21st Century Learning and Teaching
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ISTE | Standards For Students | #ModernEDU #Infographic

ISTE | Standards For Students | #ModernEDU #Infographic | 21st Century Learning and Teaching | Scoop.it

Promote future-ready learning with the ISTE Standards for Students

Today’s students must be prepared to thrive in a constantly evolving technological landscape. The ISTE Standards for Students are designed to empower student voice and ensure that learning is a student-driven process. Connect with other educators in the ISTE Standards Community and learn how to use the standards in the classroom with the ISTE Standards for Students ebook.

 

 

Learn more / En savoir plus / Mehr erfahren:

 

http://www.scoop.it/t/21st-century-learning-and-teaching/?&tag=ISTE

 

Gust MEES's insight:

Promote future-ready learning with the ISTE Standards for Students

Today’s students must be prepared to thrive in a constantly evolving technological landscape. The ISTE Standards for Students are designed to empower student voice and ensure that learning is a student-driven process. Connect with other educators in the ISTE Standards Community and learn how to use the standards in the classroom with the ISTE Standards for Students ebook.

 

 

Learn more / En savoir plus / Mehr erfahren:

 

http://www.scoop.it/t/21st-century-learning-and-teaching/?&tag=ISTE

 

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Student Voice and the Future of Education | LEARNing To LEARN | ICT | eSkills | PracTICE

Student Voice and the Future of Education | LEARNing To LEARN | ICT | eSkills | PracTICE | 21st Century Learning and Teaching | Scoop.it
Student voice matters in education today. Listening to those voices and, even more, entrusting students with decisions about the nature of their learning communities, has tremendous benefits. I am not just referring to future benefits in terms of test score results and measurable academic gains. I am also looking at the benefits of creating more equitable and humane learning communities for today. We see this happening in promising ways, but what if we saw it even more? What if we found ways to persistently engage students in tackling some of education’s greatest challenges and pursuing some of its greatest opportunities? What if the students had more room to imagine the possibilities and to pursue them?


Learn more: 


http://www.scoop.it/t/21st-century-learning-and-teaching/?tag=students+voice


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2014/05/29/practice-put-students-in-the-drivers-seat-how-to/


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2014/10/03/design-the-learning-of-your-learners-students-ideas/


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2015/07/19/learning-path-for-professional-21st-century-learning-by-ict-practice/


Gust MEES's insight:
Student voice matters in education today. Listening to those voices and, even more, entrusting students with decisions about the nature of their learning communities, has tremendous benefits. I am not just referring to future benefits in terms of test score results and measurable academic gains. I am also looking at the benefits of creating more equitable and humane learning communities for today. We see this happening in promising ways, but what if we saw it even more? What if we found ways to persistently engage students in tackling some of education’s greatest challenges and pursuing some of its greatest opportunities? What if the students had more room to imagine the possibilities and to pursue them?


Learn more: 


http://www.scoop.it/t/21st-century-learning-and-teaching/?tag=students+voice


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2014/05/29/practice-put-students-in-the-drivers-seat-how-to/


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2014/10/03/design-the-learning-of-your-learners-students-ideas/


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2015/07/19/learning-path-for-professional-21st-century-learning-by-ict-practice/


Shaona Williams's curator insight, December 8, 2015 1:22 AM

Despite the fact that the purpose of education is theoretically for the betterment of the students, they are often absent at the conversations about education that affect them the most. This year, the nonprofit Student Voice aimed to change that with the first ever student-led education summit -  â€śThe State and Future of Student Rights.”. 

The students and other education stakeholders at the summit gathered to discuss the rights they believe all students deserve and how to integrate these rights in schools across the country.

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Connecting Students and Teachers for Better Learning

Connecting Students and Teachers for Better Learning | 21st Century Learning and Teaching | Scoop.it
Research demonstrates that a sense of social connection can improve learning. In fact, activities that bring students together — like peer tutoring and cooperative learning — have shown a marked increase of up to 75% greater performance on assessments. Teachers who support student-centered learning in this way often make a bigger impact on students’ lives and education than teachers who remain aloof or apart from their students.

A sense of separation from a teacher (and other students) can happen pretty easily in an online environment. It can take a special effort on the part of online teachers to become a “favorite teacher”. David Wiley noted that the impersonal nature of the web is not only easy to slip into, it is sometimes designed into the way LMSs direct pedagogy:

“With the pile of philosophical, conceptual, and empirical evidence showing the social nature of learning and the importance of human relationships (particularly the relationship between teacher and student) in learning and wellbeing, why are we working so hard to automate away any opportunity for these relationships to exist?”

