It's late October, and kids' minds are turning to costuming and candy, marauding and merriment -- yes, this is Halloween time! While parents get mired in guilt over fair-trade candy and childhood obesity issues and some schools ban Halloween celebrations altogether, many teachers take advantage of the excitement in the crisp autumn air and brew up some activities related to All Hallow's Eve. (Amy Erin Borovoy at Edutopia)
To learn more and to watch some Halloween-related video that could be used for learning, click the above hyperlinked text.
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
A primer on copyright and Creative Commons
Copyright and Creative Commons Explained by Common Craft can be very useful in helping students understand why they cannot simply copy and paste whatever images they like that they find online. (from Free Technology for Teachers)
What can and cannot be used and how....Creative Commons licenses describe just how material an individual creates can be used by others. And there's some interesting and important information on this topic at Free Technology for Teachers.
What can and cannot be used and how....Creative Commons licenses describe just how material an individual creates can be used by others. And there's some interesting and important information on this topic at Free Technology for Teachers.
Monday, October 29, 2012
Getting students engaged
If you're looking for ways to increase student engagement, you can find resources at Edutopia. These resources include a number of blog posts in which teachers describe ways they've gotten students in their classrooms more engaged. To learn more, click the hyperlinked text below.
Friday, October 26, 2012
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Science searching
Symbolab is a new search engine designed for mathematicians and scientists. The search engine is a semantic search engine which means that rather than just searching the text of your query Symabolab attempts to interpret and search for the meaning of your query. What this means is that when you type in an equation you will get results as links and get results as graphs when appropriate. Think of it Symbolab as a cross between Google and Wolfram Alpha. (from Free Technology for Teachers)
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
A reminder about Edutopia
Edutopia is dedicated to transforming the learning process by helping educators implement the strategies below. These strategies -- and the educators who implement them -- are empowering students to think critically, access and analyze information, creatively problem solve, work collaboratively, and communicate with clarity and impact. Discover the resources, research, experts, and fellow Edutopia members who are changing our schools. Join us in reinventing the learning process! (from Edutopia)
Click the above hyperlinked text to learn more
Click the above hyperlinked text to learn more
Tuesday, October 23, 2012
Why teachers should write with their students
Particularly, the “workshop” classrooms are “writers’ workshops” geared
toward increasing awareness of and exposure to the power of writing for
students. One of the core ideas at play in these workshops is the idea
of the teacher as a writer, as a model for students in a professional
context. When they write, she writes. What they write, she attempts too.
When I consider the effect this has on students, it is nothing short of transformative. When students understand the purpose for something outside of an assignment, they tend to remember it better. When they see an adult attempting what they ask others to do, they are motivated to join in. Teachers of writing (and teachers who use writing, for that matter) have an obligation to consider themselves as writers and act as such in the classroom. ( Steve J More at Edutopia)
When I consider the effect this has on students, it is nothing short of transformative. When students understand the purpose for something outside of an assignment, they tend to remember it better. When they see an adult attempting what they ask others to do, they are motivated to join in. Teachers of writing (and teachers who use writing, for that matter) have an obligation to consider themselves as writers and act as such in the classroom. ( Steve J More at Edutopia)
Monday, October 22, 2012
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
One student on writing instruction
As a high school student myself, I was intrigued by Peg Tyre's article
about a Staten Island school's turnaround. Tyre shows the importance of
writing skills to academic and professional success. She looks
specifically at the new and improved curriculum at New Dorp High School,
which emphasizes analysis over self-expression.
On a basic level, the idea works just fine. To perform well on tests and slap together personal statements, students need to be able to string words into sentences and sentences into paragraphs. The grammar and paragraph structure learned in English class are also handy in most jobs when schooling ends and students are tossed headfirst into the "real world." An astrophysicist must be able to describe her data, and a business executive needs to be able to write clear memos. But should schools solely focus on the mechanical facets of writing? (Haley Lee at The Atlantic)
On a basic level, the idea works just fine. To perform well on tests and slap together personal statements, students need to be able to string words into sentences and sentences into paragraphs. The grammar and paragraph structure learned in English class are also handy in most jobs when schooling ends and students are tossed headfirst into the "real world." An astrophysicist must be able to describe her data, and a business executive needs to be able to write clear memos. But should schools solely focus on the mechanical facets of writing? (Haley Lee at The Atlantic)
Monday, October 15, 2012
Addressing student boredom
One glance, and any teacher knows the score: That student, halfway
down the row, staring blankly at his tapping pen, fidgeting, sneaking
glances at the wall clock roughly every 30 seconds, is practically
screaming, "I'm bored!"
While boredom is a perennial student complaint, emerging research shows it is more than students' not feeling entertained, but rather a "flavor of stress" that can interfere with their ability to learn and even their health. An international group of researchers argues this month in Perspectives on Psychological Science that the experience of boredom directly connects to a student's inability to focus attention. (Sara. D. Sparks at Education Week)
While boredom is a perennial student complaint, emerging research shows it is more than students' not feeling entertained, but rather a "flavor of stress" that can interfere with their ability to learn and even their health. An international group of researchers argues this month in Perspectives on Psychological Science that the experience of boredom directly connects to a student's inability to focus attention. (Sara. D. Sparks at Education Week)
Friday, October 12, 2012
Resources for teaching English language learners
ELL Best Practices
Guide This ELL Best Practices guide helps you create acomprehensive communication plan that puts LEP parents on equal footing withEnglish-speaking parents and shows you how to steer clear of discriminationduring student registration. (from Teaching Tolerance)
To learn more, click the above hyperlinked text.
