarily believe in multiple choice or standardized testing when it comes to the English discipline. It's not a subject that can be narrowed down to black and white. There is a lot of grey area that is dependent on each individual student's level of understanding, which makes it difficult to asses student progress sometimes.

    2. What should students know, understand, and be able to do? What is the ultimate transfer we seek as a result of this unit? What enduring under-standings are desired? What essential questions will be explored in-depth and provide focus to all learning?

      I struggle with this stage. Many of my ideas are just random thoughts that I think would be beneficial. It's difficult for me to plan things according to the end result as I myself usually focus more on the process taken to get to the end result.

    1. s. The teacher as designer is similarly constrained. We are not free to teach any topic we choose. Rather, we are guided by national, state, district, or institutional standards that specify what students should know and be able to

      this is so frustrating sometimes but I'm sure is necessary in many circumstances

    2. ts learn and understand the desired knowledg

      crucial distinction

    3. To begin with the end in mind means to start with a clear understanding of your destination. It means to know where you're going so that you better understand where you are now so that the steps you take are always in the right direc

      Planning for the future while at the same time understanding that we have to be adaptable and accommodate ourselves accordingly when things don't follow the plan we've put together.

    1. . Lessons are carried out through play-based activities that are rooted in basic social skills like sharing, taking turns, self-control, making friends, following instructions and getting along with others.
    2. hat support learning — free-to-fail, spontaneous, enjoyable, challenging, intrinsically motivated, engaging, imaginative and social,” explains Dr. Craig Bach, vice president of education of The Goddard School.

      Characteristics of PBL

    1. First, students must perceive the work as personally meaningful, as a task that matters and that they want to do well. Second, a meaningful project fulfills an educational purpose.

      While I believe in these two criteria, I feel that it can be difficult to get all your students to see that the work is meaningful because there are some students who just see school as a waste of time.

  4. Jan 2018
    1. The perfor-mance tasks ask students to apply their learning to a new and authentic situation as means of assessing their understand-ing and ability to transfer their learning.

      This will help to students have a better understanding of what they learned when they look at it in a different situation and have to think about how they relate. This is where students could be using problem solving to understand a concept.

    2. Six facets of under-standing—the capacity to explain, interpret, apply, shift perspective, empa-thize, and self-assess—can serve as indicators of understanding.

      These are crucial skills students need to know and feel comfortable doing in order to understand and learn a concept.

    1. The 21C Skills, combined with the web literacy skills, are the nexus for entry-level digital-age skills. They are a set of abilities such as problem-solving, creativity, collaboration, or communication that people need to develop in order to succeed in the information age.

      This means that for the future generations, technology is only going to grow and change the traditional style of learning. Students will need to understand how to use and keep up with the changing technology in todays world.

    2. Good online readers know the tools and strategies that can be used to search for and locate people, resources, and information. They then know how to judge the credibility of these sources

      This is important for students to lean especially in college when annotating and marking your sources is required very often.

    1. The classroom culture should value questioning, hypothesizing, and openness to new ideas and perspectives.

      This is important for students to learn and think differently to solve problems.

    2. A project should give students opportunities to build such 21st century skills as collaboration, communication, critical thinking, and the use of technology, which will serve them well in the workplace and life

      PBL is a big assistance for students to be successful in the future.

    3. Teachers can powerfully activate students' need to know content by launching a project with an "entry event" that engages interest and initiates questioning.

      This is a good way to get the students engaged and motivated to start their projects.

    4. But it is the process of students' learning and the depth of their cognitive engagement— rather than the resulting product—that distinguishes projects from busywork.

      Does this mean that we should be grading students more on the process of what they did to produce this poster or just the end result?

    5. But it is the process of students' learning and the depth of their cognitive engagement— rather than the resulting product—that distinguishes projects from busywork.

      couldn't agree more

    1. closes the achievement gap for underserved populations, improves understanding and retention of content, and increases motivation for all students.

      Its important for students to be motivated in the classroom otherwise it may be more difficult for the to retain new material.

    2. In the top 10 were qualities like the ability to work on a team, problem-solving skills, written and verbal communication skills, and initiative.