But the truth is that there are a myriad of ways that teachers and students can create digital connections in online classes. A new paper from the Research and Education Department — “Increased Social Connectedness through Digital Peer Learning” — explores several ways that Canvas supports social learning, including:

Peer Tutoring
Reciprocal Teaching
Cooperative Learning
Gust MEES's insight:

Research demonstrates that a sense of social connection can improve learning. In fact, activities that bring students together — like peer tutoring and cooperative learning — have shown a marked increase of up to 75% greater performance on assessments. Teachers who support student-centered learning in this way often make a bigger impact on students’ lives and education than teachers who remain aloof or apart from their students.

A sense of separation from a teacher (and other students) can happen pretty easily in an online environment. It can take a special effort on the part of online teachers to become a “favorite teacher”. David Wiley noted that the impersonal nature of the web is not only easy to slip into, it is sometimes designed into the way LMSs direct pedagogy:

“With the pile of philosophical, conceptual, and empirical evidence showing the social nature of learning and the importance of human relationships (particularly the relationship between teacher and student) in learning and wellbeing, why are we working so hard to automate away any opportunity for these relationships to exist?”

But the truth is that there are a myriad of ways that teachers and students can create digital connections in online classes. A new paper from the Research and Education Department — “Increased Social Connectedness through Digital Peer Learning” — explores several ways that Canvas supports social learning, including:

Peer Tutoring
Reciprocal Teaching
Cooperative Learning



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The One Thing We Can't Afford to Waste in Education

The One Thing We Can't Afford to Waste in Education | 21st Century Learning and Teaching | Scoop.it
Out of all the debates about waste in education, there is one thing that we absolutely can't afford to waste...the potential of each learner.
Adele Taylor's curator insight, August 25, 2015 6:10 PM

I hadn't heard Fuller's realisation previously, but it does put some sense into the world, and can be utilised across education and many other channels.

Emma Miller's curator insight, August 25, 2015 8:53 PM

The article is a very interesting one as it brings up a very good point. Education is a a vital part of society as it develops better individuals and prepares the future of the country. The key idea of this article is that the K-12 education system does not key in on what each student is best as and prepare them for a career they would look into and excel in. Instead, we do a general education with your "core classes" such as math, english/reading, science, and social studies. I personally find that way of education contradicting as the standardized testing being issued nationwide through Common Core is named "Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers" so you would think we key in on what students feel they will go into as a career. This idea that K-12 education could be bettered by keying in on a student's strengths is a rather good one. Rather than producing the "well-rounded" student that knows endless fats about subjects not needed for their career, they excel at their future career, whether it be medical, economic, political, or anything in the world.

Tracy Harding's comment, September 1, 2015 3:35 PM
You need to make sure that you are making the global connection and impact of the issue in your article clear.
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This Is What a Student-Designed School Looks Like

This Is What a Student-Designed School Looks Like | 21st Century Learning and Teaching | Scoop.it
The Independent Project is a result of a high school student's mission to create a school where students would feel fully engaged, have an opportunity to develop expertise in something, and learn how to learn.


Learn more:


http://gustmees.wordpress.com/2014/07/10/education-collaboration-and-coaching-the-future/


Gust MEES's insight:
The Independent Project is a result of a high school student's mission to create a school where students would feel fully engaged, have an opportunity to develop expertise in something, and learn how to learn.


Learn more:


http://gustmees.wordpress.com/2014/07/10/education-collaboration-and-coaching-the-future/


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The Power of Suggestion: Using Psychology To Improve Student Intelligence [Infographic]

The Power of Suggestion: Using Psychology To Improve Student Intelligence [Infographic] | 21st Century Learning and Teaching | Scoop.it
So how can educators use psychology to improve student intelligence and academic achievement? BrainTrack have produced this infographic looking at the power of suggestion.
Gust MEES's insight:

A very GOOD trick to use that is to show the students some tools and telling them that they are YOUR "Secret Tools" and give them the download link! Show them also examples which YOU created, BUT these examples shouldn't be perfect (even weak...) and challenge them to do BETTER, NOT TIME LIMIT to do that!!!

 

Wait and see and be SURPRISED ;)

 

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Students as Curators of Their Learning Topics

Students as Curators of Their Learning Topics | 21st Century Learning and Teaching | Scoop.it

Robin Good: Must-read article on ClutterMuseum.com by Leslie M-B, exploring in depth the opportunity to have students master their selected topics by "curating" them, rather than by reading and memorizing facts about them.

 

"Critical and creative thinking should be prioritized over remembering content"

 

"That students should learn to think for themselves may seem like a no-brainer to many readers, but if you look at the textbook packages put out by publishers, you’ll find that the texts and accompanying materials (for both teachers and students) assume students are expected to read and retain content—and then be tested on it.

 

Instead, between middle school (if not earlier) and college graduation, students should practice—if not master—how to question, critique, research, and construct an argument like an historian."

