Effective learning – what are the ingredients? « NotesFromNina

This blog was in my inbox this morning. There is some great information here for starting the new school year, or any new class of students–K-12 or postsecondary.  The point is that all learners are different, but each deserves the best we can provide for each, both individually and collectively. That may mean that we, as educators, need to be professional enough–and caring enough–to examine our own practices and prejudices to ensure we are truly doing our best for each individual learner. 

Read on:

Effective learning – what are the ingredients?

In Effective Teaching, Meaningful Learning on July 19, 2012 at 11:45 am

Creating a truly learner centered educational environment requires quite a few thoughts even before the learning-teaching interaction begins. You as teacher must make a choice of the frame of reference to be used. Sometimes this choice is an unintentional one – especially if you have not reflected upon your own learning philosophy.

To promote effective learning you should think about the learning environment (both emotional and physical) to ensure there are no obstacles for learning. Students prior knowledge plays a major part in their learning, and if you start teaching where the curriculum tells you to start, you may be passing by their actual horizon of understanding.

Some students arrive to the class ready to learn – others do not. Finding gentle ways to increase the readiness, and decreasing the fears, anxieties and misconceptions of students ensures a less bumpy ride towards the mutual goal: effective learning. Also, an aptitude for learning is highly individual among students in any given group. You as their teacher can either help students to become more interested in what they are learning – or simply communicate about passing the test as a measurement of education and learning itself not being important. Imagine how huge difference there is in between those two approaches! Yet we sometimes non-verbally communicate about passing/performing instead of learning.

Students’ own goals and their motivation to learn are also related to the learning aptitude. Certain (widely accepted) classroom practices actually cater for extrinsic motivation (i.e. performing tasks for a reward), which does not help your students to become lifelong learners. The last piece in this picture of effective learning is the quality of teaching – actually just one sixth of all the important ingredients of  effective learning, but too often highlighted as the only measurement of education excellence.

This all, among other topics, are discussed in my new book: Choosing How to Teach & Teaching How to Choose: Using the 3Cs to Improve Learning. It is already available on Amazon  and Barnes & Noble. Of course they are the same things I will be sharing in the AERO conference  in Portland, OR, August 1-5, 2012, where Sir Ken Robinson is one of the keynote speakers. I am quite excited!!

via Effective learning – what are the ingredients? « NotesFromNina.

URL: http://notesfromnina.wordpress.com/2012/07/19/effective-learning-what-are-the-ingredients/

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Online Learning Source for Fall 2012

This item showed up in my inbox today. There is information related to professional development, continuing education, use of social network tools in education, and much more. If you use technology to learn or teach, the VHS Collaborative offers a wide range of materials and subjects to explore.

Read on from:

Home

JULY 2012 eNewsletter

In this issue:  New Courses For Fall 2012, Summer Session II – Now Registering,

Join Our Upcoming Webinar, STEM for College & Careers

VHS Introduces New Courses In Fall 2012

New Languages Pave the Road to a New School Year

In partnership with Connections Learning, The VHS Collaborative (VHS) will be offering more online course options for middle and high schools worldwide. Starting in the fall of 2012, students will have the opportunity to take sought-after courses including  Japanese I and II, Sign Language I and II and Driver’s Education.

Our continued partnership with Connections Learning allows VHS member schools and individually enrolled students access to a wide variety of programs. Students are able to access courses that would otherwise be unavailable to them through their local school programs. Read the full article.

Join Our Next Webinar

The VHS Collaborative Webinar Series Presents…

“Policy, Quality and Cost Considerations of Blended Learning Environments“

Join us on July 30, 2012 for a free webinar to review options for online education that will boost your school’s 21st century studies.

Identify the goals and benefits of implementing a blended learning environment

Explore the range of delivery methods

Look at the current marketplace of online education providers and partners

Discuss Policy and Cost considerations

Our session concludes with setting goals, offering ideas of delivery models that that will best suits your needs, and provide ways in which your school or district can further develop a curriculum to incorporate online learning.

Webinar: Policy, Quality and Cost Considerations of Blended Learning Environments

Date: Monday July 30, 2012

Time: 12:00 pm EDT

LEARN MORE OR REGISTER NOW

For more information contact dneuffer@TheVHSCollaborative.org, or call 978-450-0413.

STEM Learning For College & Careers

Blogging On Preparing Students for Careers in Science

Jobs in Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) are growing faster than in any other field in the United States but less than 30% of high school graduates are ready to pursue college education in science.

We need to do more to ensure that all students have access to rigorous and engaging science courses that provide them with the skills, tools, and global perspective necessary to succeed in STEM careers. Read the full blog post now.