      This proves that earning a college degree is more then just memorizing facts and passing tests, the skills mentioned above need to be learned to achieve success in todays workforce.

    1. Project Based Learning is a teaching method in which students gain knowledge and skills by working for an extended period of time to investigate and respond to an authentic, engaging and complex question, problem, or challenge.

      This is a great overview/definition of PBL.

  5. Dec 2017
    1. Construction also brings in the role of groups of learners in the process of learning and as a result includes elements of social and cognitive constructivism. Learners are encouraged to be creative as they build and revise content.

      OCC is collaborative and always changing

    1. these new literacies are embodied in new social practices—ways of working in new or transformed forms of employment, new ways of participating as a citizen in public spaces, and even perhaps, new forms of identity and personality.

      society has changed and thus we need to teach students how to be citizens

    2. As a consequence, the traditional emphasis on alphabetical literacy (letter sounds in words in sentences in texts in literatures) would need to be supplemented in a pedagogy of Multiliteracies by learning how to read and write multimodal texts which integrated the other modes with language.

      meaning is communicated through multimedia instead of text...this needs to be in the curriculum as well

    3. literacy curriculum taught to a singular standard (grammar, the literary canon, standard national forms of the language), the everyday experience of meaning making was increasingly one of negotiating discourse differences.

      this goes with online reading comprehension...literacy was changing from traditional text, so the literacy curriculum needed to change too

    4. The world was changing, the communications environment was changing, and it seemed to us to follow that literacy teaching and learning would to have to change, as well.

      A pedagogy of multiliteracies was inevitable with modern technological advances. Education needs to change as society changes.

  6. Nov 2017
  7. media.carnegie.org media.carnegie.org
    1. . In short, if students are to learn, they must write

      I agree. Writing is a really good way to organize your thoughts, and train your brain to think in a way that is logical, chronological, and easily conveyed.

    1. As opposed to traditional writing, when students construct online content they are asked to design multimodal representations of their work product, which convey not only the knowledge they learned during the work process, but also reflective of the conventions and critiques of the genre of the online information space they used in the design

      participating in online content construction and using multimodal representations allows students to be creative. using their web literacy, they choose what works best for them and adds the most to their work

    2. OCC was developed to define the abilities necessary to communicate the information assembled while searching, sift-ing, and synthesizing knowledge gained during the online inquiry process

      need to be web literate and know what you are reading through online to be a good online peer and participator. once you are online, make the best of it by being able to construct, redesign, revise, and reinvent content online

    3. 277Online Content ConstructionOnline Content Construction (OCC) is necessary. OCC is defined as the skills, strategies and dispo-sitions necessary as students construct, redesign, or reinvent online texts by actively encoding and decoding meaning through the use of digital texts and tools

      what is online content construction?

    1. If your students are like mine, most of them are doing the majority of their research online. And, if yours are like mine, they could use a little help. I’ve found that my students appreciate being introduced to tools that help them manage and organize the information that they’re finding.

      students are forced to used technology to complete assigned tasks, but they are not being taught how to use these tools and resources for their best benefit. how can we allow our students to get the most out of technology?

  8. creatingmultimodaltexts.com creatingmultimodaltexts.com
    1. What specific literacy knowledge and skills do our students need to create this text,  in this context? What prior knowledge and experience, do students have? What is the purpose of the text? Who is it for? What is the content? From this basis, we can then design teaching and learning activities to develop these specific literacy outcomes.

      need to know the requirements that are being asked from the students and if these requirements are attainable.

    1. Construction also brings in the role of groups of learners in the process of learning and as a result includes elements of social and cognitive constructivism. Learners are encouraged to be creative as they build and revise content.

      when revising other people's work, we learn a lot of new ideas. similarly, when other people revise our work, we learn new ideas from seeing other people's perspectives and different approaches.

    2. identifying construction as opposed to creation is also of the utmost importance. Creation can be viewed simply as the act of producing, or causing to exist.  Construction is the building or assembling of an infrastructure. Construction is equal parts inspiration and perspiration. Construction calls on creativity as well as persistence, flexibility, and revision. Construction asks our students and teachers to focus on the power and patience employed during work process…and not just the final resultant work product.

      construction involves everything needed to build something new. it involves the ideas and actually administering these ideas into the final product.

