139 Matching Annotations
  1. Jan 2018
    1. Atthesametime,teachersimmenselyinfluencebothstudents’learningandpersonaldevelopment.Students’relationshipswiththeirteachersaretwo-fold:ontheprofessionallevel(addressingteacher’srole-identity),teachersareimportantforcultivatinginterest,curiosity,andmotivation(e.g.,Birch&Ladd,1996,1997;Raufelder,Druryetal.,2013),providinglearningsupport(Pianta,Hamre,&Stuhlman,2003;Raufelder,&Mohr,2011),andofferingfeedbackonacademicperformance(Becker&Luthar,2002;Piantaetal.,2003;Radel,Sarrazin,Legrain,&Wild,2010).Onthe(inter)personallevel(addressingteachers’andstudents’being),teacherscommunicatetheirapprovalordisapprovalforthestudentasaperson(Birch&Ladd,1996)whichcanaffectstudents’senseofidentity

      important that teachers show each individual student that they are loved and cared for.

  2. Nov 2017
    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?

  3. 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.

  4. Oct 2017
    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.

    1. 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.

    2. 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.

    3. 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. 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. 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

    2. 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)

    3. 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

    4. 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

    5. 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.

  5. Sep 2017
  6. languagedev.wikispaces.com languagedev.wikispaces.com
    1. turn taking, eye contact/shared reference, and verbal mapping.

      the types of interactions important for children's development of conceptual knowledge.

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

      labeling objects and conceptual knowledge depends on where the child grew up, their family & friends, and the environment in which they interact

    3. This pairing between a word and its referent has also been described as a mapping of the language onto the object or specific meaning

      example of semantic knowledge & verbal mapping

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

      semantic knowledge: applying concepts or labels to objects and other stimuli in the environment

    5. infant's parents and caregivers interpret and respond lo the infant's crying

      infant crying and the parent coming to the rescue is the first interaction of parent-infant communication.

    6. this may affect a child's ability to recognize and distinguish between phonological charac-teristics essential for learning to speak and understand language

      ear infections during infancy can hinder and negatively effect a child's phonological awareness and language development.

    7. Early childhood teachers and caregivers need to be aware of the characteristics and significance of this illness so that they may assist parents in safeguarding the health and development of young children.

      if the teacher does not assess the student's illness, the student will have difficulties keeping up with the rest of the classroom and become frustrated. this can lead to no motivation or believing they are "dumb."

    8. picture book sharing stimulates auditory perception and phonological awareness related to spoken and written language

      relates to verbal mapping. associating words with symbols or pictures that represent the word. helps the child develop their phonological awareness

    9. Selective reinforcement occurs whon children are encour-aged lo produce and ropoal the sounds that are appropriate and necessary for their home language,

      when parents respond positively to new spoken words, the infant will want to repeat that word.

    10. In acquiring language, an infanl musl first begin to "sort 0111" tho spooch sounds lha1 arc usocl by othors in his nnvironmont

      phonological knowledge in infancy

    11. it is important to keep in mind that each aspect of language knowledge does not develop in isolation from,the other four aspects; instead, their development is interrelated.

      all 5 aspects of language knowledge are important and are connected with each other. to have advanced language skills, all 5 areas of language knowledge must be present.

    12. An important factor in early social interac-tions is the responsiveness of adults lo an infant's behaviors

      the more parents speak to their infant, the more likely the infant's cognitive abilities will be strong and develop normally. they also are better with their social skills, as a result.

    13. Receptive language develops first and pro-vides a basis for later expressive language.

      receptive: how you interpret language expressive: how you speak and express your feelings to others

    14. Infants' continued parlicipation in eye conlacl/shared reference and commu-nication loops is crilical lo Inter language development and social interaction.

      need to develop these skills early on to ensure they are advanced by the time they are needed or enforced, like in a job interview, etc.

    15. within this social envi-ronment that language development begins.

      goes back to interactionist perspective. we acquire language by being exposed to it over and over again in different environments.

