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English 6-9 graders. Teachit - English teaching resources. English Worksheets. ESL Library. Interactive-notebooks - home. Settingupthe Interactive Student Notebook. Www.ok.gov/sde/sites/ok.gov.sde/files/Targeting Growth.pdf. Twelve Active Learning Strategies. Example 1 Example 1 Explanation In order for students to learn effectively, they must make connections between what they already know (prior knowledge) and new content to which they're exposed. The opening of a lecture should facilitate these connections by helping students exercise their prior knowledge of the day's subject matter.

The following four slides illustrate strategies which stimulate students' thinking and prepare them to learn. One useful strategy is to open the lecture with a question. Present an "opening question" on a PowerPoint slide, give students a moment to think about their response, and then ask a few members of the class for answers. Example 2 Example 2 Explanation "Think-Pair-Share" is an active learning strategy that engages students with material on an individual level, in pairs, and finally as a large group. When used at the beginning of a lecture, a Think-Pair-Share strategy can help students organize prior knowledge and brainstorm questions.

Example 3 Example 4. Some Basic Active Learning Strategies. Engaging students in individual or small group activities–pairs or trios especially–is a low-risk strategy that ensures the participation of all. The sampling of basic activities below can be adapted to almost any discussion or lecture setting. Using these strategies, or variations on them, ensures that you'll hold your students' attention in class and throughout the semester. Ice Breakers Those things that get people talking quickly and personally about their goals, fears, expectations for the session before them.

Ask them, for example, to consider what one thing each hopes to gain from the workshop and what one thing each hopes to offer during the workshop, then have the group get up to rove the room for five minutes gathering a sense of what others have come to gain and to offer. At the end of the workshop, this might become a way for individuals to measure what they've accomplished and gained overall. Top Think/Pair/Share Write/Pair/Share Student Summaries Question and Answer Pairs top. What Is Active Learning?

Defining "active learning" is a bit problematic. The term means different thing to different people, while for some the very concept is redundant since it is impossible to learn anything passively. Certainly this is true, but it doesn't get us very far toward understanding active learning and how it can be applied in college classrooms. We might think of active learning as an approach to instruction in which students engage the material they study through reading, writing, talking, listening, and reflecting.

Active learning stands in contrast to "standard" modes of instruction in which teachers do most of the talking and students are passive. Think of the difference between a jar that's filled and a lamp that's lit. Students and their learning needs are at the center of active learning. Using active learning does not mean abandoning the lecture format, but it does take class time. Basic Elements of Active Learning Talking and Listening Writing Reading Reflecting Keys to Success Be creative! Free Technology for Teachers. PowerPoint Presentations free to download. Teachers and students.

WorksheetWorks.com. Share My Lesson - Free K-12 Resources By Teachers, For Teachers. How to Read A Book. “Marking a book is literally an experience of your differences or agreements with the author. It is the highest respect you can pay him.” — Edgar Allen Poe You already know how to read. I bet you were taught how in elementary school. But do you know how to read well? If you’re like most people, you probably haven’t given much thought to how you read. Are you reading for information or understanding? While great for exercising your memory, the regurgitation of facts without understanding gains you nothing. A good heuristic: Anything easily digested is reading for information.

Consider the newspaper, are you truly learning anything new? There’s nothing wrong with that; it’s how most people read. Learning something insightful is harder, you have to read something clearly above your current level. Reading for understanding means narrowing the gap between reader and writer. The four levels of reading Mortimer Adler literally wrote the the book on reading. ElementaryInspectionalAnalyticalSyntopical. How To Teach All Students To Think Critically. All first year students at the University of Technology Sydney could soon be required to take a compulsory maths course in an attempt to give them some numerical thinking skills. The new course would be an elective next year and mandatory in 2016 with the university’s deputy vice-chancellor for education and students Shirley Alexander saying the aim is to give students some maths “critical thinking” skills.

This is a worthwhile goal, but what about critical thinking in general? Most tertiary institutions have listed among their graduate attributes the ability to think critically. This seems a desirable outcome, but what exactly does it mean to think critically and how do you get students to do it? The problem is that critical thinking is the Cheshire Cat of educational curricula – it is hinted at in all disciplines but appears fully formed in none. So what should any mandatory first year course in critical thinking look like? Argumentationlogicpsychologythe nature of science. 1. 2. 3. 4. How to become smarter by doing less in the information age | The Uncommon Life by Kent Healy. Common: Believing that focusing on detail is the only and best path to success.