    3. creativity, composition, and design skills students need…we have been developing online content construction (OCC)

      how to construct visual, digital and multimodal construction

    1. We remix language every time we draw on it, and we remix meanings every time we take an idea or an artefact or a word and integrate it into what we are saying and doing at the time. At a more specific level we now have digital remix enabled by computers. This includes, but goes far beyond simply mixing music. It involves mixing digital images, texts, sounds and animation; in short, all manner of found artefacts.

      remixing is done in language and within technology. creating new ideas or adding/taking away new things

    2. a very general level all of culture can be understood in terms of remix, where someone creates a cultural product by mixing meaningful elements together (e.g., ideas from different people with ideas of one’s own), and then someone else comes along and remixes this cultural artefact with others to create yet another artefact.

      all cultures are creative and just remixes of other cultures

    3. By “remix” we mean the practice of taking cultural artefacts and combining and manipulating them into a new kind of creative blend.

      building onto or changing pre-existing ideas to form a new idea of your own.

  9. Oct 2017
    1. modeling, thinking aloud,demonstrating, and creating meaning

      more ways teachers can help support students as they read (think and search)

    2. Teachers model and explain the strategies, coachstudents in their use, and help students use themflexibly.

      ways that teachers can help support students as they respond to texts (think and search)

    3. reader, text, context, and transaction)

      the basic elements of comprehension. (right there)

    1. his also draws on tenets from Understanding by Design (UbD) as you begin with the end in mind and think about where you would like to bring students by the end of the project.

      This is crucial in your lesson planning. You need to have student learning outcomes and goals or else there is no point to the lesson. It can be helpful at the start of the project to tell your students what the goals and outcomes should be. You can collaborate with your students about what their goals should be, but you should have a set of general goals already in your head.

    2. It should also be noted that Internet Inquiry Projects are not only appropriate but also vital for use in classrooms from Pre-K up through higher ed. It is the responsibility of educators in all grades and content areas to modify as needed for learners.

      depending on your own content area knowledge and your students prior knowledge every lesson needs to be tailored to fit both of your needs. Scaffolding and time duration are two main components when planning an internet inquiry project.

    3. The 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.

      internet inquiry projects incorporate everything that we've learned so far

    4. The 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.

      student-interest oriented and more authentic. follows a project-based learning approach where students work together and complete hands-on work that relate to the real-world.

    1. Internet Reciprocal Teaching

      Internet Reciprocal Teaching is a method of tech integrated education that involves direct instruction, collaboration, and inquiry.

    2. In my classroom, we spend a lot of time talking about how to summarize a text by finding pertinent points and casting them in one’s own words.

      This is a great way to teach students about ownership f words and plagiarism. If you start immediately teaching students how to synthesize information into their own words then plagiarism will be less of a worry.

    3. The transformation of a page by Readability is pretty dramatic, and its use can lead to a focused conversation in the classroom about what has been removed, and why, and what has remained, and why. This forced awareness of the construction of a web page is valuable knowledge for young users of the web.

      This is an important thing to think about because if a student is always using "readability" then are they really learning how to read online. This sounds like a really helpful tool for students with OCD or ADHD.

    4. Reading is more individualized, often with one student at one computer.

      online learning is tough because it can be very collaborative, but the reading aspect is extremely individualized. keep this in mind when lesson planning

    5. As educators, we need to take a closer look at what online reading is all about and think about how we can help our students not only navigate with comprehension but also understand the underlying structure of this world.

      When we are teaching reading skills and techniques we need to be able to students how to read online for different purposes.

    6. Readers read for different purposes. Sometimes they read for pleasure. Sometimes they read for information. Their reason for reading impacts the way they read. They may skim or read carefully depending on why they are reading. Throughout this process, readers monitor the meaning they are constructing. When the text does not meet their purposes, they may switch to another text. Readers expect what they are reading to make sense. They use a repertoire of strategies, such as rethinking, re-reading or reading on to clarify ideas, to make sure they understand what they read in order to accomplish their purposes.1

      Everything we read, we are reading with a purpose. These different purposes inform the kind of reading that we do. Especially when we are reading online, our reading will look very different then when we are reading from a text.