 

This is indeed the critical point. Moving education from an effort to memorize things on which then to be tested, to a collaborative exercise in creating new knowledge and value by pulling and editing together individual pieces of content, resources and tools that allow the explanation/illustration of a topic from a specific viewpoint/for a specific need.

 

And I can't avoid to rejoice and second her next proposition: "What if we shifted the standards’ primary emphasis from content, and not to just the development of traditional skills—basic knowledge recall, document interpretation, research, and essay-writing—but to the cultivation of skills that challenge students to make unconventional connections, skills that are essential for thriving in the 21st century?"

 

What are these skills, you may ask. Here is a good reference where to look them up: http://www.p21.org/storage/documents/P21_Framework_Definitions.pdf (put together by the Partnership for 21st Century Skills)

 

 

Recommended. Good stuff. 9/10

 

Full article: www.cluttermuseum.com/make-students-curators/

 

(Image credit: Behance.net)

 

 


Via Robin Good, João Greno Brogueira, kathymcdonough, Virginia Pavlovich
Education Creations's curator insight, May 12, 2014 12:00 AM

How to turn students into curators.

Sample Student's curator insight, May 5, 2015 10:14 PM

We often ask our students to create annotated bibliographies, and this focuses on their capacity to evaluate and make decisions about the validity, reliability and relevance of sources they have found. using Scoop.it, we can ask them to do much the same thing, but they will publish their ideas for an audience, and will also be able to provide and use peer feedback to enhance and tighten up their thinking. This is relevant to any curriculum area. Of course it is dependent on schools being able to access any social media, but rather than thinking about what is impossible, perhaps we could start thinking about what is possible and lobbying for change.

Sample Student's curator insight, May 5, 2015 10:18 PM

We often ask our students to create annotated bibliographies, and this focuses on their capacity to evaluate and make decisions about the validity, reliability and relevance of sources they have found. Using Scoop.it, we can ask them to do much the same thing. But they will publish their ideas for an audience, and will also be able to provide and use peer feedback to enhance and tighten up their thinking. This is relevant to any age, and any curriculum area. Of course it is dependent on schools being able to access social media. But rather than thinking about what is impossible, perhaps we should start thinking about what is possible, and lobbying for change. Could you use a Scoop.it collection as an assessment task?

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63 Things Every Student Should Know In A Digital World

63 Things Every Student Should Know In A Digital World | 21st Century Learning and Teaching | Scoop.it
63 Things Every Student Should Know In A Digital World


Learn more:


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2014/10/03/design-the-learning-of-your-learners-students-ideas/


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2015/07/19/learning-path-for-professional-21st-century-learning-by-ict-practice/


Gust MEES's insight:
63 Things Every Student Should Know In A Digital World


Learn more:


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2014/10/03/design-the-learning-of-your-learners-students-ideas/


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2015/07/19/learning-path-for-professional-21st-century-learning-by-ict-practice/


Melissa Spears's curator insight, February 4, 2016 12:24 AM

Read on to know what are the things students should keep in their mind in order sustain in the digital world.

María Dolores Díaz Noguera's curator insight, February 4, 2016 7:39 AM
63 Things Every Student Should Know In A Digital World
Wendy Zaruba's curator insight, February 4, 2016 9:42 AM

More like 63 Things Everyone should know in this Digital World, interesting.

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Lisa Nielsen: The Innovative Educator: The Teacher Is Not The Most Important Factor When It Comes To Learning

Lisa Nielsen: The Innovative Educator: The Teacher Is Not The Most Important Factor When It Comes To Learning | 21st Century Learning and Teaching | Scoop.it

We neither need nor want to remove or diminish the role of the teacher in the "in-school" success of students. We do however need to amplify the role and the voice of students and their families. Learning doesn’t take place unless it is consensual; a willingness on the part of the teacher and family: to listen, to respond, and to understand the significance of how all these factors influence students in the process.


Learn more:


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2015/11/27/unlearning-the-old-relearning-learning-to-learn-howto/


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2014/10/03/design-the-learning-of-your-learners-students-ideas/


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2015/07/19/learning-path-for-professional-21st-century-learning-by-ict-practice/


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2014/01/04/practice-better-ways-to-say-i-dont-know-in-the-classroom/


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2014/07/29/practice-creativity-examples-with-thinglink/




Gust MEES's insight:

We neither need nor want to remove or diminish the role of the teacher in the "in-school" success of students. We do however need to amplify the role and the voice of students and their families. Learning doesn’t take place unless it is consensual; a willingness on the part of the teacher and family: to listen, to respond, and to understand the significance of how all these factors influence students in the process.