Uncommon: Let’s be honest: Most things studied in college are quickly forgotten. I believe this is partly due to the sheer number of concepts addressed per class, per semester. In my experience, the emphasis is often on breadth versus depth. This poses a challenge to students studying for comprehensive tests. I know; I’ve been there many times. But I didn’t have the “luxury” of making the library my second home to spend hours on rote memorization. The eclipsing effect of detail: Traditional college advice places an extremely high level of importance on detail, but this train of thought can be a hindrance, at times resulting in increased stress and workload.

An extreme focus on detail limits one’s ability to grasp the larger picture, which is critical to knowing what details to focus on. Even though it may seem like some tests include everything covered during the semester, 99% of tests do not. Not so. . - Kent. Sketchnotes 101: The Basics of Visual Note-taking. Welcome to the second article in the the new Core77 "Sketchnotes Channel" (www.core77.com/sketchnotes) where we'll be exploring the application of visual thinking tools in the worlds of design and creative thinking.

So you say you're ready to start sketchnoting. Maybe you're not much of a sketcher but you take a lot of notes, and are interested in making them more meaningful and interesting, but you're afraid your drawings are too crude. For you, it's important to stress that sketchnotes—although they are inherently a visual medium—do not require drawing ability of any kind. Essentially they're about transforming ideas into visual communication; structuring thoughts and giving hierarchy to concepts can be completed with strictly text and a few lines. Maybe you're perpetually drawing and want to try and make your notes more useful and engaging but you are afraid of imposing structure to your normally freeform way of sketching. In the end, it's up to you. So let's get tactical.

Visual thinking. Visual thinking is a way to organize your thoughts and improve your ability to think and communicate. It’s a way to expand your range and capacity by going beyond the linear world of the written word, list and spreadsheet, and entering the non-linear world of complex spacial relationships, networks, maps and diagrams. It’s also about using tools — like pen and paper, index cards and software tools — to externalize your internal thinking processes, making them more clear, explicit and actionable. Why is visual thinking important? There’s more information at your fingertips than ever before, and yet people are overwhelmed by it. We think in pictures. Think you can’t draw? Squiggle birds (I learned squiggle birds from my friend Chris Glynn). So why is visual thinking important? The whirl. Visualization is increasingly used in business and science to simplify complexity: a picture is worth a thousand words.

Drawing is a natural process for thinking, exploring ideas and learning. 1. 2. 3. 4. Here's Why, How, And What You Should Doodle To Boost Your Memory And Creativity. Did your boss ever catch you covering an important memo with Escher-like scribbles? In high school, did your teacher call you out for drawing on the desk, your sneakers, your skin? Today, the doodle nay-sayers are being drowned out by a growing body of research and opinion that indicates that connects that seemingly distracted scribbling with greater info retention and creativity.

Companies like Dell, and Zappos, and Disney are eager for employees to doodle on the job—they even pay consultants to help them. "I can’t tell you how important it is to draw," says Sunni Brown, whose creative consultancy Sunni Brown Ink, teaches "applied visual thinking"— a.k.a doodling—to coders, designers, and even journalists. "It gets the neurons to fire and expands the mind. " Just why and how this happens is the topic of Brown's recent book, The Doodle Revolution. Here, she shares her doodling "dos. " Why Doodle What To Doodle "Atomization. " "Game-Storming. " "Process Map. " When To Doodle Where To Doodle. Back to Basics: Perfect Your Note-Taking Techniques. Psychology: A simple trick to improve your memory. Want to enhance your memory for facts? Tom Stafford explains a counterintuitive method for retaining information. If I asked you to sit down and remember a list of phone numbers or a series of facts, how would you go about it?

There’s a fair chance that you’d be doing it wrong. One of the interesting things about the mind is that even though we all have one, we don't have perfect insight into how to get the best from it. One area where these blind spots are particularly large is learning. Researchers Jeffrey Karpicke and Henry Roediger III set out to look at one aspect: how testing can consolidate our memory of facts. Now if many of us were revising this list we might study the list, test ourselves and then repeat this cycle, dropping items we got right. On the final exam differences between the groups were dramatic.

It seems the effective way to learn is to practice retrieving items from memory, not trying to cement them in there by further study. How to never forget the name of someone you just met: The science of memory. 4.3K Flares Filament.io 4.3K Flares × How would you like to be able to recall the name of a client or associate you just met? How would you like to go to the bank and not fumble for your account number every stinking time? Everyday scenarios like these are classic examples of our need for memorization. The function of memory has so many more applications, too—public speaking, schoolwork, studying, research, the list goes on and on. Would you believe that memorization is not an innate ability but rather a learned skill?

You can learn how to memorize. You can become a memory expert by application and sheer force. You have the power to memorize anything and everything. How our brain memorizes things Before we get to the memorization techniques, first a science lesson on how the brain stores memories. We’ve talked about the undervalued importance of sleep and creativity and productivity before, so you likely know that the brain is a complicated, beautiful system of working parts. 1 = sun 2 = shoe.

