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01 Nov 09
Morning Mourning : Stager-to-Go
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It is so valuable to read not ABOUT Maria Montessori or Jean Piaget or Herb Kohl or Ted Sizer, etc., but to read what they actually wrote themselves.
creativity : Stager-to-Go
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I get dismissed as an old crank if I suggest that colleagues read texts longer than 140 characters, attend conferences or think more deeply about fads. There isn’t a single discovery of an edublogger that Seymour Papert didn’t write in his 1996 book, The Connected Family: Bridging the Digital Generation Gap, but who wants to read books by experts when our PLN applauds our laziness?
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Seymour Papert and I used to talk at length about how the edtech community needs to know more about learning and how the progressive education community needs to understand how computers can amplify their ideas and offer learners unprecedented opportunities. Unfortunately, Dr. Papert was in a terrible accident and the summit we envisioned never came to pass. I do my small part by writing, speaking, recommending books and organizing events, but there is still much more work to be done.
Who Moved my Stalag? : Stager-to-Go
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Many school children have to overcome all sorts of personal, economic and societal challenges in their everyday lives. The last thing a child needs is to battle teachers or an inflexible one-size-fits-all curriculum. Kids need allies when they are in school, not an axis of evil. They are dependent on you to do the right thing on their behalf. School needs to be an oasis that nurtures the body, mind and soul.
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Your position of authority is ordained based on an assumption of trust and an expectation that your efforts will benefit children. It is immoral and educationally ineffective to blindly enforce arbitrary regulations when we know that in many cases the opposite approach is required to benefit children.
29 Oct 09
Reggio Emilia approach - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Their resistance to the American use of the term model to describe their program reflects the continuing evolution of their ideas and practices.
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Teachers' long-term commitment to enhancing their understanding of children is at the crux of the Reggio Emilia approach.
- 1 more annotations...
25 Oct 09
Thoughts on the Whitehouse.gov switch to Drupal - O'Reilly Radar
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Having the public write code may seem like a security risk, but it's just the opposite, experts inside and outside the government argued. Because programmers collaborate to find errors or opportunities to exploit Web code, the final product is therefore more secure.
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Of course, it's easy to imagine that the use of open source software will slash the government's IT budget. After all, this software is freely downloadable. I have a feeling it's quite a bit more complicated than that.
- 2 more annotations...
13 Oct 09
Social networking sites can be mine fields for teachers - Salt Lake Tribune
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Should teachers be friends with their students on Facebook? Can they use curse words on their personal pages? Should they post political views?
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"You just do the same things on social networks as you would do in real life,"
- 1 more annotations...
10 Oct 09
The Truth About Homework
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Rather, it’s “qualitative changes in the ways students view
themselves in relation to the task, engage in the process of learning, and
then respond to the learning activities and situation.” -
Alongside an overemphasis on time is the widely held
belief that homework “reinforces” the skills that students have learned – or,
rather, have been taught -- in class. But what exactly does this
mean? It wouldn’t make sense to say “Keep practicing until you
understand” because practicing doesn’t create understanding – just as giving
kids a deadline doesn’t teach time-management skills. What might make
sense is to say “Keep practicing until what you’re doing becomes automatic.”
But what kinds of proficiencies lend themselves to this sort of improvement? - 2 more annotations...
A Letter from a Child by Thomas Sowell on National Review Online
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The mindset that sees children in school as an opportunity for teachers to impose their own notions, instead of developing the child’s ability to think for himself or herself, is a dangerous distortion of education.
26 Sep 09
Don’t Get Mad, Ask Questions « JohnCr8on’s Snapshots
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In the social media sphere it is not uncommon to see anger filled political comments sprinkled among the updates on newborn nieces, vacation photos and business updates. Perhaps we share some of the anger we read in our respective news feeds. Perhaps some posts make us angrier still because we disagree – especially if we have not carefully filtered out all those who think differently.
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It has become a habit when we read, hear or see something which we don’t like to immediately express anger without thought or care for the consequences. We don’t consider how we might be stirring the cauldron of toxic public discourse.
- 1 more annotations...
U.S. set to pass 6 net neutrality rules
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- Consumers are entitled to access whatever lawful internet content they want.
- Consumers are entitled to run whatever applications and services they want, subject to the needs of law enforcement.
- Consumers can connect to networks whatever legal devices they want, so long as they do not harm them.
- Consumers are entitled to competition between networks, applications, services and content providers.
- Service providers are not allowed to discriminate between applications, services and content outside of reasonable network management.
- Service providers must be transparent about the network management practices they use.
The principles
Two new principles will join those original four and be formalized as official rules that will apply to both wired and wireless networks:
16 Sep 09
ELT notes: 21st Century Skills - A Reply to Bud Hunt
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Add Sticky Note

- As long as we DO them and for GOOD reasons. - on 2009-09-16
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