Saturday, December 30, 2006

Why Teacher Unions Are Good for Teachers and the Public

In the current climate, when it is in vogue to select non-educators to administer school systems, it is vital that teachers have a voice. School reform cannot possibly succeed when teachers—who are on the frontlines of implementation—are left out of the decision-making process. If there is no “buy-in,” if teachers do not willingly concur with the orders handed down from on high, then reform cannot succeed. If administrators operate by stealth and confrontation, then their plans for reform will founder. They cannot improve what happens in the classroom by humiliating and bossing around the teachers who are in daily contact with the children. Only in an atmosphere of mutual respect can administrators and teachers produce the kind of partnership that will benefit students. And administrators cannot achieve this collaborative atmosphere unless they are willing to talk with and listen to the leaders chosen by teachers to represent them.


Read the whole article

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Six trends for 2007 and the 21st century

Via Stephen Downes and ZD Net

eSchoolNews editor Gregg Downey offers six prognostications for the coming year. He has listed

Web 2.0.

Cloud computing

Service-oriented architecture

The gathering SCORM (Sharable Content Object Reference Model)

Telepresence ...

The sixth is

21st-century learning

An organization called the Partnership for 21st Century Skills has developed a program designed to help educators prepare their students for the future. According to the Partnership, students need the following skills. The job of educators in the 21st century is to deliver them:

  • Information and communication skills;
  • Thinking and problem-solving skills;
  • Interpersonal and self-direction skills;
  • Global awareness;
  • Financial, economic, and business skills; and
  • Civic literacy.

Saturday, December 23, 2006

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Social-networking sites confound schools

At least half of school systems in a recent poll do not have policies to address students' use of MySpace, Facebook, and other such sites

More than three years after social-networking web sites such as MySpace and Facebook first began cropping up online, school leaders still struggle with how to set policies regarding the use of such sites both inside and outside of school--and many school systems lack these policies altogether, according to a recent survey. Read on ...

Saturday, December 16, 2006

Schools mull new Microsoft technologies

Office 2007, Windows Vista promise greater security and ease of use--but upgrading will require significant planning and training

Software giant Microsoft Corp. will begin licensing two major new releases, Office 2007 and Windows Vista, to schools and businesses at the end of this month.

The programs include a host of new features aimed at boosting security and improving their ease of use--but upgrading will require significant planning and training on the part of schools.



Read on ...

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Lockie Leonard Read-alikes

Do you have students clamouring for "books lke Lockie Leonard"?

Try this list of Lockie leonard Read-alikes.

Tag: children's books

Saturday, November 25, 2006

'Second Life' develops education following

Virtual world being used by some educators and youth groups for teaching, socialization
By Justin Appel, Assistant Editor


Second Life, an enormously popular program that immerses participants in an online virtual world of their own making, is being used by a growing number of educators and youth organizations as a vehicle for instruction.

November 10, 2006—An online virtual world that has become one of the web's most popular activities is also becoming an increasingly popular venue for teaching and socialization among educators and youth organizations.

Read on ...

Tag: Second Life

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Momentum builds on e-books

Texas schools the latest to switch from textbooks to electronic versions

Momentum appears to be growing on the use of eBooks in K-12 education:

More and more school districts are replacing traditional textbooks with electronic versions that can be accessed through a school server or downloaded onto student laptops--and a few school systems have opted to eliminate textbooks altogether.

http://www.eschoolnews.com/news/showStory.cfm?ArticleID=6707

Sunday, November 19, 2006

Atomic Learning releases free blogging workshop

desk - businessThe new blogging workshop with over 100 tutorials is perfect for learners of all abilities. The workshop engages learners, explaining the difference between various kinds of blogs, introducing them to some hosting solutions, and showing them how to setup their own blog using Blogger™.
http://www.eschoolnews.com/resources/partners/showrelease.cfm?ReleaseID=1490

Tag: blogging

Friday, November 17, 2006

Educators slow to wise up to the gender problem

Last month, Melissa Roderick, a University of Chicago professor and leading authority on school reform, arrived at a startling conclusion: The traditional measurements of the nation's progress in improving education, which use race and income as markers, are flawed.

Why? Because boys and girls coming from the same race, families, incomes, neighborhoods and schools are turning out very differently. The girls are doing better.

Nearly half of all boys graduate from Chicago Public Schools with less than a 2.0 average, compared with a fourth of the girls. Only 8% of the system's African-American boys have a 3.0 average - a key indicator of the ability to complete college - compared with 18% of the girls.

The numbers are jarring, which explains Roderick's revelation that Chicago schools won't improve without strategies that focus on boys' achievement - the same kinds of strategies used so successfully to boost math and science skills among girls.

Read on ...

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Weightless teachers carry thrills home to students

The moment he became weightless, Mike Hickey of South High School in Cleveland, Ohio, completely forgot about the science experiment he was to conduct."
After the first bounce, I said nuts to the experiments," an exhilarated Hickey said after returning from his 90-minute flight aboard G-Force One, an aircraft specially designed to simulate the zero gravity of space by making controlled free-fall descents.

Hickey and 38 other teachers took part over the weekend in the last of five "Weightless Flights of Discovery" sponsored by Northrop Grumman Corp. and Zero Gravity Corporation of Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.

They giggled, somersaulted, gulped floating blobs of water and pushed each other around the padded cabin of the modified Boeing 727.

"Any tiny movement shot you across the plane," said Tracy Cindric of Lincoln High School in Gahanna, Ohio.

"It was very chaotic."

The teachers, representing 28 schools in Virginia, Maryland, Ohio, Arizona, Louisiana and Washington, D.C., are now expected to take their experience, their photographs and above all their enthusiasm back to the classroom and inspire the next generation of scientists, mathematicians and engineers.


Read on ...

Thursday, November 09, 2006

Nine Ways to Recognize a "Learning Classroom"

Test scores are not the only way to tell if a your classroom offers a rich learning environment for your students.

In fact, test scores are possibly one of the poorest ways to gauge how learning is progressing, and these test scores darken your classroom door too late in the school year to do much about learning that's gone awry, anyway.

Here are authentic indicators of instruction that is going right in your classroom:

>>> more

Tags: teachers, learning

Monday, November 06, 2006

Wikipedia:School and University Projects

Useful page on Wikipedia that provides advice, examples and templates to assist in the use of Wikipedia in the classroom. "An advantage of this over regular homework is that the student is dealing with a real world situation, which is not only more educative but also makes it more interesting ("the world gets to see my work"), probably resulting in increased dedication. Besides, it will give the students a chance to collaborate on course notes and papers, and their effort will remain online for reference, instead of being discarded and forgotten as is usual with paper course-work."
Via Education-India

From Stephen Downes

Friday, November 03, 2006

Quotable

Education is an admirable thing, but it is well to remember from time to time that nothing that is worth knowing can be taught.
Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)

This is the quote that opened the latest Library News for Teachers.

Tags: Education, quotations

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Just for fun

From the Just for fun section of the latest ezine ....

http://digicc.com/fido/

Ok so what is the formula?

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Develop or Upgrade your Classroom Library

Make a classroom library a focal point in your classroom, and partition the area in some way from the rest of the room.The space should be large enough to accommodate five or six students in a comfortable manner. How do you make the space comfortable?


Read on ...

Tags: library , Teachers

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Primary School Competition Celebrate Australia Day 2007

Upper Primary students are now invited to participate in the national competition to celebrate Australia Day 2007 for the chance to win a digital camera for themselves or their school.