    1. The approach that I think is more effective with teachers is: “you’re trying to do Y- and here’s how X can make you more efficient or effective (through increased access, better organization, more automation, etc.)”. That way, the focus for professional development starts with good teaching practices- rather than starting with the tool.

      regardless if you agree with using technology in the classroom or not, the bottom line is, you need to possess good teaching strategies and know how to engage with your students correctly. so, once you have a good strategy down, then you can figure out if technology can be used to enhance the experience for the students

    2. this approach not only isolates the tool from instruction, but it also seems to suggest that teachers are using lower level teaching strategies before using “technology”

      SAMR expresses the idea that a good education cannot be experienced unless technology is being integrated into the classroom. this is not true, especially for me, because i do not like technology, and sometimes it actually hinders my progress.

    3. TPACK looks at the collaboration between technology, pedagogy, and content and argues that teachers need knowledge of all three. I agree with this statement, but I don’t agree with how this framework is presented. Take a look at the graphic to the right- it shows all three concepts represented in circles of equal size. I think this sends the wrong message; knowledge of content is less important than knowledge of pedagogy (even more so now because of how accessible information is) and there is even evidence that shows that too much knowledge of content can actually lessen a teacher’s ability to properly scaffold learning for students. Same goes for technology- it doesn’t deserve equal weight for the knowledge a teacher needs.

      interesting view. i agree with both sides: you need to know all three, but do you need to know them all equally? i guess you could make sure you are first very knowledgeable on pedagogy and then move onto content and then technology and perfect yourself in each aspect

    1. a three-stage "backward planning" curriculum design process anchored by a unit design template a set of design standards with attendant rubrics and a comprehensive training package to help teachers design, edit, critique, peer- review, share, and improve their lessons and assessments

      teachers use a "backward planning" approach when following the UbD framework, so they know what their end goal is and how they are going to assess growth. they provide the students with what they are looking for and what the students should know by the end of the project, and lastly, teachers are given a packet that helps them create a project with the most effective strategies to get the job done and how to measure the student's achievement

    2. UbD™ works within the standards-driven curriculum to help teachers clarify learning goals, devise revealing assessments of student understanding, and craft effective and engaging learning activities.

      students learn better and deepen their understanding on a subject when they are given difficult problems that allow them opportunities to dig deep and approach the problem with various interpretation to see the problem in many different perspectives

    1. "They're learning to be more proactive; they're learning how to depend on their peers. When they go off to college, they already know how to work with people and draw out their strengths."

      collaborative learning teachers the students life long skills that they will need in their future career and throughout life.

    2. In English classes, students are encouraged to share and to listen to each other's individual interpretations of the text, underscoring the notion that there can be multiple right answers

      and by hearing different approaches and ideas, the students see the problem in a different way, which deepens their understanding of the problem

    1. they have to focus on the mathematical process and not just the “right answer.”

      when students are not graded whether they get the right or wrong answer, they will be more at ease and able to focus on the actual problem. they will not be scared to try different approaches because the wrong answer does not count against them. this allows them to see the problem in different ways and really understand what they are doing

    2. teachers must be willing to “cede the floor” to the students. Other things to consider are the need to create an effective classroom geography, focus on the process, build accountability, let students teach one another, and encourage students to be in tune with one another.

      teachers need to be more of a facilitator instead of just stating information and instructions for the students to take in. let the students converse among themselves and let them figure things out on their own by exchange ideas

    1. Researchers have determined that technology integration typically moves through specific levels. The higher the level of an activity the greater the educational benefit.

      SAMR describes these levels and how the transitions can be made. teachers need to be able to implement technology bc technology can achieve more than we can on our own.

    2. 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.

      important to know the tools technology offers and how to use those tools.

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

      teacher needs to know her options of resources, so she can choose the tool that best benefits her classroom

    1. Technological pedagogical content knowledge is an understanding that emerges from interactions among content, pedagogy, and technology knowledge.

      intertwining all these components will lead to the most effective teaching approach. understand the content and how technology can be used to introduce and represent the content, understanding technology and all the processes and resources it offers to advance teaching and learning, and understanding how to teach the material to the students and how to use technology to make the student's learning experience more beneficial.

