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Qualifications - Bookshare - Accessible Books for Individuals with Print Disabilities - Bookshare - Accessible Books for Individuals with Print Disabilities
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If you have a disability that makes it difficult or impossible to read a
printed book, you most likely will qualify for Bookshare™ services. -
- Autism
- Emotional disabilities
- ADHD
- ESL and ELL
Not qualified unless accompanied by a visual or physical disability,
or a qualified reading disability that has a physical basis
Motivation and Flow: The Teenager Edition - NurtureShock Blog - Newsweek.com
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So when are teens most engaged, approaching a flowlike state?
It’s highest
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uring sports and extracurricular activities. It’s lowest when teens are at jobs, which, Shernoff notes, are usually of the flipping-burger variety. Interestingly, teens very rarely reach flowlike states when they’re alone, as adults do. When teens are alone, they’re usually doing homework or vegging out. Rather, flow seems to improve when they are both with peers and adults at the same time. The adult is usually a coach, parent, or instructor, pushing them to lean into a challenge.
Since motivation and engagement are especially important to learning, Shernoff was disappointed to see how badly classroom time rated out. Fifty percent of students report that their classes are boring, and one third report surviving the day by goofing off with friends. “On average, flow is lower in class than at any other time during the week, except for when doing their paid job,” says Shernoff.
His research, though, suggested a way to fix this sorry state. Shernoff recognized that students were most flowlike in moments where they were doing group work or individual work. They were active and participating. The opposite was true for lectures and watching videos.
Unfortunately, classrooms where there was the most participation, such as art class, were usually the least challenging. The classes that were the most challenging, such as science, required students to spend the most time being lectured to. His deduction: we need to combine the methods of how art and social science are taught with the demanding nature of math and science classes.
"Only 15 percent of the time students spend in class was interactive, allowing for discussion or group activities,” notes Shernoff. “The abundance of lectures and taking notes leaves little time for active engagement. When active participation is so rarely invited, it’s no wonder students can’t engage.”
Quizzes don’t rate so poorly. Students don’t enjoy quizzes and tests per se, but their concentration is at a peak because they’re being challenged. “Tests have a gamelike quality,” Shernoff says. “Students know what the stakes are, they’re using all their skills, and it’s very clear what their goal is. They know doing well is important.” However, all those good dimensions disappear in students who don’t know the answers to the quiz questions. “For them, the whole experience is debilitating and takes a psychological toll.”
It’s true that students with better grades experience more flow. And many personality dimensions matter, too. But overall, these individual factors were not as powerful as the structural factors described above: whether a situation was challenging, active, and relevant.
Interestingly, Shernoff’s data reveals that flow states were common during after-school programs. Kids love this time, even though the situation shares many elements as the flow-stopping academic day: it’s on the same premises as school and usually with the same kids. There’s a lot of sports in after-school programs, but that alone doesn’t explain it. Because there’s also a lot of academic-enrichment time, in which kids are learning and following an established curriculum. And these academic-enrichment periods produce very high levels of flow.
What do academic-enrichment sessions have that mere academic classes don’t? First, they’re usually more relevant to kids’ experience, whether the curriculum module is about agriculture, or why planes fly, or what causes pollution. Second, they invite participation. They’re often project based. Third, kids can learn without feeling like they’re being ranked on a bell curve and labeled smart or dumb. Kids’ natural thirst for knowledge emerges.
All of which, again, incriminates lecture-style classrooms. I suggested to Shernoff there was a tradeoff here: can’t teachers cover more material through lecture? If they had to slow down and make everything a hands-on project, wouldn’t kids learn less?
“In the long run, kids might be learning far more,” he argued. In today’s classrooms, kids forget most of what they’ve learned very rapidly, because they weren’t truly interested. “When you’re motivated, and when your knowledge is something you can use and keep coming back to, you learn for life.”
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Chapter 1: Teaching Every Student TOC: Information & Ideas
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In a time of greater student diversity, increased emphasis on standards and accountabilitychallenges teachers to help all students achieve.
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UDL is not "just one more thing;" it is an integral component of improving student learning, compatible with other approaches to education reform.
News briefs - Wayland, MA - Wicked Local Wayland
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The Wayland School Committee has been reviewing its Late Night and Overnight Student Trip Policy (IJOA) and is contemplating changing it effective December 2009.
Citizens who wish to review the current and proposed wording of this policy are encouraged to view them online at "www.wayland.k12.ma.us" (Breaking News) or visit the superintendent’s office in the Wayland Town Building during normal business hours where all School Committee policies are on file and available to the public.
Wayland residents and other interested parties are encouraged to offer oral and/or written comments and reactions to the School Committee regarding the proposed policy changes before its Nov. 9 meeting. At the meeting, it is the intent of the School Committee to take action on the revisions to Policy IJOA.