The theme is: An Australian Day: A day in the life of my community.

Students are asked to explore all the great things in their local community and to use these to capture what they celebrate about being Australian.

Students can use images and words to create a visual essay that captures "a day in the life of" their community and expresses what they value and celebrate on Australia Day.

More details...

Friday, October 20, 2006

Teacher joins exodus for better pay

[In August,] Australia lost another of our youngest and brightest teachers to the British education system.

Luke Hall, 23, a maths and science teacher from country Victoria, hopped on a jet for a new life working in London.

His departure and that of thousands of other teachers each year has led to calls by Labor backbencher Craig Emerson for a model that would allow all state school principals to pay teachers more money for good performance instead of seniority. Read on ...

Tag: teachers

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Assembly prayers illegal, schools to be told

Reported in August ...

State schools will soon receive a new set of guidelines on religion, including a warning that prayers or Christian karakia in primary schools are illegal in most circumstances. Read on ...

Tags: schools

Sunday, October 15, 2006

Learn genetics

From the Genetic Science Learning Centre

“Helping people understand how genetics affects their lives and society”

Includes Resources for teachers

Visit Learn Genetics

Tag: genetics, teachers

Thursday, October 12, 2006

Two years' preschool for all, pay rises for staff urged

Found this clipping recently ...

A NATIONAL preschool system that gives children at least two years' education before they start school is the ideal child-care system, says a paper to be released today by 21 social policy researchers.
Read on ...

tags: preschool, teachers

Monday, October 09, 2006

Teachers sell lesson plans online

eBay for educators' helps teachers turn their hard work into extra cash

From eSchool news

A new web site launched in April, teacherspayteachers.com, aims to do for teachers what eBay has done for the masses: It gives teachers a far-reaching platform for selling their lesson plans to other interested educators. Buyers say the site helps them quickly find relevant content that can be adapted for their classrooms; sellers say it allows them to earn some extra money for their work.
Read on …


Tag: teachers

Friday, October 06, 2006

Reading, Writing and Google

Check this out ...

The Literacy Project, launched with United Nations, to cull teaching tools like, perhaps, Hooked on Phonics.


Google unveiled on Wednesday a Web site dedicated to literacy, pulling together its book, video, map and blog services to help teachers and educational organizations share reading resources.


The site was launched at the Frankfurt Book Fair, the world's largest gathering of publishing executives, in conjunction with the United Nations and a literacy campaign organized by fair officials.

Continues ...

Tags: Literacy, Google

Digital Classroom Resources

The Digital Classroom Resources (DCR) provides a select collection of free online learning materials which are available through the site. These materials have been classroom tested and peer reviewed. Many items in the library are posted with editorial reviews and a link to a moderated discussion group focused on the materials. Visit the site …

tag: Teachers

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

USING WIKIS IN SCHOOLS: A CASE STUDY

By Lyndsay Grant, Learning Researcher, Futurelab

IntroductionWikis have been heralded as one of a number of new and powerful forms of software capable of supporting a range of collaborative ventures and learning activities. This paper addresses the potential uses of wikis - online editable websites - as learning tools in schools. It places wikis in the context of current relevant literature about collaborative learning, summarising major theories of learning in communities and knowledge-building in networked groups. It also looks briefly at the trends in the wider area of 'social software', of which wikis are just one example. Using wikis in school is explored further through a short-term 'case study' in a UK secondary school. The literature and research background is used to analyse some of the emerging issues surrounding using wikis in the classroom highlighted through this case study. This paper looks both at the affordances of the technology itself and the wider context of the classroom, and offers some provisional conclusions about the potential of using wikis to support collaborative learning in schools.
Read on …

Tag: wikis

Saturday, September 30, 2006

Web's second phase puts users in control

The web's shift from a tool of reference to one of collaboration presents teachers with some rich opportunities for e-learning
>>more

Tags: collaboration, eLearning, web 2.0

Thursday, September 28, 2006

28,000 school children and teachers agree - museums excite and inspire!

A major new Museums Libraries and Archives Council (MLA) research study shows that children have fun and enjoy learning more in museums.

Teachers too, are highly enthusiastic about museums and their potential to support learning.

What did you learn at the museum today? Second Study is an evaluation of the outcomes and impact of learning following school visits to 69 UK museums. In the study, funded through the MLA’s Renaissance in the Regions programme, pupils expressed high levels of enjoyment and inspiration from visiting museums and most said they had learnt interesting, new things.
Read on …

Tag: Museums

Monday, September 25, 2006

Call for national teacher standards

A new report recommends an overhaul of how teachers are judged, writes Caroline Milburn.

SCHOOL teachers should be able to measure their competence against national standards that could herald a new era of performance-based pay, according to the author of a report on the profession.

Dr Lawrence Ingvarson said teaching, unlike most other professions in Australia, had not developed uniform standards that applied to its members regardless of where they worked.
Read on ...

Tag: Teachers

Friday, September 22, 2006

Push for simpler spelling persists

When "say," "they" and "weigh" rhyme, but "bomb," "comb" and "tomb" don't, wuudn't it maek mor sens to spel wurdz the wae thae sound?

Those in favor of simplified spelling say children would learn faster and illiteracy rates would drop. Opponents say a new system would make spelling even more confusing.
Read on …


Tag: spelling

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

National Financial Literacy Framework


This is a website to enable teachers to easily access the parts of the framework they need. Use the table on the home page to navigate directly to chosen year levels and dimensions.

National Financial Literacy Framework

tag: financial_literacy

Sunday, September 17, 2006

The Question of Teacher Roles in Blogging-yet-Traditional Classrooms

The tension we face right now is how to navigate between the demands of the traditional structures we find ourselves in (i.e. the teacher as local power-holder: designing the syllabus, dispensing knowledge through lectures and assignments, and evaluating through testing and grades--and in turn being evaluated on just how successful the students are according to prescribed standards) and the realities of the fluid, emergent knowledge spaces existing outside this realm in places with Internet access, where everyone is an expert and an apprentice connected within that space, where we might not need "teachers" at all, where learning doesn't happen according to set schedules and syllabi. If we take the traditional role of designer-director-evaluator in our classrooms, how are we helping young people become active citizens in this world with its inequities, its fragility, its violence, its power relations, its potential, its connectedness, its beauty? How are we helping them learn how to learn and learn how to give and to act? To take responsibility for their learning and their use of that learning? And yet for many of us, the structures in place (disciplines, majors, departments, school calendars) make it incredibly difficult to break away from the lecture-absorb or call-and-response model of education, especially for student from ages 12-22. Who has the time? Who has the energy? Who has the nerve? And who has the skill?
Read the whole post

Tag: blogging in education

Friday, September 15, 2006

A 'hole in the wall' helps educate India

Another slant on this fascinating issue.

By Pat Orvis
NEW DELHI – Free computers placed where children play could help bring basic education to India's 200 million boys and girls under age 15. That's the hope of the man behind an Internet learning experiment called Hole-in-the-Wall.

Read on …

Tag: Computers in education

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Attitudes to Teaching as a Career

This report synthesises recent Australian and international research on attitudes to teaching as a career, including research on the motivations of current teachers to remain in or leave the profession. The research shows that, while people who have chosen teaching as a career are chiefly motivated by ‘intrinsic’ rewards such as wanting to ‘make a difference’, enjoyment of children, etc, extrinsic factors such as remuneration, workload, employment conditions and status are the most significant factors influencing people not to choose teaching, and to leave the profession. Read the report

tag: Teaching

Saturday, September 09, 2006

Jamie McKenzie's article of the month compares the Essential Question with the Damanding one .....