    2. TPK requires a forward-looking, creative, and open-minded seeking of technology use, not for its own sake but for the sake of advancing student learning and understanding.

      do not really understand the difference between TCK and TPK, but TPK allows the teacher to find the best way to use technology to advance the teaching and possibly make the learning process easier for the students.

    3. Teachers need to understand which specific technologies are best suited for addressing subject-matter learning in their domains and how the content dictates or perhaps even changes the technology—or vice versa.

      when the teacher deeply understands the content, the teacher can determine if technology can be used to upgrade or worsen the student's experience in learning the content. also, the teacher should be able to confidently use technology in the most beneficial way, which is only accomplished when the teacher understands the content matter and the technology processes.

    4. Acquiring TK in this manner enables a person to accomplish a variety of different tasks using information technology and to develop different ways of accomplishing a given task.

      need to understand technology and all the components that make it up. need to be aware of the various and many resources it offers that can be used to accomplish certain tasks. technology can enhance teaching and learning when the teacher is aware its processes and of all the possible ways it can be used.

    5. PCK is consistent with and similar to Shulman’s idea of knowledge of pedagogy that is applicable to the teaching of specific content.

      the teacher understands the content and figures out the best way to teach the content depending on their classroom. need a deep understanding of the material to be able to determine the best teaching strategy that will be used to distribute the content to the classroom

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

      teachers know different teaching strategies that are beneficial in the classroom and know how students learn and construct knowledge. the teacher needs to assess each student because all students learn differently and may need a different teaching approach than their fellow classmates.

    7. 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 very important for the teacher to know the subject matter they are teaching and also deeply understand it in depth

    8. 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,

      according to the TPACK framework, to effectively integrate technology into the classroom, the teacher needs to have knowledge on the content, on pedagogy and technology. in addition to this, the teacher needs to be able to connect these three factors and how they work together.

    9. There is no “one best way” to integrate technology into curriculum.

      integrating technology in the classroom should be creative and designed specifically for that certain teacher and classroom. different subject matter and grade levels will affect how technology in used in the classroom. but the TPACK framework is arguably the best approach in how to guide the teacher in incorporating technology into the classroom.

    10. not surprising that they do not consider themselves sufficiently prepared to use technology in the classroom and often do not appreciate its value or relevance to teaching and learning.

      many teachers did not receive the adequate teaching on technology when they got their degree, mostly due to the time they got their degree. these teachers are not adequately prepared for using and integrating technology into the classroom. if these teachers barely understand it themselves, how are they going to effectively distribute it within their classroom and how are they going to teach it to their classroom?

    11. 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.

      technology is always improving, so we often forget about and take for granted past technology when newer technology replaces it. traditional pedagogical technology is specific (has one specific use), stable (doesn't change), and transparency of perception (what is provided is what is used) while new digital technologies are protean (usable in many different ways), unstable (changing rapidly), and opaque (the uses are sometimes hidden and hard to figure out)

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

      ill-structured discipline: a lot of the time, teachers have to intertwine different areas of content across the board to be able to teach their class on a specific subject. a beneficial teaching requires using knowledge from all different structures and combining that knowledge to make sense of one topic and to get the point across. a teacher has to consider their own knowledge on the subject matter, the students learning techniques and current competencies, and the use of technology.

    13. 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.

      to be able to effectively teach and incorporate technology in the classroom, a teacher needs to understand the content, pedagogy and technology and be able to practice it.

    14. teacher knowledge for technology integration called technological pedagogical content knowledge

      it is critical that teachers are educated and confident in their technological pedagogical content knowledge. this is the knowledge on pedagogy content combined with technology knowledge to be most effective in a classroom and use technology to advance teaching techniques.

    1. Traditional education is failing to engage many students as they enter their middle school, high school, and college years.

      I found the image that shows the engagement in schools decreases as the grade rises. I never thought about how different hands-on work is between elementary, middle and high schools. We need to incorporate PBL and connected learning more and throughout all grade levels.

