Schools Fuel Demand for High-Tech Language Labs — from edweek.org by Michelle R. Davis

When students of Spanish teacher Sean M. Boettinger put on their headsets in his Maryland high school’s language lab, their concentration heightens, he says.  The up-to-date digital equipment, says the teacher, keeps them engaged with teenage-friendly electronics, allows them to get more Spanish listening and speaking practice, and, most important, blocks out distractions. “Particularly in classes that have a hard time paying attention, having those headphones on, and me being able to speak through that microphone directly into their ears with no outside noises, is a great focusing tool,” says Boettinger, who teaches at Dr. Henry A. Wise Jr. High School in the 134,000-student Prince George’s County district.

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George Siemens posted an item this morning entitled, “What is the future of education? A request for help“.  Mike Bogle then expanded on this topic in his posting, “The Future of Education is War“.

Quoting from Mike:

We will not see much recognisable difference in these educational institutions in 50 years. What I think we will see though is the emergence or strengthening of an educational counter-culture outside of the stagnating walls of traditional institutions, inspired by the exodus of of the innovators, dissidents, and people generally unsatisfied with the unrelenting constraints of the traditional model.

Homeschooling is one distinct area I think will continue to expand, but by no means the only one. I think we will see more and more charter schools, open universities, learning cooperatives, open educational networks, and other self-supporting bodies, each of which adopts a model that empowers and supports their learning styles, philosophies and preferences.

From DSC:
For those who won’t change…and when you see your enrollments going down…take some time to observe what happens to the rock within the flowing stream. Then reflect upon what you might gleam from that phenomenon. (To aid in this process, I created the below graphic a while ago and will now post it again here).

Staying Relevant

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Online Learning in the Race to the Top Finalists’ Applications
iNACOL analysis of the Race to the Top Applicants’ use of Online Learning as a solution to meet the goals for the Race to the Top Program and meet the four assurances.

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Digital access, collaboration a must for students — from eSchoolNews.com by Laura Devaney
Students increasingly are taking education into their own hands with personal technology experiences, a trend with important implications for schools

In a national survey that reveals K-12 students’ use of technology at home and at school, students overwhelmingly agreed that access to digital media tools and the ability to collaborate with peers both inside and outside of school can greatly enhance education.

“Speak Up 2009: Creating Our Future: Students Speak Up about their Vision for 21st Century Schools,” the latest education technology survey from the nonprofit group Project Tomorrow, identifies the emergence of “free agent learners”—students who increasingly take learning into their own hands and use technology to create personalized learning experiences.

“For these students, the schoolhouse, the teacher, and the textbook no longer have an exclusive monopoly on knowledge, content, or even the education process, and therefore it should not be surprising that students are leveraging a wide range of learning resources, tools, applications, outside experts, and each other to create a personalized learning experience that may or may not include what is happening in the classroom,” the report says.

The three elements identified in the report are:

  • Social-based learning: Students want to leverage emerging communications and collaboration tools to create and personalize networks of experts to inform their education experience.
  • Untethered learning: Students envision technology-enabled learning experiences that transcend the classroom walls and are not limited by resource constraints, traditional funding streams, geography, community assets, or even teacher knowledge or skills.
  • Digitally-rich learning: Students see the use of relevancy-based digital tools, content, and resources as a key to driving learning productivity, and not just about engaging students in learning.

Tim OReillly on Education as an open system / platform

From DSC:
This idea of creating platforms is key. Apple let people develop their own apps for the iPhone, and look what happened. Innovation skyrockets when people can contribute.

Where is innovation happening within your organization? In your face-to-face learning environment? In your online learning environment? In your hybrid/blended spaces? How can we open things up more to allow for:

  • More creativity
  • The pursuit of students’ passions
  • Increased flexibility in our offerings
  • More innovation
  • A greater reach/impact?

Also see:
Video: JP Rangaswami on the nature of platforms

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Free Web 2.0 Projects book now available — from ictineducation.org by Terry Freedman [via Stephen Downes posting]

  • 87 projects.
  • 10 further resources.
  • 52 applications.
  • 94 contributors.
  • The benefits of using Web 2.0 applications.
  • The challenges of using Web 2.0 applications.
  • How the folk who ran these projects handled the issues…
  • … And what they recommend you do if you run them.
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Mega-Schools-Feb2010-JohnDaniels

Table of Contents

1. Education for All – Unfinished Business
2. Seeking a Silver Bullet
3. Technology is the Answer – What is the Question?
4. Open Schools and Mega-Schools
5. Teacher Education at Scale
6. Strategies for Success
Appendix 1: Profiles – Selected Open Schools and Mega-Schools
Appendix 2: Programmes and Mechanisms for Expanding Teacher Supply

Mega-Schools, Technology and Teachers [VIDEO] addresses the new challenges created by both the successes and the failures of the EFA campaign. This book advocates new approaches for providing access to secondary education for today’s rapidly growing population of children and young adults and examines:

  • The creation and expansion of Mega-Schools, which combine distance learning and community support and have a proven track record of increasing access at scale.
  • How to prepare the 10 million new teachers that are required to achieve Education for All by 2015 (emphasis DSC) by focusing on classroom-based in-service training.
  • Strategies for using technology to scale up distance education cost-effectively (emphasis DSC).
  • The creation of a 21st century educational ecosystem (emphasis DSC) that integrates open schooling and teacher education with communities and their school systems.
  • Successful examples of open schools and teacher education programmes operating at scale around the world.