The (merely) Demanding Question


When is an essential question actually essential?

When will a demanding question suffice?

Back when Grant Wiggins and the Coalition of Essential Schools introduced and popularized the term "essential question" two decades ago, an essential question was important and deep enough to provide focus for an entire year's study.

"What causes some to want to explore the unknown even when that exploration might entail loss, pain, hardship and death?"
Over the next twenty years, the term spread far and wide as many curriculum leaders urged teachers to build their lessons and units around such questions.

Read the whole article

tags: Jamie McKenzie, questions in education

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

State readies online teacher training options

LITTLE ROCK - Arkansas teachers will get the chance to improve their craft at any time and at any location with Internet access through online professional development training slated to start this fall. Read on …

Tag: eLearning, Teachers

Monday, September 04, 2006

Young children 'learn homophobia'

Primary school children are using homophobic insults without realising it, paving the way for later bullying, an educationalist has warned.

Mark Jennett said teachers should not allow words like "gay" and "sissy" to be used as terms of abuse. Read on …

tag: homophobia

Friday, September 01, 2006

Teacher literacy falls with salaries

EVIDENCE that the academic standards of new teachers are significantly lower than a generation ago will underscore a Howard Government push for the introduction of merit pay.

The Education Minister, Julie Bishop, seized on research released yesterday that showed the average teacher trainee in 1983 was more literate and numerate than 74 per cent of age peers. By 2003, that advantage was down to 61 per cent - and the decline was similar for new teachers. Read on ...

Is $100 laptop project flawed?

The head of one of the largest charitable suppliers of refurbished PCs claims that there are some basic problems with creating a custom-made laptop for the developing world. Read on …

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Statements of Learning

After an intensive period of development during 2005 under the direction of AESOC and the project management of Curriculum Corporation, and with expertise contributed by all States and Territories, Ministers approved the Statements of Learning for mathematics, science, civics and citizenship and ICT in August 2006 >>> more

Monday, August 28, 2006

Young Storytellers foundation

The Young Storytellers Foundation is dedicated to developing literacy, self-expression and self-esteem in elementary school children.
Visit Young Storytellers

Saturday, August 26, 2006

Bush education policy to miss goals: Harvard study

By Jason Szep

U.S. President George W. Bush's signature No Child Left Behind education policy is failing to close racial achievement gaps and will miss its goals by 2014 according to recent trends, a Harvard study said on Wednesday. >> more

Tag: No child left behind

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Web's second phase puts users in control

The web's shift from a tool of reference to one of collaboration presents teachers with some rich opportunities for e-learning. >>more

Tags: teachers, collaboration, e-learning

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Virtual schools offer clubs, field trips Organizers aim to dispel 'myth' of isolated instruction

Contrary to popular perception, students who enroll in cyber education have a plethora of options for interacting socially with their peers. Virtual schools are forming online clubs and organizing both online and face-to-face field trips to foster social experiences, and organizers say their efforts are paying off. >>more

tag: elearning

Saturday, August 19, 2006

An evening with David J Smith

David J Smith, author of the multi-award-winner and international bestseller If the World Were a Village, is coming to Sydney for one night only and Allen & Unwin is inviting you as our special guest.

Presented by Sydney Ideas, The University Of Sydney's International Public Lecture Series

Monday 18th September, 2006, 5pm

Seymour Centre, corner City Rd and Cleveland St, Chippendale

Tickets $20/$15

FREE for Allen & Unwin newsletter subscribers & their colleagues

If the World Were a Village is a book that has been published in 15
countries and in 12 languages and has been adopted in schools all around the world at every level, for lessons in counting, percentages, graphing, global geography, human geography, ecology, research, and more.

David J Smith will present his own lessons and ideas, as well as some of the ways that the book has been used, and offer a chance for teachers to share the ways they use the book or would like to.

Don't miss this chance to get an insight into this fascinating author, and grab yourself an Allen & Unwin showbag as well, which will include teachers' notes for If the World Were a Village.

email with RSVP in the subject line to reserve your free seats!

We hope to see you there.

Regards, Christian Taylor
Educational Marketing Coordinator
Allen & Unwin
83 Alexander StreetCrows Nest NSW 2065
Phone: 61 2 8425 0150 Fax: 61 2 9906 2218
Email: ChristianT at llenandunwin dot com

Thursday, August 17, 2006

Assessment Resource Centre

http://arc.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.au/

The aim of this website is to support and enhance professional practice in the assessment and reporting of student achievement across Years K to 12. It has been developed primarily for teachers, although parents and students may also find it useful. Student work samples aligned to the Grade Scale are available for each stage and each KLA. These work samples will assist teachers across NSW to consistently report student achievement against standards.

tag: Assessment

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

Miami school board bans Cuba book

Educational authorities in the US city of Miami have voted in favour of removing a controversial book about Cuba from the city's school libraries.
The book sparked protests from some in the Cuban exile community, but its removal could lead to a legal battle.
The Miami Dade School board voted six to three in favour of removing the 32-page geography book A Visit to Cuba from public school libraries. Read on …

Tags: book banning, censorship, education, school libraries

Sunday, August 13, 2006

Miss. proposes self-paced, online curriculum

Plan aims to 'redesign education for the 21st century'

Mississippi's state superintendent has floated a plan that would allow the state's students to take self-paced online courses as an alternative to graduation. The plan, which aims to reduce the state's dropout rate and better prepare students for college and the workforce, also asks students to choose from among seven possible career paths. Read on …

Saturday, August 12, 2006

Zip breaking news to parents electronically

Need to get in touch with teachers quickly? Want to get parents more engaged in school decision-making?

Try creating an electronic newsletter...Read on ...

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Summer Spruce-up: Scour, Scrub, Sift-through and "Sanitize" your Stuff

Summer time is prep time for the upcoming school year.

Wouldn't it be great if you faced the year unafraid?

Well, you might not fear your mess, but, clutter drains your energy.

And, clutter builds stress.

Especially when you are looking for something that is very important. Read on ...

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

Schools ban dictionary of slang

The author of what has been described as the definitive dictionary of slang is gobsmacked, gutted, throwing up bunches, honked, hipped, and jacked like a cock-maggot in a sink-hole. A North Carolina school district has banned the dictionary under pressure from one of a growing number of conservative Christian groups using the internet to encourage school book bans across the US. Read on ...

Sunday, August 06, 2006

New Power Solution Allows for All-Day Laptop Use

EarthWalk's Invention Allows Schools To Perform State Assessment Tests All Day

EarthWalk Communications has released a universal power system solution designed specifically for today's laptop classroom. Called the eCharger and Sidekick Battery Pack, these new products offer a cost-effective solution that allows teachers and students alike the ability to access computers all day long--without the problem of diminishing battery power. Read on ...

,.

Saturday, August 05, 2006

Teachers Matter

The No Child Left Behind education act, passed by Congress four years ago, was intended to correct the corrosive inequality that has plagued public education from the start.

It was with that goal in mind that Congress specified for the first time that in return for federal education dollars, states would have to end the destructive practice of staffing schools serving poor and minority children with disproportionate numbers of inexperienced and unqualified teachers. Read on ...