    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.

      this follows the same idea that project-based learning arises from. the idea that hands-on work that actually engages the children makes them more excited about their work and in turn, allows them to retain the information instead of just memorizing info for a test & then forgetting it right after

  7. languagedev.wikispaces.com languagedev.wikispaces.com
    1. In academic settings, language is used in specific ways for specific purposes. This register of language is referred to in English-speaking settings as academic English.

      how the english language is used in the classroom to be able to work, display what you have learned, correct errors in spelling, pronunciation or errors, collaborate with classmates, and evaluate your own learning. the "right" way to use language in academic situation & the benefits of using it in school

    2. t is important for teachers to recognize and value the home language or dialect of each child in their classrooms.

      language provides the child's background, identity, and development, so it's important to assess their native language.

    3. Dialects devolop in settings where a group of people com-nrnnicato within their group moro froquontly and for a longer period of lime than they do with outside groups.

      example would be the south using "yall" instead of "you all." just because you use a specific dialect, does not make that the "norm." respect all culture's dialect.

    4. When a pidgin is creolized, linguistic features of the language are expanded, especially with respect to grammar-syntax, vocabulary-semantics, and function-style-pragmatics.

      creole is more complex and advanced than pidgin

    5. Differences in language use were attributed to the complex family culture-not simply to socioeconomic status or ethnic group identity.

      this reflects the interactionist perspective (and behaviorist perspective) the idea that we learn language through interaction with the people around us.

    6. In recognizing the varied ways in which language is used in different settings and speech communities, there has also been an acknowledgment that people tan develop linguistic flexibility that allows them to communicate effectively in differ· ant settings, using different dialects and communication styles

      this is an example of pragmatic knowledge. you learn early on to figure out the intent of your conversation and how to reach that intent, depending on your setting and who you are talking to.

    7. Cultural differences have also been noted in the ways in which language is used pragmatically. In U.S. culture, new skills are typically taught and learned through verbal instruction {Slobin, 1979) or through silent observation. A distinction has also been made betwe-en cultures that encourage independent learning and those that encourage cooperative learning

      we learn by different approaches depending on the culture. each culture has a different use of language and how they learn and distribute that language.

    8. Language and culturo are intorlwinocl in a complex way. Tho system of symbols prosont in a language and tho way in which a language is usocl lo communicate have uniquo foalurcs for nach particular cull urn or subculture.

      keeping this in mind as teachers is important bc each individual brings their own experiences to the classroom, and we want to appreciate those differences.

    1. You need to differentiate the learning environment because some students learn better on their own, and others learn better in a team

      balance collaboration & individual learning. need to know how to learn on their own but also need to learn communication skills & how to work in groups. also need to make time to individually meet with students to see how they are performing

    2. Another essential component of PBL is student voice and choice, both in terms of what students produce and how they use their time.

      this was mentioned in one of O'Byrne's articles about PBL, but the idea that students state their opinions and suggestions & also choose what they end up doing. this allows them to be more interested & engaged in their work. it also makes it more personal

    3. Throughout the project, students should be reflecting on their work and setting goals for further learning.

      have students critique their own work & make sure they are proud of it. make goals for themselves to reach eventually & make them better

    4. Sometimes in a novel- or literature-based PBL project, it might be appropriate to differentiate by grouping into reading level.

      dividing students into groups regarding their skill level to make sure you are assessing their needs & improving their skill by the correct instruction

    5. it is student-centered, student-driven, and gives space for teachers to meet the needs of students in a variety of ways.