To learn more, click the above hyperlinked text.
Thursday, October 11, 2012
Mark up webpages with Markup
Express thoughts quickly and easily on any webpage. Share ideas with coworkers and friends. Since Markup works in your browser, so there’s nothing to download and install. Just drag the Get Markup icon into your bookmarks bar. When you want to make notes on a webpage, click your bookmarklet to load the Markup toolbar. Publish when you’re ready to share your thoughts. (from the Markup website)
To learn more and to get the Markup bookmark tool, click the above hyperlinked text.
To learn more and to get the Markup bookmark tool, click the above hyperlinked text.
Wednesday, October 10, 2012
Code matters
The computer world is based on using APIs. Zynga uses the Facebook
APIs to embed its games on FaceBook. Any iPhone or iPad app uses the iOS
API to let you move stuff by swiping the screen. WordPress is built on a
series of APIs that lets just about anybody build a web site in
minutes.
However, even the best of these APIs are hard to use because the documentation, supposedly written in English, is terrible. Most engineers can't write a single coherent sentence, never mind string together a paragraph. (Bernard Meisler at The Atlantic)
However, even the best of these APIs are hard to use because the documentation, supposedly written in English, is terrible. Most engineers can't write a single coherent sentence, never mind string together a paragraph. (Bernard Meisler at The Atlantic)
Tuesday, October 9, 2012
Monday, October 8, 2012
Exit exams and the Common Core
With many states crafting assessments based on the common-core
standards—and an increasing emphasis on college and career
readiness—some are rethinking the kind of tests high school students
must pass to graduate, or whether to use such exit exams at all.
Twenty-five states, enrolling a total of 34.1 million students, make exit exams a graduation requirement, according to a study released last month by the Center on Education Policy, a Washington-based think tank. That represents 69 percent of the nation's K-12 enrollment. And that's grown over the past decade: In 2003, 19 states representing 52 percent of U.S. enrollment had such exit exams. (Andrew Usifuja at Education Week)
Twenty-five states, enrolling a total of 34.1 million students, make exit exams a graduation requirement, according to a study released last month by the Center on Education Policy, a Washington-based think tank. That represents 69 percent of the nation's K-12 enrollment. And that's grown over the past decade: In 2003, 19 states representing 52 percent of U.S. enrollment had such exit exams. (Andrew Usifuja at Education Week)
Friday, October 5, 2012
Thursday, October 4, 2012
Formal testing of prekindergartners
Teachers at Orlando Day Nursery in Florida have always evaluated how
well their 4-year-old prekindergartners—most of them poor and
African-American—could recognize letters, isolate sounds in words,
understand stories read to them, and show other hallmarks of early
literacy.
Just as important, though, have been the teachers' formal observations of social and emotional development: Could children follow instructions, for example, and make friends and cooperate in a group? (Lesli A. Maxwell at Education Week)
Just as important, though, have been the teachers' formal observations of social and emotional development: Could children follow instructions, for example, and make friends and cooperate in a group? (Lesli A. Maxwell at Education Week)
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
Writing about things
"What is a concrete noun?" a student might ask.
"It's something you can drop on your foot," I always answer. "It's that simple."
"So if I am writing about markets, productivity and wealth, I am going to...."
"Yes indeed -- you are going to write about things you can drop on your foot, and people, too. Green peppers, ears of corn, windshield wipers, or a grimy mechanic changing your car's oil. No matter how abstract your topic, how intangible, your first step is to find things you can drop on your foot."
From a teacher's perspective, the lovely thing about this technique of writing with things you can drop on your foot is that both the skilled and the unskilled can do it. Both kinds of students find the assignment intriguing. Students led into writing this way at the start of a course--writing about abstract ideas in terms of concrete objects--find it strange at first, but they are pleased that the task is actually doable. They start to write with good examples, though they don't think of them as examples, but as objects.(John Maguire at The Atlantic)
"It's something you can drop on your foot," I always answer. "It's that simple."
"So if I am writing about markets, productivity and wealth, I am going to...."
"Yes indeed -- you are going to write about things you can drop on your foot, and people, too. Green peppers, ears of corn, windshield wipers, or a grimy mechanic changing your car's oil. No matter how abstract your topic, how intangible, your first step is to find things you can drop on your foot."
From a teacher's perspective, the lovely thing about this technique of writing with things you can drop on your foot is that both the skilled and the unskilled can do it. Both kinds of students find the assignment intriguing. Students led into writing this way at the start of a course--writing about abstract ideas in terms of concrete objects--find it strange at first, but they are pleased that the task is actually doable. They start to write with good examples, though they don't think of them as examples, but as objects.(John Maguire at The Atlantic)
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Monday, October 1, 2012
Supreme Court to hear affirmative action case
The future of affirmative action in education—not just for colleges
but potentially for K-12 schools as well—may be on the line when the
U.S. Supreme Court takes up a race-conscious admissions plan from the
University of Texas next month.
That seems apparent to the scores of education groups that have lined up behind the university with friend-of-the-court briefs calling on the justices to uphold the plan and continue to recognize the need for racial diversity in the nation’s schools and classrooms. (Mark Walsh at Education Week)
That seems apparent to the scores of education groups that have lined up behind the university with friend-of-the-court briefs calling on the justices to uphold the plan and continue to recognize the need for racial diversity in the nation’s schools and classrooms. (Mark Walsh at Education Week)
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