background preloader

Education

Facebook Twitter

The Best Sources Of Advice On Helping Students Strengthen & Develop Their Creativity. Here’s a “The Best…” list offering resources I’ve been accumulating them for awhile on creativity. You might also be interested in The Best Resources For Teaching “What If?” History Lessons. I certainly don’t view this as the be all and end all of creativity resources, so I hope readers will contribute more. Here are my choices for The Best Sources Of Advice On Helping Students Strengthen & Develop Their Creativity: How To Be Creative is an excerpt from Jonah Lehrer’s book (despite it being pulled because of Mr. Thinking “Inside Out” — How Could I Use This In A Lesson? Developing Students’ Creative Skills for 21st Century Success is by Jennifer Henderson and is on ASCD’s website. The Big Lesson of a Little Prince: (Re)capture the Creativity of Childhood is by Maria Konnikova and appeared in Scientific American.

The Kaleidoscope Mind: Some Easy Ways to Teach Creativity appeared in The Atlantic. Lab Notes #5: Creativity is from Wired. How to encourage big ideas is from MIT News. Snapshots of a School Year. I keep telling myself that I need to get out my camera more often and capture all those moments that would otherwise go unnoticed. If I had kept a camera at my fingertips this year, I would have captured these moments.

When my sophomores delivered their final speeches for first semester, I was suddenly struck by how much they had grown up in those few months since they first walked in the classroom. Not only were they more confident, but they were also finding purpose. {*style:<b> </b>*} One of my colleagues asked me in the days before school started if I had come across any really cool desk arrangements in all my travels. When I misjudged the logistics of a unit in my course, Reading the Screen, there was only one solution: begin again.

All year, I’ve been admiring the work ethic and intrinsic desire to learn from Morgan. Two giggling sophomores walked into the classroom peering over their phones. On the last day of school, I asked my seniors what they wanted to do. The Essence of Connected Learning. Good Chemistry. Teacher-Developed Apps Fill Lesson Gaps - High School Notes. Facebook and Angry Birds were two of the most downloaded apps last year, but that doesn't mean Web and mobile applications are all play. There are tens of thousands of educational apps aimed at teaching high school students everything from physics to Japanese. But not all of those apps are created equal, warns Teacherswithapps.com, a site created by two teachers to evaluate educational apps, and some educators have taken matters into their own hands. [Get three tips for integrating technology into the classroom.]

Jeff Scheur, an English teacher at Whitney Young Magnet High School in Chicago, created an app to drill his students on apostrophes, conjunctions, and run-on sentences. Scheur developed NoRedInk, a Web-based application, when traditional red ink wasn't yielding the desired results in his classroom. But there wasn't an app for that—at least, not one that met Scheur's requirements of being fun and engaging and allowing for immediate feedback. Facebook, Edutopia Collaborate on Social Media Guide - High School Notes. As most high school students are gearing up for summer break , many teachers and administrators are planning and prepping for the next school year. Part of their planning may include strategies to integrate technology in the classroom , through digital textbooks , gaming , and social media.

On May 8, the nonprofit Edutopia released " How to Create Social Media Guidelines for Your School . " The free guide, released during Teacher Appreciation Week, is part of a collaboration with Facebook . [Learn how a new Facebook effort targets educating school counselors .] "Without having a plan and a focus on how you're going to go about incorporating social media, you're potentially going to find that you're not able to reap the benefits," says Cindy Johanson, executive director of The George Lucas Educational Foundation, which produces Edutopia. "Instead of starting from scratch, we hope that others can refer to the steps in the primer and also … the real world examples," says Johanson. Pearson Professional Centers Tour. Pearson Professional Centers is our global network of more than 230 company-owned and -operated test centers. These test centers are designed from the ground up, with a professional and consistent layout, solely for high stakes testing.

They deliver the highest level of exam delivery security and control in the industry and are designed to satisfy the most demanding requirements for high-stakes testing programs. The centers and staff provide a positive reflection of each testing program and ensure that each test taker is handled consistently and professionally at all times. The Testing Experience We are confident that you will have a great testing experience when you take your next exam at a Pearson Professional Center.

Click on the photo images on the floorplan graphic or select an area from the dropdown list below in which you are interested in seeing. Watch the Video. The Power of "What If" Learning - Transforming Learning. What if students could build sculptures for an art-math expo? Or act out skits with a backdrop of life-size, student-created paintings based on stories they read? Or use LEGOS to program robots — and then film a movie about them?