    7. This phase involves students in a larger project based on their own interests and learning from the two earlier stages.

      when we focus on the student's interests, the student wants to take ownership of the work they have completed.

    8. Mini-lessons by teachers in this stage also allow for the nurturing of the guided discovery process.

      the teacher models what is to be done and then allows the students to work with each other to get the task done. the teacher will facilitate the process as well as offer assistance when needed.

    9. we need to take a closer look at what online reading is all about and think about how we can help our students not only navigate with comprehension but also understand the underlying structure of this world.

      our students need to acquire the skills on how to properly and efficiently navigate the web that best enhances their learning experience on the web.

    1. Pedagogical knowledge (PK) is teachers’ deep knowledge about the processes and practices or methods of teaching and learning.

      Having a complete understanding of the different methods of learning and how you can best implement them.

    2. rethinking teacher education

      This class has actually made me rethink a lot of how i want my classroom to function and how i'm going to integrate technology into it in a positive and educational manner. However, I wont be 100% sure of whether or not i will have access to technology in my future school, so I will just be preparing for multiple scenarios.

    3. effective teaching depends on flexible access to rich, well-organized and integrated knowledge from different domains

      I definitely think that is does depend on this sort of access, however what about the teachers who don't? Is there a way we can pull them out of the school system or put them in classes to the side that are state funded in order for them to learn and have this wide domain of knowledge? If we think about this in the technology sense, how could we help those teachers whose schools do not have the funding or access to the type of technology the children should/could be using?

    4. technological tools can provide a greater degree of flexibility in navigating across these representations.

      depending on your content knowledge more or less technology is available to be used in the educational processes. knowing the technology involved in the content area is essential

    5. FITness, therefore, requires a deeper, more essential understanding and mastery of information technology for information processing, communication, and problem solving than does the traditional definition of computer literacy.

      you must have FITness and it is something that is always changing and updating, making it very complicated to learn

    6. PCK is the notion of the transformation of the subject matter for teaching

      how the teacher is going to teach their content knowledge to their students

    7. Pedagogical knowledge (PK) is teachers’ deep knowledge about the processes and practices or methods of teaching and learning. They encompass, among other things, overall educational purposes, values, and aims.

      pedagogical knowledge is the teacher's knowledge of educational processes and their values and aims for teaching

    8. knowledge of concepts, theories, ideas, organizational frameworks, knowledge of evidence and proof, as well as established practices and approaches toward developing such knowledge.

      content knowledge

    9. there are three main components of teachers’ knowledge: content, pedagogy, and technology. Equally important to the model are the interactions between and among these bodies of knowledge,

      tpack consists of teachers knowledge of content, pedagogy, and technology and the relationship between all of these

    10. this knowledge is unlikely to be used unless teachers can conceive of technology uses that are consistent with their existing pedagogical beliefs

      how one teacher decides to integrate technology into their classroom will be different from another because teachers need to see how technology fits into their pedagogical values

    11. 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.

      teaching with technology is not easy especially considering that technology is always changing and most technologies are not used in a single defined way but can be used in very different ways.

    12. This paper describes 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)

      TPACK is a framework for teachers to integrate technology into their pedagogy and content knowledge

    1. building connections across different sites of learning.

      This is very important in learning. People learn best when they are able to make connections between something that is learned in a classroom, and then with something that they are familiar with in daily life. Kids especially because this can help them continue learning outside of the classroom by making connection back to the lessons they've learned.

    2. Young people learn best when actively engaged, creating, and solving problems they care about, and supported by peers who appreciate and recognize their accomplishments

      I fully agree with this statement. Personally, I have always learned better when I am involved in a hands on activity where it ties into my every day life or relates to me in some way. Support/recognition i feel is also very important, because without it, students can be unsure of their work and don't feel like they're doing a good enough job.