      PBL revolves around the students & accommodates their needs

    1. With clearly identified results (enduring understandings) and appropriate evidence of understanding in mind, educators can now plan instructional activities.

      knowing your goals for the classroom & your students along with the best approaches on how to assess the student's progress, then allows you to make your lesson plan & go about in how you are going to instruct

    2. Given its focus on understanding, our unit or course will be anchored by performance tasks or projects—these provide evidence that students are able to use their knowledge in context, a more appropriate means of evoking and assessing enduring understanding.

      projects show evidence of understanding bc the student has to be completely engaged and familiar with the topic they are presenting. a full understanding is needed when doing a project whereas memorization can be used for tests & all that "memorized" info can be quickly forgotten

    3. The backward design approach encourages us to think about a unit or course in terms of the collected assessment evidence needed to document and validate that the desired learning has been achieved, so that the course is not just content to be covered or a series of learning activities

      collecting evidence of understanding to measure the student's progress & knowledge acquisition & how to go about in doing this

    4. The smallest ring represents finer-grain choices—selecting the "enduring" understandings that will anchor the unit or course.

      what to make sure the student's hold onto & learn above all other things. what to focus on mainly

    5. It specifies the prerequisite knowledge and skills needed by students for them to successfully accomplish key performances

      how to make the students experts in that subject

    6. Without a focus on linchpin ideas that have lasting value, students may be left with easily forgotten fragments of knowledge.

      when students don't see use of what they are learning or a purpose for it, they will not hold on to the knowledge.

    7. In this first stage, we consider our goals, examine established content standards (national, state, and district), and review curriculum expectations.

      cant address all the content, so find the areas that are most promising & worth while. the content that will provide the students with the most skills for the future

    8. Greater coherence among desired results, key performances, and teaching and learning experiences leads to better student performance—the purpose of design.

      when students know what they are working towards, they try harder & want to understand the content

    9. backward design calls for us to operationalize our goals or standards in terms of assessment evidence as we begin to plan a unit or course.

      deciding how you are going to measure the student's acquisition & progress before you start your curriculum

    10. We are advocating the reverse: One starts with the end—the desired results (goals or standards)—and then derives the curriculum from the evidence of learning (performances) called for by the standard and the teaching needed to equip students to perform.

      teacher should make goals of what they want to accomplish in their classroom & then make a lesson place that enables them to achieve these goals

    1. In Stage 3 of backward design, teachers plan the most appropriate lessons and learning activities to address the three different types of goals identified in Stage 1: transfer, meaning making, and acquisition (T, M, and A).

      now that the teacher has decided what they are going to assess in class & how they are going to measure student's progress or learning, she/he needs to construct the lesson place that best fits the student.

    2. we consider in advance the assessment evidence needed to document and validate that the targeted learning has been achieved.

      need to see where the students are & if they are learning effectively. can use performance tasks & other evidence to track student's progress

    3. Essential companion questions are used to engage learners in thoughtful “meaning making” to help them develop and deepen their understanding of important ideas and processes that support such transfer.

      providing open-ended questions to draw the students in to realize what they are doing is important & has a purpose. show the students how that specific assessment will help them in the future. doesn't only need to be used in the classroom & shouldn't only be used in the classroom (transfer of learning)

    4. In the first stage of backward design, we consider our goals, examine established content standards (national, state, prov-ince, and district), and review curriculum expectations.

      teacher should figure out what they are going to teach that fits in the curriculum & how they are going to assess it

    1. These 21C Skills span across sectors and domain areas and are critical in a variety of jobs and higher education, and for success in life

      problem-solving (understanding the problem, taking different approaches to solve the problem, etc), creativity (to add your own twist & make your work unique), communication (share ideas & critique each other), and collaboration (talk w/ others & work together)= all important qualities to have at this time

    2. 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.

      learn how to read (understand how to navigate through the web & resources to use to help you gain information), write (design websites & edit pre-existing ones to make them better) & participate (communicate & collaborate by sharing your work, etc) on the web. critical for this information age & the ever-changing technologies

    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.

      skill & familiarity with technology & the web is important for this generation.

    1. extended process of inquiry, critique, and revision.

      having the students answer their own questions and collaborate to find the information they are looking for, critique their own work & have peers along with the teacher critique their work, then revise their own work.

    2. Schoolwork is more meaningful when it's not done only for the teacher or the test. When students present their work to a real audience, they care more about its quality.

      when there is an actual purpose for student's work other than a good grade, students work harder and are more excited & engaged in their work.