These ideas are just a few of the winning proposals submitted this year from schools across the country for the Champion Creatively Alive Children grant program . This joint Crayola-NAESP initiative challenges principals to imagine innovative projects that bring the arts to life in their schools. Embedding the arts in everyday learning is essential for equipping students with 21st century skills — but it takes visionary, creative school leadership to take ideas from "what-ifs" to reality. Arts education is a crucial foundation for preparing students to take part in a rapidly changing world. Arts-infused education spurs students to innovate, analyze, and apply what they are learning. 5 Ways Schools Can Build Positive Relationships With Parents. Fpssummeracademy - WarmUpSessions. Teaching and Learning. Do &apos;Flipping&apos; Teachers Need Additional Training? - Teaching Now.

UserID: iCustID: IsLogged: false IsSiteLicense: false UserType: anonymous DisplayName: TrialsLeft: 0 Trials: Tier Preview Log: Exception pages ( /teachers/teaching_now/2012/06/teachers_need_more_training_before_flipping.html ) = NO Internal request ( 188.165.248.41 ) = NO Open House ( 2014-04-15 20:22:45 ) = NO Site Licence : ( 188.165.248.41 ) = NO ACL Free A vs U ( 2100 vs 0 ) = NO Token Free (NO TOKEN FOUND) = NO Blog authoring preview = NO Search Robot ( Firefox ) = NO Purchased ( 0 ) = NO Monthly ( 2e8a3643-6e12-c0e4-ab42-5cc10b559d26 : 3 / 3 ) = NO 0: /teachers/classroom_qa_with_larry_ferlazzo/2013/03/response_many_ways_to_help_students_develop_academic_vocabulary.html 1: /ew/articles/2012/12/12/14arts.h32.html Access denied ( -1 ) = NO. 10 Education Hashtags to Follow on Twitter. With the growth of social media in recent years, the Internet provides numerous opportunities for educators to share ideas and start conversations that spur innovations in the classroom.

Twitter has become especially useful. But with so many users online — it’s been reported that there are more than 170 million registered tweeters, with interests ranging from BYOD to Justin Bieber — wading into the online ether in search of substantive conversations can sometimes prove to be more trouble than it’s worth. The best way to find people who share your interests is to search Twitter’s massive network for specific hashtags (#edtech, for example). You can search for hashtags using Twitter’s search box or strategically insert the digital markers into your tweets to automatically join a specific conversation thread. Sounds simple enough — and it is. But you first need to know what hashtags your colleagues are using. Engaging Students with Technology over the Summer. As we approach the summer months, many educators lament the "summer slide. " The months between June and September can vary between enriching camp or other learning experiences to days upon days spent playing video games or watching TV on the couch.

Students often return to school having lost a reading level or a variety of math concepts. So how do we engage students over the summer months so they return to school ready to jump back into the swing of things? For those of our students who are connected, it's easier than you think. As an educator in an urban, low-income neighborhood, I am very sensitive to the effects of limited access to the Internet on my students. Edmodo and Schoolology If you have been using a blended learning approach in your classroom this year, then use this tool to engage students over the summer. Storybird Reconsidering Facebook If you just want to keep in touch and share with your students over the summer, there's always a simple Facebook fan page.

Kidblog. Crappy Graphs! by Brian Shaler. eTutorials.org. National Institute for Learning Outcomes Assessment. Welcome to Teacher's Clubhouse! Welcome to the Teaching Oasis!

Common Core

Learn For Free (Full Curriculum and Learning Resources) Mudpies and Butterflies: Home. Teacher Discussions, Blogs, Chat, Social Networking for teachers - ProTeacher Community - Ideas for Teaching, Resources for Lesson Plans, and Activities for Unit Planning. Instructional Coaching.

Myths and Opportunities: Technology in the Classroom by Alan November. How Does the 21st Century Teacher Help the Networked Student Learn? Shmoop: Study Guides & Teacher Resources. 21stcenturyskillsnmteachercourse.wikispaces.

Play Music Sites

Toy Theater - Home. CHARACTERplus School Home Community. Education Videos. PDF Resources. Games. Brain Research. Early Mathematics. Early Literacy. Art Education.