    3. While wealthy families are embracing the potential of new technologies for learning, and investing more and more in out-of-school and connected learning, less privileged kids are being left behind. Access to specialized, interest-driven and personalized learning used to be difficult and scarce. But in today’s networked world, there’s no reason why all children should not have the opportunity to pursue connected learning.

      technology should not just be for rich students. technology should be accessible to all students in the classroom and should be incorporated into their learning

    4. We need to harness these new technologies for learning rather than distraction.

      Instead of banning technology from the classroom teachers should incorporate it. this way teachers can keep their students interested and keep their teaching style modern.

    5. .The “connected” in connected learning is about human connection as well as tapping the power of connected technologies. Rather than see technology as a means toward more efficient and automated forms of education, connected learning puts progressive, experiential, and learner-centered approaches at the center of technology-enhanced learning.

      connected learning is about learning with other people. technology is an easy avenue to make this happen

    1. Starting from the traditional view which focused on the printed form of a text

      traditional reading

    1. Additional reading skills and strategies are required to generate effective keyword search strategie

      students need to be taught specific strategies on how to search and find reliable and beneficial research. this is not just accomplished in one lesson and takes time for student to feel comfortable in this aspect.

    2. Critically evaluating online information includes the ability to read and evaluate the level of accuracy, reliability, and bias of information

      important that student's know whether or not the information they are reading is reliable.

    3. One of the most consistent patterns in reading research is the finding that the prior knowl-edge we bring to a text profoundly shapes our interpretation.

      we must teach our students a traditional reading style before expecting them to be able to read the internet. a basis of reading research and prior knowledge is critical to become web literate.

    4. A useful first step is to use online resources to teach CCSS foundational offline reading skills in PreK, kindergarten, and first grade.

      integrate technology from a young age

    5. online reading compre-hension is online research. Second, online reading also becomes tightly integrated with writing as we communicate

      interesting

    6. As we try to understand these New Literacies we encounter a conundrum: How can we develop adequate understanding when the very object that we seek to study continuously changes

      education is never ending

  10. languagedev.wikispaces.com languagedev.wikispaces.com
    1. Although children may be at the one-word stage in their productive language, research suggests that they are perceiving and processing language in five-to six-word segments

      Children are always listening and trying to understand the world around them. Parents should be aware of this and include their child in conversations as much as possible even if the child cannot speak fluently back to the parent.

    2. It is important for teachers and parents to realize that although children's speech production is lim-ited, comprehension of others' speech is much higher.

      Children are constantly taking in everything around them. This is why it is important for parents to not continue "baby talk" after a certain age. Children learn how to pronounce words based on their parents speech and if the parent is constantly speaking to them in a babyish way then, they will develop their language to mimic the "baby talk".

    3. Concept labels (i.e .• words) and schemata are culture and language specific

      This relates to what we discussed in class last Thursday, how a child's culture effects their language development and how we, as teachers, need to be culturally aware and sensitive to our students.

    4. As children process this information cognitively, they develop ways of categorizing these stimuli into abstract conceptual group-ings, or schemata.

      This is a key part of Piaget's theory, children developing schemata to process new information they are learning.

    5. Young children are more likely to have ear infections than older children

      My younger brother used to have reoccurring ear infections as a child and I always had no idea why.

    6. In this way, Ryan explored the specific sounds that are associated with each alphabetic letter

      Having a time set aside to read with your child is a great way to enhance their language development. It helps reiterate what they are learning at school while getting them to practice reading and feeling comfortable with more advanced readings.

    7. lfocoptivc> language knowledge of tho sounds of a language begins to develop as lho infant hoars lho :;pooch of others around him

      I feel as though so people do not realize that infants begin being receptive to the words and language around them so early because the infants cannot physically say words back, which may lead to the parents not being aware of the language the infant is learning and receiving. Just because a child cannot physically talk back doesn't mean they aren't aware of the words being spoken around them.

    8. talking directly to their children only after they were capable of actually producing speech.

      I, personally, don't think it is productive to only speak to children after they are capable of producing speech. My younger cousin could understand certain meanings behind words, but did not have the physical capability to produce speech. The way we knew she understood what we were saying was through sign language. This allowed her to communicate with us without using words.

    9. reported that "children from more stimulating and responsive homes ... [had) larger vocabularies, [used] more irregular nouns and verbs, {used] longer utterances, and [had] increased rates of acquiring irreg-ular forms ... than children from less responsive and less stimulating homes"

      It is extremely important for parents to have positive and productive conversations with their children. Children learn from watching their parents and other adults so it is important that adults are allowing their children to interact with them and learn how to have meaningful conversations.