Subscribe to The VHS Collaborative Blog. Read more from colleagues, experts and online learning advocates and join in the conversation to discuss blended learning initiatives in education today.

Now Enrolling for Summer Session II

There’s Still Time to Take An Online Summer Course – Register Now

Whether you need to make up credit before the fall semester, or you are looking for interesting courses that will teach you new and innovative skills, VHS online Summer School courses are a great way to get ahead!.

With the support of a teacher, and interaction with online peers troughout the course, VHS’ Online Summer program is a convenient option for students who:

Need to make up credits to graduate on schedule

Have other commitments and need flexible scheduling

Want to try an online course while their schedule is less demanding

Are looking to get ahead or stay academically engaged during the summer months

REGISTER NOW

Summer Session II offers online studies in the following subject areas:

Chemistry, Biology, English Literacy Skills,  Financial Literacy, Pre-Algebra/Algebra Preparation, Planning for College, Health, U.S. History, Video Game Design

***

URL for The VHS Collaborative: http://thevhscollaborative.org/

For connection to this post on the Virtual School Meanderings blog: 

via New Online Courses For The Fall | STEM And Blended Learning | Upcoming Webinar And More « Virtual School Meanderings.

URL: http://virtualschooling.wordpress.com/2012/07/19/new-online-courses-for-the-fall-stem-and-blended-learning-upcoming-webinar-and-more/

#educ_dr

Posted in Digital Education, Education, Education News, Online Education, PostADay, Professional Development, Virtual Schools | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Affect and Effect | The Daily Post at WordPress.com

For all the writers and students out there, the use of the word “affect” when the meaning is “effect” is a personal peeve. When I’m reading, I often have to stop to figure out if the right word has been used by the author. This generally happens when the word has been misused, but I’ve come across the misuse so often that I now have to think about which word was intended. Now, each time I write one of them, I have to question myself about whether I am using the right word. That represents the number of times these words have been misued–I’ve unlearned what I “knew” most of my long life.

If you struggle with whether to use “affect” or “effect,” here is a clear explanation:

Affect and Effect

by Daryl L. L. Houston on July 19, 2012

The distinction between “affect” and “effect” trips up lots of people, but with one or two little mnemonics, you can master this tricky pair in probably 95% of cases.

Effect is almost always used as a noun meaning “the result of some action.”

Affect is almost always used as a verb meaning “to influence or bring about change.”

Affect, which is an action (another word for “verb”), starts with an a, like action. There’s your first mnemonic. When something affects something else, it has an effect. The affect or verb happens first and the effect or noun second, just as affect comes first in the alphabet and effect second. There’s your second mnemonic.

My experience with mnemonics tends to be that once I’ve had to use them enough, I internalize the underlying grammar that they help me to remember so that I no longer have to remember the little hint. So the affect/effect distinction comes naturally to me now without the memory tricks, and maybe it will for you too one day, if this is one of those distinctions you struggle with.

This entry wouldn’t be complete if I didn’t complicate things a little. There are of course alternate uses for both words. You can speak of a person’s mood or way of outwardly presenting his mood as his affect (in psychology you’ll hear of a person’s “flat affect”). And you do sometimes hear of someone “effecting change.” These other uses, along with the fact that the two words look and sound similar, are what wind up causing all the confusion. But these are pretty specialized and uncommon uses, and if you remember that affect is almost always an action or verb and effect almost always a noun, you’ll almost always be correct in your usage.

via Affect and Effect | The Daily Post at WordPress.com.

URL: http://dailypost.wordpress.com/2012/07/19/affect-and-effect/

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No Blog Presence Today

 

My cat chewed through my laptop power cord yesterday, and I didn’t realize how low the batter had gotten until this morning. No blogging today, and probably not tomorrow until my replacement arrives and the laptop recharges. Just to let you know…

Meanwhile, I thought I had a replacement, but she had chewed through that ages ago. I just forgot. (sigh)

#educ_dr

 

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Webinar: Changing Mindsets, Motivating Students

 

Normally, I would not share information about a paid webinar. This one, however, is only $49 and is sponsored by Education Week. Carol Dweck is a leading contributor to research and information on motivation–one of my interests, although I haven’t done research on it. Self-concept, yes; motivation, only for background.

And I love the title: “Changing Mindsets, Motivating Students.” Sounds like a great professional development webinar!