,

Thursday, August 03, 2006

Environmental protection Agency - Education Portal

p>

Basic Environmental Concepts for Classroom and Non­Traditional Educators

Teaching Aids

Awards & Recognition

Community Service Projects

and more

visit the site

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

A Positive Mental Attitude during Job Interviews

Summer is the time when many teachers who don't have jobs (and some who do) interview for new positions.

The job interview is a time that many unemployed (and under employed) teachers find stressful.

Here are some suggestions:

read on ...

Sunday, July 30, 2006

Public schools in 'state of disrepair'

Many public high schools in Australia are in such a state of disrepair that they should be bulldozed or rebuilt, an education expert says. Read on ...

Saturday, July 29, 2006

Feminised curriculum 'has thrown boy out with bathwater'

Schools are failing boys because lessons have become "feminised", says a leading academic who wants to see outdoor adventure given greater emphasis in the curriculum.

Tony Sewell, an author and director of The Learning Trust, will today a conference in London called Boys to Men: Teaching and Learning Masculinities in Schools and Colleges that boys fall behind in exams and the jobs market because teachers do not nurture male traits such as competitiveness and leadership.Read on …

Friday, July 28, 2006

EBD Blog is about emotional and behavioral disorders of children and youths.

In the US, this area of special education is often referred to as "emotional disturbance," but we're using the term EBD, as that one is more clearly discriptive and preferred by many leaders in the field. EBD Blog will also include content about related areas of disability, including autism, attention deficit disorder (ADD or ADHD), and other similar topics. John Wills Lloyd and James M. Kauffman are the primary authors of EBD Blog.

, ,

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Storytime online

This website uses online streaming video to feature Screen Actors Guild members reading childen's books aloud.

There are actiities to use and these can be downloaded.

Visit Storytime Online



, ,

Sunday, July 23, 2006

Improcving instruction through the use of weblogs

In preparation for her day at Kennesaw State University last week, Anne put together this great wiki resource site that should be on everyone’s resource list. (And check out her nifty use of Rock You on the language arts examples page. You go girl!) It’s chock full of reflection and links and thinking, and it’s just pure quality. Read on ...



Saturday, July 22, 2006

E-learning trends according to Google

Google Trends was launched in May 2006. It's yet another highly addictive application from the google lab pushers. We spent some time using it to analyse the trends in e-learning (and, er, Big Brother).

Read on ...

Thursday, July 20, 2006

Pupils get revision help by text

Pupils are able to send their queries to their teachers

Pupils at a school in Buckinghamshire have been getting extra help with GCSE revision by texting their teachers.

Far from banning mobile phones, Cottesloe School in Wing has decided to turn modern technology to its advantage in an attempt to improve results.

Read on ...

Tuesday, July 18, 2006

Information Literacy Assessment

TRAILS is a self-guided, self-administered assessment tool designed for use by library media specialists and teachers to determine the information literacy competencies of their high school students.

Librarians and teachers at other grade levels may find it of use as well. Once an assessment is selected, the library media specialist or teacher can choose how to use it to serve local needs. These tips may provide helpful information to create an assessment experience most conducive to obtaining useful results. Visit TRAILS

information literacy

Sunday, July 16, 2006

An Instructional Designer looks at Digital Games Based learning

The potential of digital game-based learning remains largely unrealized, in part because designers of "edutainment" games have never understood how and why games are effective and how to align curriculum with the game world without "sucking the fun out" of the games (according to Marc Prensky).

This has led some to believe that educators and instructional designers should never be allowed near a game.

The failures of the edutainment industry largely result from poorly understood theory and a lack of alignment between the worlds of education and games. Games succeed precisely because they employ sound pedagogical approaches such as situated cognition, cognitive disequilibrium, and scaffolding to teach what is needed to succeed in the game.

By examining the underlying principles of games and aligning them with educational theory and learning outcomes, it IS possible to create effective blended game-based learning. Instructional design is ideally positioned to guide this process. This presentation provides an overview of some of the theories that underlie games AND effective learning and explains how to align these two worlds.

Read on ...




Saturday, July 15, 2006

Centering, connecting and creating_ transformations in blogging classrooms

The Presentation Abstract:

We’ve all heard stories about the remarkable outcomes teachers claim by bringing social software into the classroom.

But enhancing the learning experience for our students is not simply a matter of “handing out blogs” like notebooks and then standing by to watch the miracle; nor is it a matter of setting up series of strict rules and parameters and methods.

By thinking first about the nature of our learning community and our pedagogical framework, and how connecting students to themselves, one another, and the world makes sense in our classrooms, we can take powerful advantage of the connectivity and the transparency of the medium.

And once we’ve seen the effects of blogging on our students, we’ll find ourselves blogging alongside them, and adding podcasting, skype, RSS, and digital storytelling into the blogging as ways to make learning exciting and effective for every student.

Read on ...

Thursday, July 13, 2006

Technology aids Health education

Schools use videos, internet to engage students and drive home the need for healthy choices Educators and school leaders across the country are taking steps to curb childhood obesity by stepping up their health education programs--and many are using technology to better engage kids and get the message across. Read on ...

Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Toontalk

From Bill Kerr...,

Weblabs runs a WebReports plone site which has developed some game type programs using ToonTalk for creating new ways of representing and expressing mathematical and scientific knowledge. They have developed reports on representing infinity, sequences, collisions, lunar lander and randomness.Bill goes on to explain Toontalk

Addressing the Literacy Needs of Emergent and Early Readers

ISSUE: Literacy development begins in the very early stages of childhood, even though the activities of young children may not seem related to reading and writing. Early behaviors such as "reading" from pictures and "writing" with scribbles are examples of emergent literacy and are an important part of children's literacy development.

With the support of parents, caregivers, early childhood educators, and teachers, as well as exposure to a literacy-rich environment, children successfully progress from emergent to conventional reading. The theoretical and research-based knowledge of child development in general and of literacy development in particular provides an understanding of the literacy acquisition of young children and suggests strategies that can help children become successful, confident readers and writers. Read on ...

Sunday, July 09, 2006

Schools lose bid to spam filter

Cobb County filter blocks telco's eMail

A telecommunications executive claims a Cobb County School District spam filter cost the district the chance to save $250,000 a year in telephone service. After the filter blocked Mike Russell's response to a request for more information about his bid for services, Russell was disqualified from consideration because he seemingly failed to respond in time. The incident highlights the imperfect nature of spam filters--and serves as a lesson to vendors and school leaders not to rely solely on eMail for important communications. Read on ...

Using Technology to Enhance Literacy Instruction

This Critical Issue was coauthored by Ann Holum, Ph.D., and Jan Gahala, M.A. Holum's doctoral work on the use of interactive media to improve children's story-understanding skills sparked her ongoing interest in integrating technologies in K-12 literacy settings; she currently is an independent educational consultant. Gahala is a technical specialist in NCREL's Communications department.

ISSUE: Educational technology is nudging literacy instruction beyond its oral and print-based tradition to embrace online and electronic texts as well as multimedia. Computers are creating new opportunities for writing and collaborating. The Internet is constructing global bridges for students to communicate, underscoring the need for rock-solid reading and writing skills. By changing the way that information is absorbed, processed, and used, technology is influencing how people read, write, listen, and communicate.