    10. eyo conlact/

      Eye contact is SUPER important! Not just as a way to get an infant's attention, but in some cultures it is a form of respect.

    11. As with all verbal communication with young children, nonver-bal communication is successful only if the people involved in the interaction are engaged in eye contact and shared reference.

      children need feedback to know what they are doing is correct or not. a communication loop is required for a child to adequately develop language abilities

    12. Pointing gestures are used to indicate or draw attention to an object or entity, while reaching gestures are associated with requests

      children use two different gestures to show two different intents (draw attention & requests)

    13. It is important to remember that during these toddler years, a child's language environment continues to influence her development of language knowledge.

      a child's interactions and conversations with their parents or other adults are very critical when a child is a toddler

    14. Children's speech during the toddler years is characterized by longer utterances and utterances with specific syntactic features.

      still not full sentences, but longer & more advanced than infant vocabulary

    15. t is important for teachers and parents to realize that although children's speech production is lim-ited, comprehension of others' speech is much higher.

      even though the child may not have a large productive vocabulary, the child can listen very well and remember things the parents say or spell.

    16. Over lime, these repeated pairings result in the infant's responding when tho word cracker is heard with no visible snack present.

      This could be seen by a behaviorist like pavlov's dog

    17. mile and make eye contact (in the mirror) es I made the sounds.

      Humans are such social creatures that it is important for them to be encouraged with things like eye contact and smiles

    1. The SAMR model truly covers the entire spectrum of tech integration

      there is no limit to how integrating tech will benefit your classroom

    2. The key to successful technology integration is the efficient use of digital tools tools that are appropriate for the task.

      your toolkit is a place for all of your technological tools that benefit learning

    3. 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.

      there are different levels of samr with different educational benefits. there are also transitional questions and prompts to help teachers decide what level best suits their pedagogy

    4. 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 integrated into the educational process the greater the educational benefit

  11. languagedev.wikispaces.com languagedev.wikispaces.com
    1. she concluded that children from ages 8 to 12 learn a second language more quickly than do children ages 4 to 7.

      Maybe public schools in the United States should begin to teach a foreign language in middle school rather than in high school.

    2. 1nm hem; IIPC'd to nn11e•mlior llwt •a11 ond la11g11ago loat1H•rs 11111sl lir<;t loa111 llw 1argol J.mg11agP in oral I mn·c•rsalio11c1\ lo1 rn prior lo hl'ing ahlo lo cilloc lh Ph ac qui in tlw ,H aclnmi1 rq~i.·;1rir and ,,1 it1P11 lorm ,w,,cl i11 Pd11rnlio11al :;d linw;

      I think that this is interesting because when I first learned German, we rarely focused on our oral abilities. We always focused on our reading abilities.

    3. he three types of learning strategies that involve specific language competencies related to academic English register are:

      Cognitive strategies, metacognitive strategies, and social-affective strategies are three types of language competencies used with academic English.

    4. Because we each have learned language in our early years within our home and cultural sellings. we may grow up thinking lhal our way of speaking and using Ian· guage is the "norm" (Gordon, 200G) and are surprised when someone suggests that we speak. wilh a dialect.

      Because I am from Ohio and live in South Carolina, I notice this concept whenever I refer to soda as "pop" or a buggy as a "cart".

    5. For example, phonologica~ differences are heard in the way words are articu-lated. For example, the word creek may be pronounced with an extended e sound ("creek," as in beet) or with the short i sound (as in pick), as "crick." Semantic dif-ferences occur when different labels are used to refer to the same object or action. In some locales in the United States, a drinking fountain is referred to as a bubbler. Syntactic differences involve differences in the way sentences are structured, For example, "I don't got no time to help" and "I have no time to help" reflect syntac-tic differences. Morphemic differences are found in the way verb endings or other inflectional endings are used, such as gonna or goin' compared with going to and going. When people are communicating in different dialects, these differences may result in communication that requires more negotiation or clarification.

      Very good examples of each subcategory.