Learn more:


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2015/11/27/unlearning-the-old-relearning-learning-to-learn-howto/


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2014/10/03/design-the-learning-of-your-learners-students-ideas/


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2015/07/19/learning-path-for-professional-21st-century-learning-by-ict-practice/


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2014/01/04/practice-better-ways-to-say-i-dont-know-in-the-classroom/


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2014/07/29/practice-creativity-examples-with-thinglink/


Barbara Macfarlan's curator insight, December 3, 2015 3:48 PM

We need to re-think teaching and learning and frame it for the students rather than the teachers.

Carlos Rodrigues Cadre's curator insight, December 4, 2015 7:37 AM

adicionar sua visão ...

Daniel Christian's curator insight, December 4, 2015 11:48 AM

Some powerful, insightful comments here. Thanks Lisa. Thanks @Gust MEES

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6 Tips For Creating Effective Student Groups | LEARNing To LEARN | eSkills

6 Tips For Creating Effective Student Groups | LEARNing To LEARN | eSkills | 21st Century Learning and Teaching | Scoop.it
Grouping students is easy; creating effective student groups is less so.

The following infographic from Mia MacMeekin seeks to provide some ideas to help make group work easier in your classroom. The strength of this particular graphic is in the range of the ideas. The first tip refers teachers to Vygotsky’s Zone of Proximal development, which frames student ability in terms of a range: what they can do unassisted, what they can do with the support of a More Knowledgeable Other (MKO), and what they cannot do even with support. This is different for each student, and understanding these ranges for students can help inform grouping decisions, whether you’re using a peer instruction model, ability grouping, or another approach.


Learn more:


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2015/07/19/learning-path-for-professional-21st-century-learning-by-ict-practice/



Via John Evans
Gust MEES's insight:
Grouping students is easy; creating effective student groups is less so. 

The following infographic from Mia MacMeekin seeks to provide some ideas to help make group work easier in your classroom. The strength of this particular graphic is in the range of the ideas. The first tip refers teachers to Vygotsky’s Zone of Proximal development, which frames student ability in terms of a range: what they can do unassisted, what they can do with the support of a More Knowledgeable Other (MKO), and what they cannot do even with support. This is different for each student, and understanding these ranges for students can help inform grouping decisions, whether you’re using a peer instruction model, ability grouping, or another approach.


Learn more:


https://gustmees.wordpress.com/2015/07/19/learning-path-for-professional-21st-century-learning-by-ict-practice/


Annaliese Mauchline's comment, May 18, 2020 9:28 PM
I love letting my students work in groups, this such a great 'cheat sheet' on how to do group-work right!
Annaliese Mauchline's curator insight, May 18, 2020 9:30 PM
One of the things I love implementing in my classes is group work, and this resource presents a short 'cheat sheet' for how to do group-work right - how to maximise that collaborative opportunity.
James Douglas's curator insight, May 20, 2020 9:07 PM
What a great breakdown of how to create effective student groups. Especially relevant to Film and Media collaborations for developing student centred learning and higher order thinking. It's not simply a matter of pairing friend with friend! 
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What’s It Like to Be a Student Today? (Infographic)

What’s It Like to Be a Student Today? (Infographic) | 21st Century Learning and Teaching | Scoop.it
 
Gust MEES's insight:

What’s It Like to Be a Student Today? (Infographic)


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An Introduction to Content Curation and Its Relevance For Students and Teachers

 

 


Via Robin Good
Gust MEES's insight:

 

Learn more:

 

http://blog.scoop.it/2011/11/30/lord-of-curation-series-gust-mees/

 

http://www.scoop.it/t/21st-century-learning-and-teaching/?tag=Curation

 

Dean J. Fusto's comment, September 7, 2013 7:49 AM
Helpful primer on curation and its particular skill set. Thanks for the scoop.
Dean J. Fusto's curator insight, September 7, 2013 7:50 AM

A very helpful primer on content curation.

Alfredo Corell's curator insight, September 22, 2013 5:49 PM

 

Stacia Johnson and Melissa Marsh have recorded a 10-minute video introducing to Content Curation for their EDCI515 graduate course at the University of Victoria.

 

Topics covered:

Defining CurationWhat skills neededWhat tools can help

 

good summary recomendet to anyone interested in content-curation and its aplications in learning

 

Rescooped by Gust MEES from Web 2.0 and Thinking Skills
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4 things you need to know to help your students manage their online reputation [Infographic]

4 things you need to know to help your students manage their online reputation [Infographic] | 21st Century Learning and Teaching | Scoop.it

 

We often hear complaints about what students say and do online, but we often neglect to look into educators helping them manage their online reputation. This infographic is geared toward adults, but it can serve as a great starting point for conversations and activities that educators can engage in with students to help them to establish an active digital footprint that represents who they want to be perceived as online.

 


Via Made Hery Santosa
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