Although technology promises new ways to promote literacy, educators' reactions to it have been mixed. Some have embraced technology with unbridled enthusiasm while others have held it at arm's length with a healthy skepticism. Yet the growing influence of technology has caused many educators to acknowledge that they need information on teaching literacy skills in the Digital Age. To serve that need, this Critical Issue offers research, best practices, and resources that support integration of new technologies into literacy instruction.

Read on ...

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Saturday, July 08, 2006

States resist push for standard year 12 certificate


State and territory education ministers have refused to agree to a federal push for a uniform year 12.


The Federal Government wants to standardise year 12 content across Australia.

Read on ...

Thursday, July 06, 2006

Critical Issue:Using Technology to Enhance Literacy Instruction

This Critical Issue was coauthored by Ann Holum, Ph.D., and Jan Gahala, M.A. Holum's doctoral work on the use of interactive media to improve children's story-understanding skills sparked her ongoing interest in integrating technologies in K-12 literacy settings; she currently is an independent educational consultant. Gahala is a technical specialist in NCREL's Communications department.



ISSUE: Educational technology is nudging literacy instruction beyond its oral and print-based tradition to embrace online and electronic texts as well as multimedia. Computers are creating new opportunities for writing and collaborating. The Internet is constructing global bridges for students to communicate, underscoring the need for rock-solid reading and writing skills.

By changing the way that information is absorbed, processed, and used, technology is influencing how people read, write, listen, and communicate.

Although technology promises new ways to promote literacy, educators' reactions to it have been mixed. Some have embraced technology with unbridled enthusiasm while others have held it at arm's length with a healthy skepticism. Yet the growing influence of technology has caused many educators to acknowledge that they need information on teaching literacy skills in the Digital Age. To serve that need, this Critical Issue offers research, best practices, and resources that support integration of new technologies into literacy instruction. Read on ...

Tuesday, July 04, 2006

Creating crosswords - freeware

Creating Crossword Freeware

"Freeware crossword program intended for literacy educational purposes. Answers change colour when correct, allows direct typing to the crossword grid and multiple levels of hints (as well as answer) for each clue. Students can save partially filled crosswords for later use. Includes a free editor to create the crossword files."

Crosswords can be created around educational subjects including sciences, arts or languages. They can be used to reinforce knowledge of word lists in literacy courses.

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Sunday, July 02, 2006

CREATE - energy

CREATE motivates and educates people in businesses, communities, and schools to achieve more sustainable uses of energy and reduce carbon emissions. Visit CREATE

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Thursday, June 29, 2006

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

Learning Networks and Connective Knowledge

What do you see when you look through a computer?

Stephen Downes' presentation

so much more than text and images ...

http://www.downes.ca/files/toronto2006.ppt#256,1,

What do we see when we look through a computer?

networks, education

Monday, June 26, 2006

The Smart Classrooms Professional Development Framework trial

The Smart Classrooms Professional Development Framework trial is open for registrations.

In term 3, 100 teachers will be funded 3 TRS days to participate in an online course trialing the Framework. Successful participants will be accredited with the ICT Pedagogical Licence.

ICT Curriculum Integration online course
Teachers will be required to participate in a 10 week online course and construct a digital portfolio. The course will take approximately 40 hours of commitment. The registration cost is $300 (+GST).

Download an application kit today. Don’t miss out!

New Professionalism Program

2006 GUIDELINES AND APPLICATION FORMS ARE NOW AVAILABLE

- 108 Scholarships/Grants now across EIGHT CATEGORIES

- via the links below.


Closing dates: 14 July 2006 for teacher aides

11 August 2006 for remaining categories


The New Professionalism program recognizes that employees continue their individual development of understandings and skills that are essential to providing a quality public education system that delivers opportunities for all students.


Teachers, teacher aides, principals, managers, therapists, administrators — it doesn 't matter what the role in the many services provided throughout the department - professional development is pivotal to providing a quality service.


The department offers a range of scholarships and grants under the New Professionalism banner not only to ensure the future capability of our people but also to acknowledge and encourage the talents of its valuable employees.


Read on …

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Sunday, June 25, 2006

29 Marbles - Autism and its impact

Thoughts and discussion on autism and its impact on individuals and society

visit 29 Marbles

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Visual Literacy: An Institutional Imperative

Susan E. Metros and Kristina Woolsey

Academics have a long history of claiming and defending the superiority of verbal over visual for representing knowledge. By dismissing imagery as mere decoration, they have upheld the sanctity of print for academic discourse. However, in the last decade, digital technologies have broken down the barriers between words and pictures, and many of these same academics are now willing to acknowledge that melding text with image constructs new meaning, and some may even go so far as to admit that images, as communication devices, can stand on their own.

Read on ...

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Saturday, June 24, 2006

YOUNG AND WIRED

Computers, cell phones, video games, blogs, text messages -- how will the sheer amount of time spent plugged in affect our kids?

Read on ...



education

Study Backs Calif. Preschool Proposal

A proposed universal preschool program on California's June ballot would dramatically increase student achievement and could eventually become a national model if it is adopted, early education researchers say.

Read on ...

preschool, education

Thursday, June 22, 2006

Intel's answer to $100 laptop: Eduwise

The $400 machine for developing markets can do more than MIT prof's $100 laptop, Intel says

Intel, the world's largest chip maker, has responded to MIT professor Nicholas Negroponte's $100 laptop with a low-cost mobile PC of its own for students in developing markets. The $400 machine, called Eduwise, reportedly will run either Microsoft's Windows or the open-source Linux operating system, and though it's aimed first at developing countries, an Intel spokesman said the company will explore interest in the device from U.S. schools "over time."

Read on ...

education

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

School Library 2.0

A group of students from Lakeview High School in Battle Creek, MI, is sitting down to a discussion of Elie Wiesels Night (Hill & Wang, 1960). Its a fairly typical exercisethe Nobel Laureates haunting memoir of the Holocaust has been widely read in high schools (long before being tapped for Oprahs book club earlier this year).

Not so typical is the discussion itself. It will take place entirely online, in the form of a blog.

Read on …


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Sunday, June 18, 2006

Teaching to Learn

From the Unravelling to Understand blog

"I mentioned in a previous post how I learned some skills in scouting better when I had to teach them. They just stuck in my mind better. I urge you to try prepare a lesson to teach if you are struggling with a subject. Something amazing happens when your purpose is to help someone else. It's as if the specifics of the skills are forced into your brain because you have a mission."

Read the whole post

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Saturday, June 17, 2006

Parents urged to reject new report cards


Australian parents are being urged to reject a new report card system that grades their children from A to E.
National bodies representing parents of government school students and teachers are encouraging parents to refuse to accept the new cards, The Australian newspaper reported on Saturday. Read on ...

education, assessment, reporting

Thursday, June 15, 2006

The journey ahead - literacy

Thirteen teachers report how the Internet influences literacy and literacy instruction in their K-12 classrooms

Rachel A. Karchmer

Read the report

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Wednesday, June 14, 2006

Yr3/4 Literacy Blog

Year 3 and 4 students in Muxton Primary have been using a blog to share comments linked to 4 magazine advertisements they have been discussing.

To keep an eye on their progress click on http://muxton.edublogs.org/tag/magazine/

You can see from the dates and times of postings that some children have been working on this at home.

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Microsoft Innovative Teachers Award 2006

Searching for Australia's most innovative teachers...

Could one of them be you?

The search is on again to discover Australia's most innovative teachers, and this year's awards recognise both individual and team approaches.