Changing Mindsets, Motivating Students
In this webinar, renowned psychologist Carol Dweck will discuss how teachers can use new discoveries in cognitive development to improve student motivation and engagement. Through her intensive research, Dweck has found that students who believe intelligence is a fixed quality are more likely to avoid challenging tasks, while students who believe intelligence can be developed with effort tend to be more successful. She’ll discuss some of the most common mistakes teachers make in trying to motivate students and detail strategies for promoting a “growth mindset” rather than “fixed mindset” in the classroom.
Carol S. Dweck, Ph.D Carol S. Dweck, Ph.D., author of Mindset: The New Science of Success, is the Lewis and Virginia Eaton Professor of Psychology at Stanford University. Her research focuses on why students succeed and how to foster their success. She has held professorships at Columbia and Harvard Universities and has lectured and worked with schools and other organizations all over the world. She is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and recently won the Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award from the American Psychological Association—the highest honor in psychology.
Moderator: Liana Heitin, associate editor, Education Week Teacher
[UNKNOWN]
Order This Webinar Now!

 

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“You can go to jail, but not to Yale.”

This article details the frustrations teachers and parents face when state politics and faulty funding distribution formulas functionally run the educational environment instead of real need. One parent at an Education Cost Sharing Task Force Meeting in Bridgeport, Connecticut, stated:

I have never heard a judge say to someone who committed a crime, `sorry we don’t have money to lock you up.’ Why is it then, that when a child says he wants an education, we say, `we don’t have money to give’? We are telling kids, `you can go to jail, but not to Yale.’ And there are kids in Bridgeport who don’t even know that Yale is in Connecticut.

From the Washington Post’s Education Page article: How underfunding schools really hurts kids – The Answer Sheet – The Washington Post

via How underfunding schools really hurts kids – The Answer Sheet – The Washington Post.

URL: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/post/how-underfunding-schools-really-hurts-kids/2012/07/14/gJQAyATAkW_blog.html

#educ_dr

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Just Released: New Americans in Postsecondary Education: A Profile of Immigrant and Second-Generation American Undergraduates

 

Here is a new report, released just today, on the the post-secondary educational attainment of immigrant and second-generation students. Information for the report came from the National Postsecondary Student Aid Study (NPSAS), another study from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES). The report is based primarily on Hispanic and other immigrant populations, and includes post-secondary choices made by these students. The full report is available for download as a .pdf file from the link below. The URL is provided under the official document description.

New Americans in Postsecondary Education: A Profile of Immigrant and Second-Generation American Undergraduates

This Statistics in Brief describes the characteristics and undergraduate experiences of 2007–08 undergraduates who immigrated to the United States or who had at least one immigrant parent (second-generation Americans). The analysis compares these two groups with all undergraduates (excluding foreign students) and with third- or higher generation American undergraduates whose parents were born in the United States. The findings are based on data from the 2007–08 National Postsecondary Student Aid Study (NPSAS:08), a nationally representative sample of more than 100,000 students enrolled in U.S. postsecondary institutions.

 

URL: http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid=2012213

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Posted in Assessment of education, Education Reports, Government Reports, NCES Reports, Post-secondary education, Student Loans | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Trends Among Young Adults Over Three Decades, 1974-2006

 

Here is a publication that might be of interest to many of you. The report used data from 4 national longitudinal studies to compile this report, and presents data to investigate educational and occupational trends of student participants. The report is free and downloadable in .pdf format. Enjoy!

Trends Among Young Adults Over Three Decades, 1974-2006

This report describes patterns of continuity and change over time in four areas of the transition to adulthood among young adults as measured 2 years after their senior year of high school. The four areas are postsecondary enrollment, labor force roles, family formation, and civic engagement. The analysis population is spring-term high school seniors in 1972, 1980, 1992, and 2004. The data come from four separate NCES sponsored studies: the National Longitudinal Study of the High School Class of 1972 (NLS:72), High School and Beyond (HS&B), the National Education Longitudinal Study of 1988 (NELS:88), and the Education Longitudinal Study of 2002 (ELS:2002).

Interested? Here’s the URL: http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid=2012345

#educ_dr

 

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Campus Safety Is Essential For A Successful Learning Environment: If You See Something, Say Something! | ED.gov Blog

That college campuses have become scary places is not news. However, there are things you and your school can do about potential violence–changes that involve simple human intervention and a coordinated effort by all stakeholders. The U.S. Department of Education blog site, Homeroom, contains links to a guide for managing threatening situations, a publication called Implementing Behavioral Threat Assessment on Campus in downloadable .pdf format from Virginia Tech, and a CD called A Safe School And Threat Assessment Experience: Scenarios Exploring The Findings Of The Safe School .

Read the blog below from a college president whose campus had a close call.

Campus Safety Is Essential For A Successful Learning Environment: If You See Something, Say Something! | ED.gov Blog.

URL: http://www.ed.gov/blog/2012/07/campus-safety-is-essential-for-a-successful-learning-environment-if-you-see-something-say-something/

#educ_dr

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“Worth a Read” (reblog)

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