technology

14 Brilliant Bloom’s Taxonomy Posters For Teachers

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Bloom’s Revised are essential to teaching 21st Century Skills and Common Core! Great visual resources for educators.  “Bloom’s Taxonomy is a useful tool for assessment design, but using it only for that function is like using a race car to go to the grocery–a huge waste of potential.”  In this TeachThought post they look at better use of Bloom’s taxonomy in the classroom read more at http://www.teachthought.com/learning/14-brilliant-blooms-taxonomy-posters-for-teachers/

10 Important Questions To Ask Yourself Before Deploying iPads

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Instead of focusing on the financial and logistical considerations when implementing 1 to 1 IPad programs we need to focus on the curriculum needs and ensure that the IPad implementation, what positive effects will they have on student learning.  To read this excellent article from
TeachThought click here.  

9 Characteristics Of 21st Century Learning

21st-Century-Overview
1. Learner-centered

2. Media-driven (this doesn’t have to mean digital media)

3. Personalized

4. Transfer-by-Design

5. Visibly Relevant

6. Data-Rich

7. Adaptable

8. Interdependent

9. Diverse
Read the full article at http://www.teachthought.com/learning/9-characteristics-of-21st-century-learning/

iPads in the classroom: embedding technology in the primary curriculum

Spring Cottage Primary School

As all of our schools wrestle with the technological revolution and application to classroom instruction educators continue to try and transcend the chasm from digital immigrant and try and develop classroom strategies to meet the needs of our digital natives.  Today’s classroom teachers are digital immigrants and must develop literacy in technology to meet the needs of these students.

Digital Natives are the generation born during or after the general introduction of digital technology. Digital Natives have an inherent understanding of digital technologies, as they’ve been integrated into their lives since early childhood. They are part of a tech-savvy generation at the forefront of technological progress and want to be connected when they wish, from anywhere.

Almost as soon as they can walk, children these days are using iPads, iPhones and all sorts of mobile devices. Most three and four year olds are now technologically savvy, using digital technology at home, in school, and on the go. Using the web site to play games, learn language, math, and reading skills, take pictures and listen to music.  This means that a burgeoning number of children are well versed with the Internet and the hardware they need to access it, well before they even start school.

iPads and iPods are influencing all areas of learning in David Andrews’ classroom. He reveals how he’s using the iPad in the following article from Teacher Network.  Click here to read about his amazing technology journey and how he is using iPads in his primary classroom to build and control a ‘vehicle’ using a variety of online apps.

 

New Common Core standards will focus on critical thinking over memorization

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With the onset of the Common Core teachers in classrooms all over the country are expecting their students to do more than calculate the correct answers in math class. Students are expected to work through problems and demonstrate how they arrive at answers. After conferring with classmates, they also must critique the reasoning of their peers.

Math instruction will be infused with Common Core, academic standards that are set to hit California classrooms in the 2014-15 school year. The Common Core guidelines were developed by a nationwide consortium of educators and other officials. They are designed to emphasize critical-thinking skills over rote memorization and better prepare students for college and career. No more multiple-choice answers, the whole point of Common Core is to support teachers to prepare students for college and beyond.

Schools throughout California, in private and public institutions, are working to incorporate the new benchmarks into daily lessons in time for the statewide launch, which is set for fall 2014. The shift will drive systemic changes in instructional practices and outcomes from kindergarten through high school. The overarching goal of Common Core is to transform how students are taught, particularly what they must do to master math, English and other subjects.
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Common Core and the Use of Technology

At the heart of standards-based education lie academic content standards. Content standards specify what students should know and be able to do, typically by grade level. By extension, they also specify what schools should teach.  Over the years different states developed their own academic standards that didn’t necessarily align with those found in other states.  With the adoption of national Common Core Standards the United States is taking the first step in ensuring that our country has aligned rigorous standards for all students. Over the next couple of years all of the states will be moving towards aligning curricula and assessment to these standards.  Along with the changes required in curriculum and textbooks comes the need to change assessments as well as the way we asses our students achievement both formatively and summatively.

The Common Core State Standards provide a consistent, clear understanding of what students are expected to learn, so teachers and parents know what they need to do to help them. The standards are designed to be robust and relevant to the real world, reflecting the knowledge and skills that our young people need for success in college and careers. With American students fully prepared for the future, our communities will be best positioned to compete successfully in the global economy. Ideally, these standards are rigorous and based on widely held agreements about the educational goals of the system.

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Technology as “Hamburger Helper”

I recently read an article in Education Week by Rick Hess entitled, Technology as Hamburger Helper.  In his article, Rick talks frankly about technology in the classroom and the importance of viewing it as an a tool rather than viewing technology as the difference maker.

His article is a must read for all teachers and school leaders as we struggle to make meaning of how to best use technology as a tool to solve problems smarter, deliver knowledge, support students, extend and deepen instruction, and refashion cost structures.

If we supply our teachers with technological advances and they are unfamiliar with how to use them, how to integrate technology into their curriculum or how to differentiate instruction using them, are we wasting our time and resources?

Ricks article can be found at Technology as “Hamburger Helper”.

An annual report reveals that student-owned mobile devices, including tablets, are on the rise

As we begin this school year, there continues to be a need for our schools to change the way we foster learning in this generation of students.  Our students are vastly different than the students of 5 or 10 years ago, their needs are changing rapidly because of the ever increasing technological advances, social media, educational programs, informational technology and the accessibility of devices to access the internet.  These 21st century learners, or digital natives live and interact with their world in vastly different ways that their parents or teachers who are digital immigrants.  The article below was written by By Laura Devaney, Managing Editor of ESchool News and shares some statistical information supporting the changing needs of students and the need for our educational system to change to meet their leaning needs.

More and more students own mobile devices, including tablets, and indicate a strong desire to use those personal learning tools in school to increase collaboration and access to resources, according to the annual Speak Up Survey, which is facilitated by Project Tomorrow.

“Students, perhaps without realizing it, are already seeking out ways to personalize their learning,” according to the report. “Looking to address what they perceive as deficiencies in classroom experiences, students are turning to online classes to study topics that pique their intellectual curiosity, to message and discussion boards to explore new ideas about their world, or to online collaboration tools to share their expertise with other students they don’t even know. Students now expect in their learning lives the same types of personalized interactions that adults already experience in our everyday lives.”

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Why Today’s Students are Different

If you do any educational reading you have most likely come across the term “21st century education”. There is little doubt that the students we educate today are very different that the students of just 10 years ago. They live in a world rich with technology, global access and a worldview like no other time in history. The characteristics of 21st century education will change the face of education, pedagogy, technology integration, and academic focus.  In  order to achieve within this developing context and beyond, it is accepted that students need:
  1. Reading literacy
  2. Information literacy
  3. Technological literacy
  4. Skills for personal knowledge building
  5. Oral literacy and numeracy  
According to Marc Prensky (2001b), “… today’s students think and process information fundamentally differently from their predecessors.” They are “digital natives,” born into the digital age, while adults are “digital immigrants,” adapting their skills and thinking processes to a new world. These digital natives have fundamentally different expectations of access and interactions with technology.
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