Perhaps you've created individualised learning environments, or designed better ways for your students to engage with staff peers and experts from around the world. Or maybe your team has implemented a best-practice project that redefines learning or student assessment.

Whatever inspired you to integrate technology into the curriculum, the Microsoft Innovative Teachers Award is your opportunity to share your experiences with other teachers who, like you, are enthusiastic about creating a curriculum that responds to changes in our society. Read on ...


education, education and technology,

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Free maths worksheets

Math-Drills.Com includes over 6000 free math worksheets with answer keys. These printable worksheets can be used for assessment, mental math, algorithm practice, and a variety of other activities. You are welcome to use any of the free math worksheets on this website as long as they are helping you or someone else to learn math

maths, education,

Monday, June 12, 2006

Teachers stand firm over OBE dispute

A Western Australia Government meeting with education groups has failed to allay fears that teachers may boycott the new outcomes-based education (OBE) courses next year. Read on ...
education

Sunday, June 11, 2006

Micosoft Innovative Teachers Award 2006

Searching for Australia's most innovative teachers... Could one of them be you?

The search is on again to discover Australia's most innovative teachers, and this year's awards recognise both individual and team approaches.

Perhaps you've created individualised learning environments, or designed better ways for your students to engage with staff peers and experts from around the world. Or maybe your team has implemented a best-practice project that redefines learning or student assessment.

Whatever inspired you to integrate technology into the curriculum, the Microsoft Innovative Teachers Award is your opportunity to share your experiences with other teachers who, like you, are enthusiastic about creating a curriculum that responds to changes in our society.

Read on ...

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Saturday, June 10, 2006

EBSCO Publishing is offering free access to the new Teacher Reference Center

From ITI Newsbreaks Weekly News

EBSCO Publishing (http://www.epnet.com/) is offering free access to the new Teacher Reference Center, a bibliographic index of more than 260 titles from teacher and administration trade journals, periodicals, and books. The database, delivered via the EBSCOhost platform, is available as a free resource to anyone interested in teaching and education.

Teacher Reference Center provides coverage on topics such as assessment, best practices, continuing education, current pedagogical research, curriculum development, elementary education, higher education, instructional media, language arts, literacy standards, school administration, science and mathematics, teacher education, and more.

Teacher Reference Center is currently available at http://www.libraryresearch.com/, along with EBSCO Publishing’s free Library, Information Science & Technology Abstracts (LISTA) database. In the coming weeks it will move to http://www.teacherreference.com. Existing EBSCOhost customers may request to have Teacher Reference Center added to their existing EBSCOhost profiles at no additional charge.

Thursday, June 08, 2006

LMS and LCMS demystified

One Letter Away from Each Other as Acronyms, but Miles Apart in Practice

Learning management systems (LMS) and learning content management systems (LCMS) really have two very different functions. It's unfortunate that both have such similar names and a shared acronym, which only serves to confuse e-learning buyers even more.

The primary objective of a learning management system is to manage learners, keeping track of their progress and performance across all types of training activities. By contrast, a learning content management system manages content or learning objects that are served up to the right learner at the right time.

Read on ...

learning Management systems, education,

Wednesday, June 07, 2006

Vroom

Vrroom ...The national Archives of Australia has built “an interactive website and online teaching resource that aims to encourage teachers and students to use archival materials within discovery-oriented teaching and learning”.

…. The general topics already found on Vrroom include immigration, conflicts, gender, and Indigenous rights. Formulated for students and teachers throughout Australia and across all curricula, Vrroom is ideal for anyone engaged in Australian studies, politics, geography, environmental management, and technology.

Visit Vrroom

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Tuesday, June 06, 2006

Connecting the digital dots: literacy in the twenty-first century

Literacy today depends on understanding the multiple media that make up our high-tech reality and developing the skills to use them effectively

By Barbara R. Jones-Kavalier and Suzanne L. Flannigan

Prior to the 21st century, literate defined a person’s ability to read and write, separating the educated from the uneducated. With the advent of a new millennium and the rapidity with which technology has changed society, the concept of literacy has assumed new meanings.

Read on …

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Monday, June 05, 2006

Libraries tied to student achievement

The following article appeared in the Toronto Sun.

Libraries tied to student achievement

Study makes case for training, funding

"...first Canadian study linking school libraries to student achievement indicates that better libraries improve student testscores and add to kids' reading enjoyment. The Ontario School Library Association says the research, released yesterday, is the evidence it needs to make a case for more trained school librarians and better-stocked shelves. "There's such a clear link between libraries and student achievement. I don't know how the minister (of education) can ignore it," said association president Michael Rosettis.

The study by Queen's University professor Don Klinger was based on provincial test scores and attitudinal information collected by the province's Education Quality and Accountability Office. That information was married with data on the state of elementary school libraries gathered by the provincial parent group, People for Education.

Klinger's study of 800 elementary schools and about 50,000 students showed that schools without trained teacher-librarians were more likely to score lower on grades 3 and 6 reading tests. Schools with teacher-librarians had proportionally more students who scored the highest levels on Grade 6 tests.

The study found the biggest difference teacher-librarians made appeared to be in how much students enjoyed reading, said Klinger. The research showed that the presence of a teacher-librarian accounted for a small shift in students' attitude to reading. It was a tiny variable, but given that researchers haven't been able to identify most of the factors affecting student achievement, it is significant, he said. "If all school libraries were adequately staffed and sufficiently funded, just imagine the impact on student achievement," said Rosettis, a teacher-librarian at St. Augustine Catholic High School in Markham.

Teacher-librarians are qualified teachers who've taken more courses to become librarians. They focus on integrating information technology with the curriculum, and work with teachers to design research units.

The $40,000 study was funded by the Ontario School Library Association, but conducted independently, Rosettis said.

U.S. studies have shown a link between student achievement and well-staffed, well-stocked school libraries. The librarians and People for Education say the Ontario government has made small steps to stem a 20-year decline in school libraries with a $17 million book grant last year and another $15 million last month.

Rosettis said he hopes new education minister Sandra Pupatello will find the study compelling enough to consider designating dedicated funds to teacher-librarians and books.

School boards get one librarian for every 769 students, but many schools don't have that many students and even when they do get a library allocation, some principals spend the money on other staffing and specialty teachers in physical education or music.

People for Education research shows that only 54 per cent of Ontario elementary schools had a full- or part-time teacher-librarian last year, compared with 80 per cent in 1997-'98.

At Church Street Public School, full-time teacher-librarian Nancy Woodruff said she works with other teachers, looking for alternative curriculum materials to suit student needs, including those who haven't yet learned English and others with learning disabilities. "These children will have to know how libraries function to the end of their school days," she said, but every year she wonders if the school will be able to keep her in the library position. Principal Judy Gillis said she gets between $6,000 to $7,000 a year to stock the library but it's a struggle with so many competing priorities. Pupatello was not available for comment yesterday.

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Sunday, June 04, 2006

Standard year 12 exams in the pipeline

All Australian Year 12 students would sit standard national exams replacing all existing state qualifications if the federal government gets its way. Read on ...

Saturday, June 03, 2006

Podcasting 101 for K-12 Librarians

"When podcasting emerged in the communication revolution, I saw a unique opportunity to provide on-demand content in an easily accessible and cost-effective format.

What began as an interest in using podcasting for professional development has now become an interest in exploring creative podcast use in K–12 libraries.