Original posting from Tony Bates

PBS Teachers — Innovation Awards 2010

PBS Teachers: Innovation Awards 2010

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Creative Exercises for Artists and Art Students — from free technology for teachers

“I recently learned about a blog for artists called My French Easel. The author of My French Easel, Benoit Philippe, recently published an ebook (available in SlideShare format) titled Creative Exercises for Artists and Everyone Else. Creative Exercises for Artists and Everyone Else contains seventeen specific exercises for artists and aspiring artists. The exercises cover a range of drawing and painting techniques that almost anyone can do regardless of your current skill level. Included with the publication are templates on which you can try the exercises. Philippe also included some background information on the history and development of some the techniques and exercises. Check out Creative Exercises for Artists and Everyone Else in the SlideShare below.”

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Stories of learning

Stories of Learning is another new blog I am launching this week.  I interact with teachers every day who are innovative, creative, and doing transformative things in education.  We need to collect these stories in one place.  Stories of Learning is (I hope) a place where we can record all of these.  Write a guest post, cross post something that you have already written, I would love it all!”

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Pearson Foundation Releases New Research on Digital Literacy Among Young Children — from ednetnews.com
Pearson Foundation —Saturday, March 06, 2010

Latest Study Explores 21st Century Learning in Developing and Least-Developed Nations

Washington, D.C. – March 1, 2010 – At the annual Consortium for School Networking (CoSN) International Symposium, the Pearson Foundation released today “The Digital World of Young Children: Emergent Literacy,” a research white paper on the effects of digital media on young children’s learning.

Authored by early childhood education experts, Arizona State University’s Jay Blanchard and Terry Moore, the white paper examines the latest research on how young children learn using increasingly personalized and mobile media, including cell phones, television, video games, smart devices, and computers. The report focuses on the impact of these new ways of learning and highlights the degree to which these emergent literacies are rooted in young people’s use of common-place mobile devices – especially in developing and least-developed nations.

Blanchard’s and Moore’s research finds that developmental milestones are changing as a new generation of young children approach learning and literacy in ways not thought possible in the past. According to this new report, digital media is already transforming the language and cultural practices that enable early literacy development, making possible a new kind of personal and global interconnectedness.

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Raising Their Voices

Raising Their Voices

“Last year, President Barack Obama issued a challenge to the American people to become more actively engaged in reforming the K–12 public education system. Although the President emphasized that students are responsible for their own educational progress, he extended this responsibility to all Americans. “It’s up to their parents. It’s up to their teachers,” he said. “It’s up to all of us.” This challenge came amidst a troubling crisis in our nation’s schools: every year, nearly one-third of all public high school students—and almost one-half of minorities—fail to graduate with their class. These high dropout rates have negative consequences for dropouts themselves, our economy, and the civic fabric of communities. The success of our young people is ultimately a collective endeavor, and we know that students, parents, and teachers are central to finding solutions.”

“Four years ago, we released a report—The Silent Epidemic: Perspectives of High School Dropouts—to understand why nearly one-third of all public high school students, and almost one-half of African American, Hispanic, and Native American students decide to discontinue their education.”

Original posting from:
http://www.ednetnews.com/story-4357-3.html

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40,000 Teachers Give Their Views on Education Reform in “Primary Sources” — from Scholastic and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Teachers Call For Engaging Curriculum, Supportive Leadership, Clear Standards Common Across States in Survey by Scholastic Inc. and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

New York, March 3, 2010 — Scholastic Inc. and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation today released Primary Sources: America’s Teachers on America’s Schools, a landmark report presenting the results of a national survey of more than 40,000 public school teachers in grades pre-K to 12. The survey reveals that, while teachers have high expectations for their students, they overwhelmingly agree that too many students are leaving unprepared for success beyond high school. Primary Sources reveals teachers’ thoughtful, nuanced views on issues at the heart of education reform – from performance pay and standardized tests to academic standards and teacher evaluation. Teacher responses reveal five powerful solutions to raise student achievement.

Also see:
http://www.scholastic.com/primarysources/download.asp

Obama ed-tech plan goes live online — from Education Week

The National Educational Technology Plan was released today by the U.S. Department of Education, and you can view our coverage of it here. Also, check out Secretary of Education Arne Duncan’s speech about the plan given at the annual meeting of the American Association of Publishers.

National Educational Technology Plan - Released March 5, 2010

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Moderning classrooms

From DSC:
For those of us in higher education, what occurs in K-12 affects us, as it affects our incoming students’ expectations. We need to prepare now for our students of tomorrow! And congratulations to those of you in K-12 who are working hard to keep your students engaged, growing, challenged, participating, and learning!


© 2025 | Daniel Christian