HomeNewsHere.com > Archives > Daily Times Chronicle > News > Survey shows local youths still at risk
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Sixty-two percent (62%) of Reading 9th – 12th graders reported drinking alcohol during their lifetime, compared to 66% in 2007 and 67% in 2005. Forty-three percent (43%) of Reading 9th – 12th graders reported having alcohol in the past 30 days, compared to 48% in 2007 and 45% in 2005.
Romeo and Juliet
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William Shakespeare wrote the
tragedy of Romeo and Juliet around 1595. Arguably the most famous love
story of all time, this play tells the tale of a boy and a girl from warring
families who meet and fall in love. Fate is not on their side, however, and they
eventually choose to kill themselves rather than live without each other. -
A lot of people think the balcony scene is about as deep as a twelve-year-old
interpretation of true love.
Angela Maiers Educational Services: Passionate Readers Read Passionately
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When a student is not passionate about what they are reading, they end up "fake reading" or just turning the pages and picking out the bold keywords and phrases (because that's what will probably be on the test). Do we want to train fake reading or passionate reading?
Blogush
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We have schooled out of kids most of the traits that we want then to have, and then try to coercively school them back in. We make learning an unnatural activity.
How Bookshare Works - Bookshare - Accessible Books for Individuals with Print Disabilities - Bookshare - Accessible Books for Individuals with Print Disabilities
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It operates under an
exception to U.S. copyright law
which allows copyrighted digital books to be made
available to people with qualifying disabilities. In addition, many publishers
and authors have volunteered to provide Bookshare with access to their
works.
Angela Maiers Educational Services
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There is no excuse NOT to have books that kids are passionate about, a topic they are willing to do anything for so they will learn and become better readers.
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Here's the truth (and you know it well): When a student is not passionate about what they are reading, they end up "fake reading"
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TeachPaperless: Top Eleven Things All Teachers Must Know About Technology (or: I promised Dean Groom I wouldn’t write a top ten list; so this one goes up to eleven.)
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The Top Eleven Things All Teachers Must Know About Technology
1. Technology is not a monolith. -
2. Technology is not a monolith, but many technology providers are monoli
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Battles of Saratoga - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Battles of Saratoga, sometimes referred to as The Battle of Saratoga (September 19 and October 7, 1777) conclusively decided the fate of British General John Burgoyne's army in the American Revolutionary War, and are generally regarded as a turning point in the war.
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Burgoyne attacked Bemis Heights again on October 7 after it became apparent he would not receive relieving aid in time. In heavy fighting, marked by Arnold's spirited rallying of the American troops (in open defiance of orders to stay off the battlefield),
teachingeverystudent - Playing with Diigo
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Microsoft Word is a word processing software program that is an incredibly flexible and customizable tool with unique applications for all educators
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1. SAVE (CTL + S) OR SAVE AS (F12)
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Seth's Blog: Education at the crossroads
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If you think the fallout in the newspaper business was dramatic, wait until you see what happens to education.
SpeEdChange: Toolbelt Theory for Everyone
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Tools matter though. They are the most basic thing about being human.
We are many things - human beings - but above all we are tool users. -
The thing about toolbelts though, is that no two people ever really need the same one
Association football - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Association football, more commonly known as football or soccer, is a team sport played between two teams of eleven players using a spherical ball. Association football is the most popular football variant worldwide, and is widely considered to be the most popular sport in the world.[1][2][3]
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The modern game was codified in England following the formation of The Football Association, whose 1863 Laws of the Game created the foundations for the way the sport is played today. Football is governed internationally by the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (International Federation of Association Football), commonly known by the acronym FIFA.
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Water cycle - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The water cycle, also known as the hydrologic cycle, describes the continuous movement of water on, above, and below the surface of the Earth.
Transformational Leadership
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such leaders should look to increase constituent’s investment and enrollment in the institution’s vision.
U.S. Copyright Office - Fair Use
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- The purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes
- The nature of the copyrighted work
- The amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole
- The effect of the use upon the potential market for, or value of, the copyrighted work
One of the rights accorded to the owner of copyright is the right to reproduce or to authorize others to reproduce the work in copies or phonorecords. This right is subject to certain limitations found in sections 107 through 118 of the copyright law (title 17, U. S. Code). One of the more important limitations is the doctrine of “fair use.” The doctrine of fair use has developed through a substantial number of court decisions over the years and has been codified in section 107 of the copyright law.
Section 107 contains a list of the various purposes for which the reproduction of a particular work may be considered fair, such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Section 107 also sets out four factors to be considered in determining whether or not a particular use is fair:
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