When I first asked my librarians whether they used podcasts, two-thirds didn’t know what I was talking about. However, many of their students were already accessing and creating podcasts on their own. So I suggested that we brain­storm and plan how to turn podcasting into an opportunity to reach out to students and to affect learning.

" ...Podcasting supports efforts to differentiate instruction in the library in accordance with No Child Left Behind requirements. The podcast is a viable alternative for delivering research content or lessons to students who need re­medial or extended support.

While auditory learners particularly benefit when podcasts are incorporated into the teaching model, librarians can help all students and staff find ways to creatively use podcasting. Sometimes new formats are the key to igniting interest. While creating podcasts, students learn to research, write, develop vocabulary, speak effectively, manage time, solve problems, and grab attention. "

Read the whole article...

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Thursday, June 01, 2006

As test-taking grows, test-makers grow rarer

" ....Government and industry officials warn that the shortage of experts could undermine the testing process and lead to errors, with consequences like children's being wrongly denied promotion and schools being mistakenly labeled as failing.

Already, they say, many states and school districts lack officials trained to oversee testing and make effective use of score data.

The states are being hardest hit because they desperately need psychometricians to supervise their multimillion-dollar contracts with test publishers but are routinely outbid not just by testing firms but also by colleges, research groups and other industries."

Read the whole article

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Govt to revamp year 12 certificate

The Federal Government is moving ahead with plans for an overhaul of the year 12 certificate.

Former education minister Brendan Nelson had been concerned by differing standards across the country in key subject areas such as English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry. A report he commissioned into establishing a national certificate of education for year 12 students will be released today with the Government's response

. Read on …

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Common errors in English

The aim of this site is to help you avoid low grades, lost employment opportunities, lost business, and titters of amusement at the way you write or speak. Check it out …

writing, conversation, speaking, education, English,

Monday, May 29, 2006

2cents worth - Education blog

http://davidwarlick.com/2cents/

Thoughts about education, teaching and learning

education

Saturday, May 27, 2006

wwwtools for education

“wwwtools is designed to keep you informed and to save valuable time in tracking down information and resources on the World Wide Web.Each article is on a particular topic or issue related to Web-based teaching and learning.”

Visit wwwtools for education

education

Friday, May 26, 2006

Landmarks for schools

As popular as it has become in recent years, the Internet is still a vast wilderness. For this reason, it still takes the explorer in us to seek out those net-based gems that can bring life to our learning environments.

Most educators, however, have little time to go exploring on the Net, as much as they would like to.

To serve these professionals, David Warlick and The Landmark Project have utilized 20 years of experience inventing instructional applications of computer and communication technologies for teaching and learning.

Landmarks for Schools (LFS) serves as a hub for these and other resources available to teachers to help them prepare students for the 21st century.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Pioneering a sustainable Queensland

From the Queensland Museum

Until 22 June

Thursdays 12.00-1.00pm

This ground-breaking free talk series presents a range of remarkable people, from private enterprise and the public sector, who are leading the charge in a sustainable future for Queensland.Take this opportunity to hear the final four presentations in the series.

Visit the Museum website for a full series program!

sustainability

education

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

The Librarian - your technology partner

From Doug Johnson…

”Having a partner in any enterprise that seems risky lessens the fear factor and improves one's chance for success. When implementing a new project that uses technology, I whole-heartedly recommend asking your librarian to be your "technology partner." You will find that today's best librarians -- or library media specialists (LMSs) -- have…”

Read on to find the eight qualities …

library

education

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Monday, May 22, 2006

Global Issues using films

In an increasingly visual environment, film is a powerful way to engage students in global education.

Use films from a variety of sources to help students engage with the wider world.

Develop students’ skills in visual literacy to assist in global awareness and to promote understanding, tolerance and acceptance of cultural, religious and political differences.

Help students to learn how to interpret the complexities of different points of view and contextualise them through historical, geographical, cultural, economic, political and environmental lenses.

Teach students to read the many layers in the visual images by asking questions about the environment and the interaction of people and their values.

Continues with detailed information and resources on using film

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Friday, May 19, 2006

Teaching to the test

Let's Teach to the Test

By Jay Mathews

All signs point to 2006 being a crucial year for testing in America, with the first national results from the new SAT due, as well as significant changes underway in how states use the tests that rate schools under the No Child Left Behind law. If only, then, we could figure out a way to speak clearly to each other about what we think of the many tests our children are taking. Let's start by trying to clarify what I consider the most deceptive phrase in education today: "teaching to the test."

Read on …

Tag:

Thursday, May 18, 2006

Schools tree day

Finally a school activity where kids can get dirty!

28 July is Planet Ark's ‘Schools Tree Day'.

Sponsored by Toyota and the AMP Foundation the number of schools becoming involved rises steadily each year.

On 28 July 2006 tens of thousands of students around Australia will join in tree planting activities and fun outdoor eco-lessons. To get out of maths lessons, call 1300 88 5000 or visit Planet Ark to download lesson plans.

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Tuesday, May 16, 2006

English - media studies

Interactive, multimedia lessons guide you through the media in the world today from newspapers and TV to the internet.

Test your knowledge of media studies in the specially-designed exercises that form part of each lesson. Specialist terms are explained in a glossary and the lessons are summarised in handy, printable revision sheets.

Visit the site

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Monday, May 15, 2006

Creating to learn - has technology fulfilled its promise in our classrooms?

Creating to Learn:Has technology fulfilled its promise in your classroom? by Jacqueline Keane

“Anyone? … Anyone?”

I'm sure all of us have experienced something like that scene with Ferris Bueller's teacher-staring out at a collage of blank faces, hoping for a student to show some interest, some spark of understanding, or (should we dare even think it?) some insight.

As Ferris's teacher used old-fashioned “talk and chalk” at the front of his classroom, his students drifted farther and farther away. No wonder Ferris wanted to take a day off. We all laugh at this scene, but we need to ask ourselves: What are we doing so differently now?

Read on …

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Sunday, May 14, 2006

Resources for families

Visit the families pages for information on parenting, food and nutrition, books and reading, and homework help

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Saturday, May 13, 2006

The Academic search engine from Microsoft

The Academic Search Engine From Microsoft: Windows Live Academic

A new, Microsoft-based, online search engine focused on academic subjects is now live.

Called Windows Live Academic, it currently indexes content related to computer science, physics, electrical engineering, and related topics (with more than 6 million records from approximately 4300 journals and 2000 conferences) providing direct access to peer reviewed journal articles contained in academic and scientific online portals.

More subjects will be added in the near future

. Read more ….

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Thursday, May 11, 2006

State omits minorities' test scores

States are helping public schools escape potential penalties by skirting the No Child Left Behind law's requirement that students of all races must show annual academic progress.

With the federal government's permission, schools aren't counting the test scores of nearly 2 million students when they report progress by racial groups, an Associated Press computer analysis found.

Minorities — who historically haven't fared as well as whites in testing — make up the vast majority of students whose scores are being excluded, AP found. And the numbers have been rising.

Read on …

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Wednesday, May 10, 2006

Better grades - thank a librarian

The following article appeared in the Toronto Sun, Friday, April 7th,2006.

Libraries tied to student achievement

Study makes case for training, funding

"...first Canadian study linking school libraries to student achievement indicates that better libraries improve student testscores and add to kids' reading enjoyment.

The Ontario School Library Association says the research, released yesterday, is the evidence it needs to make a case for more trained school librarians and better-stocked shelves.