    3. In addition to providing direct feedback, the teacher should coach students in using rubrics or other sets of criteria to critique one another's work.

      peer revision or teacher aid in a project allows the student to realize there is always room for improvement & shows them the importance of collaboration.

    4. In real inquiry, students follow a trail that begins with their own questions, leads to a search for resources and the discovery of answers, and often ultimately leads to generating new questions, testing ideas, and drawing their own conclusions.

      real inquiry allows the students to respond & promotes discussion, questioning, hypothesizing, theorizing, & developing new ideas & perspectives. not one right answer?

    5. 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 helps give students skills that will stay with them & benefit them in the future. allows the student to be creative & go out of their comfort zone

    6. In terms of making a project feel meaningful to students, the more voice and choice, the better.

      teachers hear their student's opinions and feedback. also let their students have a choice in what topic they choose so that they are more interested in the project. teacher also wants to make sure they are staying true to their own style and what is beneficial for their students.

    7. A project without a driving question is like an essay without a thesis.

      always provide a "driving question" with an assignment. a good driving question gives students a reason of why they are doing that specific project. open-ended, complex question linked to the project that gives the project purpose.

    8. announcing a project by distributing a packet of papers is likely to turn students off; it looks like a prelude to busywork.

      when assigning projects, teacher should present it in a fun, enthusiastic way. this can be done by a video, lively discussion. guest speaker, etc.

    9. Many students find schoolwork meaningless because they don't perceive a need to know what they're being taught.

      when student's know the content they are studying is important & will be beneficial in the long run, they are more interested & try harder

    10. 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. Well-designed and well-implemented project-based learning is meaningful in both ways.

      projects are impactful on students when: they are personal & motivate the student to do good work and involve hands-on learning with practice on how to present and design in a meaningful way

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

      PBL actually engages and excites students. it also is not just about memorizing but PBL allows the student to actually understand what they are doing. lots of benefits of PBL

    2. Now that technology has made it easy to find any fact in a matter of seconds, the ability to regurgitate information is no longer valued the way it once was.

      just "spitting out facts" isnt good enough anymore. need to know skills (verbal communication skills, problem-solving skills, ability to work on a team, etc) and hands-on learning

    3. 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.

      deals with real-world problems and provides learning strategies that will help you throughout life

    4. deliver content to students, give them opportunities to practice or apply what they learned, and eventually conduct a summative assessment

      Project-based learning is pretty much what we consider to be "traditional" instruction

  8. Aug 2017
  9. languagedev.wikispaces.com languagedev.wikispaces.com
    1. The most effec· live scaffolding promotes the highest level of functioning with the lowest level of support.

      Have the student try & make mistakes while you aid them. Do not just say "you can do it" & then give them the answer.

    2. This perspective contends that children acquire language through their attempts to communicate with the world around them.

      I thought this was Piaget's belief, but how is that possible if Piaget believes children are born "preprogrammed."

    3. Thus, language is "taught" through situations in which children are encouraged to imilato others' speech and to devolop associations between verbal stimuli (i.e., words) and objects

      I agree with this. What I am confused about is that I inferred Piaget to be suggesting this same idea, which can not be right since Piaget believes children our born with certain abilities/inabilities.

    4. The nativist and the cognitive dovelopmentalisl perspectives emphasize the contributions of "nature," whereas tho behaviorist and interaclionist perspectives focus more on the contributions of "nurture."

      nativist & cognitive focuses on the child being "preprogrammed" @ birth while behaviorist & interactionist focus on the child being born w/ a "blank slate"

  10. languagedev.wikispaces.com languagedev.wikispaces.com
    1. Children's ability to urticulnle and cliscriminato different sounds and words when using language lo communicnle rnprosonts their Ii nguislic Jovel of phonological knowledge. Similarly. childrnn's ability to corn pa ohond tho semantic meanings of others' spoech and to croato their own moan-i ngf ul spooch rnpresenls their linguistic level of semantic knowledge. Tho linguistic lovol or syntactic knowledge is evident us children aro ablo lo express Lhoir icloas in a form thal is grammnlically appropriate Lo their dialect or language. Morphemic knowl· odgo at tho linguistic lovol is ovidonl when a child can use appropriate plural forms of 11m111s or use prefixos and suffixos. Tho linguistic level or pragmatic knowledge is clem-onstratod by a child's use of "ploaso" and "thank you" iu social situations.

      summary or easier way to define the five aspects of language knowledge by using examples

    2. Through lan-guage, we represent the world and l.oarn about the world.

      how important language, written and oral, is and as future educators, we are responsible to understand this importance so we can effectively teach language & its many aspects and significance to our students.