Memory Tricks to Help You Learn by Real Business. It didn’t take long for Santiago Paiva, a data science researcher at Montreal-based Busbud, to see the difficulties in using rote memorization to learn Portuguese. “There are two ways to learn how to say ‘please’ in Portuguese,” says the Spanish and English speaker. “I could memorize the word, or I could associate it with Spanish, which is similar.” Neurologists say that associating random bits of information with something familiar is often the more effective route to remembering. “Something that is rote memorized is only retrievable the exact way it was processed,” says Dr. Judy Willis, a neurologist in California. “By forming multiple connections in the brain, we gain greater understanding and it becomes a long-term memory.” And in developing our ability to form durable connections, we help advance our day-to-day lives, whether we’re attempting to remember the name of a new colleague in the office or trying to keep track of all our daily tasks and assignments.

Step 1: Symbolize 1. 2. 3. The Neuroscience Behind Stress and Learning. The realities of standardized tests and increasingly structured, if not synchronized, curriculum continue to build classroom stress levels. Neuroimaging research reveals the disturbances in the brain's learning circuits and neurotransmitters that accompany stressful learning environments. The neuroscientific research about learning has revealed the negative impact of stress and anxiety and the qualitative improvement of the brain circuitry involved in memory and executive function that accompanies positive motivation and engagement.

The Proven Effects of Positive Motivation Thankfully, this information has led to the development of brain-compatible strategies to help students through the bleak terrain created by some of the current trends imposed by the Common Core State Standards and similar mandates. With brain-based teaching strategies that reduce classroom anxiety and increase student connection to their lessons, educators can help students learn more effectively. Hacking Knowledge: 77 Ways to Learn Faster, Deeper, and Better. If someone granted you one wish, what do you imagine you would want out of life that you haven’t gotten yet? For many people, it would be self-improvement and knowledge.

Newcounter knowledge is the backbone of society’s progress. Great thinkers such as Leonardo da Vinci, Thomas Edison, Benjamin Franklin, Albert Einstein, and others’ quests for knowledge have led society to many of the marvels we enjoy today. Your quest for knowledge doesn’t have to be as Earth-changing as Einstein’s, but it can be an important part of your life, leading to a new job, better pay, a new hobby, or simply knowledge for knowledge’s sake — whatever is important to you as an end goal. Life-changing knowledge does typically require advanced learning techniques. Health Shake a leg. Balance Sleep on it. Perspective and Focus Change your focus, part 2. Recall Techniques Listen to music. Visual Aids Every picture tells a story. Verbal and Auditory Techniques Stimulate ideas. Kinesthetic Techniques Write, don’t type. Welcome to Discovery Education. BrainPOP - Animated Educational Site for Kids - Science, Social Studies, English, Math, Arts.

Lessons Worth Sharing | TED-Ed. WatchKnowLearn. HowStuffWorks - Learn How Everything Works! The best place online to learn English for free.

Nearpod: Create, Engage, Assess through Mobile Devices. | Interactive Lessons | Mobile Learning | Apps for Education | iPads in the Classroom. The Power of Twitter: Personalized PD At Your Fingertips | The Golden Age of Education. Have you ever wanted to be in two places at the same time? Do you often feel as if you’re being pulled in three directions? In my roles as teacher, technology staff developer and father of four I frequently feel this way. Saturday was a good example of this as there were two education conferences in the NY Metropolitan area that I really wanted to attend, but family responsibilities prevented me from going to either of them. However, Twitter made it possible for me to “be” in three places at once! Long Island Connected Educators Summit 2015 (#CELI15) Teachers’ College Reading and Writing Project 88th Reunion (#TCRWP) Learning NEVER Stops on Twitter The awesome power of Twitter allowed me to participate in both conferences simultaneously while at my son’s snowy LAX practice.

Six Take-Aways From My Personalized PD Session on Twitter: This is just a little taste of what I learned in one afternoon of riding hashtags. Like this: Like Loading... The 35 Best Web 2.0 Classroom Tools Chosen By You. The Best 8 Tools to Create Posters for your Classroom. Youngzine | News and more for the Young. YouTube Education. Wonderopolis | Where the Wonders of Learning Never Cease. Visual Dictionary Online.

TED-Ed. Storybird - Artful Storytelling. Prezi - Presentation Software. Picture Book Maker. Paper.li – Be a publisher. LiveBinders. GoodReads. FlipSnack | PDF to Flash page flip - flipping book software. Edudemic - Education Technology Tips For Students And Teachers. BiblioNasium - Kids Share Book Recommendations. Use Online Reading Logs, Find Books At Their Reading Level. Easel.ly | create and share visual ideas online.