"There's such a clear link between libraries and student achievement. I don't know how the minister (of education) can ignore it," said association president Michael Rosettis.

The study by Queen's University professor Don Klinger was based on provincial test scores and attitudinal information collected by the province's Education Quality and Accountability Office. That information was married with data on the state of elementary school libraries gathered by the provincial parent group, People for Education.

Klinger's study of 800 elementary schools and about 50,000 students showed that schools without trained teacher-librarians were more likely to score lower on grades 3 and 6 reading tests. Schools with teacher-librarians had proportionally more students who scored the highest levels on Grade 6 tests.

The study found the biggest difference teacher-librarians made appeared to be in how much students enjoyed reading, said Klinger. The research showed that the presence of a teacher-librarian accounted for a small shift in students' attitude to reading.

It was a tiny variable, but given that researchers haven't been able to identify most of the factors affecting student achievement, it is significant, he said. "If all school libraries were adequately staffed and sufficiently funded, just imagine the impact on student achievement," said Rosettis, a teacher-librarian at St. Augustine Catholic High School in Markham. Teacher-librarians are qualified teachers who've taken more courses to become librarians.

They focus on integrating information technology with the curriculum, and work with teachers to design research units. The $40,000 study was funded by the Ontario School Library Association, but conducted independently, Rosettis said. U.S. studies have shown a link between student achievement and well-staffed, well-stocked school libraries.

The librarians and People for Education say the Ontario government has made small steps to stem a 20-year decline in school libraries with a $17 million book grant last year and another $15 million last month.

Rosettis said he hopes new education minister Sandra Pupatello will find the study compelling enough to consider designating dedicated funds to teacher-librarians and books.

School boards get one librarian for every 769 students, but many schools don't have that many students and even when they do get a library allocation, some principals spend the money on other staffing and specialty teachers in physical education or music.

People for Education research shows that only 54 per cent of Ontario elementary schools had a full- or part-time teacher-librarian last year, compared with 80 per cent in 1997-'98.

At Church Street Public School, full-time teacher-librarian Nancy Woodruff said she works with other teachers, looking for alternative curriculum materials to suit student needs, including those who haven't yet learned English and others with learning disabilities. "These children will have to know how libraries function to the end of their school days," she said, but every year she wonders if the school will be able to keep her in the library position. Principal Judy Gillis said she gets between $6,000 to $7,000 a year to stock the library but it's a struggle with so many competing priorities.

Pupatello was not available for comment yesterday.

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Monday, May 08, 2006

Promoting poetry

Lots of creative and inexpensive suggestions for making poetry a more important part of school life during April and throughout the year

. Poets.org

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Sunday, May 07, 2006

“Anti-racism education for Australian schools” – includes lesson plans and teaching ideas. Resource section, interactive student games

Thinking Out Loud

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Saturday, May 06, 2006

The Art room

Like art rooms in schools everywhere, this virtual art room is meant to be a "special" place.

Within its "walls," kids are offered opportunities to create, to discover, to imagine, to invent, to learn, and to make their thoughts become things.

In short, the @rt room is a place for kids to explore their inner and outer worlds

. Visit the art room

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Friday, May 05, 2006

Reactive colours for autism

The Reactive Colours research team, based at Cardiff School of Art and Design, is developing experiential software called ReActivities, to promote relaxation, encourage spontaneous play and support learning for children on the autistic spectrum

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Thursday, May 04, 2006

Term 2 book rap - "Worst best friends"

Just wanting to let you know that the Term 2 rap Worst best friends for Stage 2 will be available from May 15th on our website at http://www.schools.nsw.edu.au/schoollibraries/teaching/raps/index.htm

Rap information: Worst best friends by Max Dann. Stage 2. A multimedia unit based on books and films from the television series by the author. This is a cross KLA unit including English and PDHPE which explores issues about friendship, trust and loyalty. Students will share ideas about what friends are like, how they act, things they do and share with friends.

The rap may be used alongside the COGs unit Stage 2: Understanding each other that focuses on exploring different cultures, customs, viewpoints and types of relationships in order to better understand each other.

Resources available from Australian Children's Television Foundation (ACTF). The Rap will be live for viewing and registering (no cost) week of 15 May 2006.

Rap starts 22 May 2006.

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Wednesday, May 03, 2006

Cool free add-on to NASA's World wind

From resource shelf:

World Wind is a free, open source, 3D interactive geographic application (maps and imagery of Earth) that we've linked to on the blog several times and Gary also posted about on the SEW Blog a year ago.

The first version of the app launched in mid-2004. The program was first developed by NASA's Learning Technologies. World Wind has its own wiki, WorldWindCentral, loaded with tons of info (knowledge base), cool places found using the imagery, user tips, and more. A user forum is also available.

World Wind Moon now offers 3-D interactive imagery of the Moon. It's also worth knowing that many add-ons for WorldWind are available. This page has a good overview of how they work. A list is available here and even more comprehensive list here. Add-ons include:+ Access to MSN's Virtual Earth (Live Local) imagery+ Access to Great Lakes Data+ Access to Imagery of Venus+ NASCAR Tracks+ National Parks+ Near Real Time Satellite Tracker

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education


geography

Tuesday, May 02, 2006

Australian Flexible Learning Framework - Indigenous access

Applications are now open for funding from the 2005-2006 Australian Flexible Learning Framework (Framework) to contribute to improving employment futures for Indigenous people with limited access to mainstream training options by advancing skills through e-learning.

In 2006, The Framework's Indigenous Engagement Project aims to bring together committed Indigenous individuals and organisations to further strengthen the role of Indigenous people and communities in shaping vocational and technical education.

Successful projects must demonstrate the potential to increase the uptake and delivery of e-learning through the establishment of partnerships between Indigenous communities/organisations and registered training organisations (RTOs).

Visit the website

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Sunday, April 30, 2006

Online video game training for teachers

The Game Institute and Muzzy Lane Software Introduce Online Video Game Training for Teachers

Helping educators get the most from video games in the classroom.

As more schools embrace the educational promise of videogames, teachers are demanding a new kind of education: Courses that help them use interactive technology effectively in the classroom.Today, the Game Institute and Muzzy Lane Software announce a new online education series that will do just that. The new professional development series called "Using Games in Education" is a hands-on training program delivered over the Internet.

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education

games in education

Saturday, April 29, 2006

Powerpoint Templates

PowerPoint Templates for Teachers from Vicki Blackwell.

Also includes links to PowerPoint presentations for teachers and other template sites.

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powerpoint
education>
teachers

Friday, April 28, 2006

Group work 'raises attainment'

Pupils are more focused on their work, make more progress and behave better if they work in groups, research suggests. A one-year project by the Institute of Education at London University found group work led to improvements in maths, reading and science

. Read on …

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education

Thursday, April 27, 2006

New Information Literacy website

This website has been designed and developed by information professionals from key UK organisations actively involved in the field of information literacy. The site will support practitioners by providing news, case studies, examples of best practice and freely available toolkits. Our aim is to provide a practical resource that information professionals regularly visit to discover the latest developments in information literacy.

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information literacy

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Pivotal Communication

All aspects of communication on the Pivotal communication blog - writing, books and reading, public speaking, email and much more .
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communication

Tuesday, April 25, 2006

ThinkQuest Library

The ThinkQuest Library provides innovative learning resources for students of all ages on a wide range of educational topics.

Featuring over 5,500 websites, the library is created by students from around the world as part of the competition.

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education