Ludmilla Smirnova's Profile

Associate professor of education at Mount Saint Mary College. Courses taught: Curricular Planning, Methods of Teaching, Teaching with Technology, Nature of Schools and Society. I am a chair of Academic Technology Advisory Committee.

Member since Jun 16, 2008, follows 29 people, 10 public groups, 1394 public bookmarks (1410 total).

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  • Issues Related to Teaching Generalizations in Elementary Social Studies on 2009-04-09
    • generalization

      learning may be regarded as the highest

      form of social studies learning. Our

      purpose here is to identify and to dis­

      cuss issues related to the teaching of

      generalizations and to stimulate new

      rese...


  • ACEI/NCATE Rubrics Index on 2009-03-24
  • Social Constructivists and eLearning on 2009-01-08
    • Some observers suggest eLearning Conferences should now focus on instructional methodology rather than information technology. “Tool-based” conferences tend to attract information and education technologists responsible for system development and administration, and assisting faculty use the technology.
  • Change: It's a Matter of Life or Slow Death on 2009-01-05
    • Teachers model living


      JSD: Here’s something else you wrote: "Our enthusiasm is infectious. People around us are moved in ways that are subtle but powerful. We become living symbols of a new vision. We send out new signals to everyone around us and, if we are in an organization, our very presence disrupts old routines. A new dialogue is born and the culture in which we are participating begins to change."


      Quinn: I have six children, all of whom have graduated from high school. Over the years, I listened to endless discussions of their teachers. Eighty percent of the people they described were experiencing slow death. What kids look at is what they see modeled by the human being at the front of the classroom. Teenagers in particular are very good at picking up authenticity or the lack of it. When they encounter authenticity, they gravitate toward it. When they pick up hypocrisy, they move away from it. What we teach kids is not just subjects but how to live.

  • The 2Learn.ca Education Society presents NetKnowHow.ca on 2008-12-25
  • Search Engine Tutorial by Pandia - a free guide to Web searching on 2008-12-24
  • What is a Mnemonic? on 2008-12-13
    • The type of mnemonic is important because different people find different kinds of information easier to remember. Some people find that a rhyme is most easy to remember, while others find that an association that they make themselves is the best strategy. Other people use whatever has already been created for the particular bit of information that they are trying to remember. The key to using mnemonics is to choose a type of mnemonic that works well for you.
    • are rhymes, acronyms, associations, and sentences.
  • Muskingum College - Center for Advancement and Learning (CAL) on 2008-12-09
  • Kagan Online Catalog on 2008-12-09
    • ohnson, Johnson, & Stanne (2000) summarize that cooperative learning strategies
      are widely used because they are based on theory, validated by research, and
      almost any teacher can find a way to use cooperative learning methods that are
      consistent with personal philosophies. In a meta-analysis of 158 studies, Johnson
      & Johnson report that current research findings present evidence that cooperative
      learning methods are likely to produce positive achievement results. The studies
      included eight methods of cooperative learning: Learning Together and Alone,
      Constructive Controversy, Jigsaw Procedure, Student teams Achievement Divisions
      (STAD), Team Accelerated Instruction (TAI), Cooperative Integrated Reading &
      Composition (CIRC), Teams-Games-Tournaments (TGT), and Group Investigation.
      No studies were found that specifically investigate Kagan's Cooperative Learning
      Structures. In each case, the achievement levels were significantly higher when
      cooperative learning methods were used as compared to individualistic or competitive
      methods of learning.
    • Grouping is essential to cooperative learning. The most widely used team formation
      is that of heterogeneous teams, containing a high, two middle, and a low achieving
      student and having a mix of gender and ethnic diversity that reflect the classroom
      population. The rationale for heterogeneous groups argues that this produces
      the greatest opportunities for peer tutoring and support as well as improving
      cross-race and cross-sex relations and integration. Occasionally, random or
      special interest teams could be formed to maximize student talents or meet a
      specific student need (Kagan, 1994).
      • Ludmilla Smirnova

        Ludmilla Smirnova on 2008-12-09

        TEam fomation is important in CL -- see the rationale for it

    • 2 more annotations...
  • “Clicker” Cases: Introducing Case Study Teaching Into Large Classrooms on 2008-12-09
    • Clickers in the Classroom


      Student response systems and audience response keyboards, or “clickers,” as they are often called, have been commercially available for the past 15 years, although they were preceded by fixed electronic response systems (Judson and Sawada 2002). Made famous by their use in the TV quiz show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?, clickers are rapidly infiltrating higher education classrooms. They provide instant feedback to students and faculty regardless of the size of the class, and have a clear value in socialization, making impersonal classes more intimate. The technology also seems to resonate with students’ fascination with interactive media.



      For years, some instructors have attempted to garner responses to questions by asking students to hold up their hands, say in ConcepTests, as used in Peer Instruction (Mazur 1997). Unfortunately, students regularly alter their votes in front of their peers. This problem is avoided when clickers are used, as they are perceived to be anonymous, making it possible to collect more accurate data in the classroom. If truly anonymous results are desired, the instructor can ask students to switch devices with their neighbor.



      Clickers are similar to a TV or stereo remote control, with numbered buttons that students can push to register their votes. Typically students respond to questions framed in a multiple-choice format. Transmitted by either infrared or radio frequency signal, a receiver picks up the answers and then relays them to a classroom computer. The results can be immediately displayed as a chart on the computer screen and projected for the class. The data can be stored and retrieved later, either as an anonymous record or by identification with a personal ID (Greer and Heaney 2004).

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