    1.  The truth of the matter is that you already have various digital breadcrumbs that already exist from the residue you leave online as you live your life.

      your online identity should be someone you want to be, and you have time to edit this person.

    2. Avatar in this context primarily comes from business or marketing and refers to an ideal client or targeted audience.

      an ideal person/audience of who you want to address. allows you to decide if your work is appropriate for the audience and/or fills your purpose of that social network

    3. there are opportunities to create different identities in different places, and share more in one space that you would another.

      depending on your followers and the type of things posted on that certain social media network

    4. The key point is that you can create any identity you so choose.

      depending on the social media network and/or your followers

    5. you’ll have to consider how public you’ll want to be online.

      what do you want public? what do you want private?

    6. describes actively framing, curating, sharing, and directing your own engagement streams throughout the learning environment. This means that you take control of the various parts of your digital identity and shape the digital identity that you want.

      personal cyberinfrastructure

    7. The end result is an identity spread across numerous digital spaces that is often incomplete.

      info can be shared, not shared, deleted, moved, modified, etc.

    8. Our online and offline interactions are woven together into a narrative that forms different parts of our identity.

      we can control our online identity and info on our social media accounts only to an extent

    1. I believe that by keeping your design choices consistent across multiple spaces, you create a sense of professionalism and polish in your presented materials.

      all your social networks should be similar and consistent. have all accounts represent you the same

    2. Select images, photos, images, and colors that represent the identity you would like to use as your digital identity.

      profile picture? quotes? texts? design elements? patterns?

    3. This means that you develop and direct the information streams that individuals use to interact with you online.

      you personally create your own online identity from scratch that is not altered by outside sources

    1. PBL raises students self-esteem by beginningthe cycle of success

      no one is dumb. we can all succeed if we understand how we learn as an individual

    2. Children re-tainmoreinformationwhentheylearnbydoing.

      hands-on work provides experience for the child and adds excitement to their work

    3. Research sup-ports that students using PBL perform better on bothstandardized assessments and project tests than stu-dentsintraditionaldirectinstructionprograms,andthatthey learn not only real-world application of skills, butalso analytic thinking

      probably bc the students that have used PBL know how to approach the problem in the way they will understand it and get it right

    4. Scaffolded instructionoccurs in PBL when teachers use organizers that aid stu-dents in bridging the gaps that exists in knowledge andskill, and it makes the tasks manageable and achievable.

      instead of making the child feel dumb when they can not understand something, the teacher changes their technique and teaches the lesson with another approach

    5. Childrenlearn so much about themselves when they are empow-ered to make their own learning decisions.

      compared to standardized testing where you are given certain, restricted material that you are forced to learn

    6. Consistent employment and prac-tice of these skills will strengthen them over time andlead to proficiency and mastery.

      allowing the student to grade themselves and perfect their work over time

    7. Accountability to peers often has greaterconsequences and provides more motivation for stu-dents than if they were only responsible to the teacher.

      the only time "peer pressure" is good

    8. Furthermore, these students demonstrateda solid grasp of the concepts and were able to performwell on traditional tests

      PBL allows students to express their intelligence in diverse ways and also gives them more confidence to actually demonstrate their potential

    9. standardized testing does not measure criti-cal twenty-first-century skills that are integral for studentsuccess.

      standardized testing limits intelligence to one category

    10. The outcome ofPBL is greater understanding of a topic, deeper learning,higher-level reading, and increased motivation to learn.

      Forcing student to research creatively and independently while still providing help and assistance if needed.

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