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Veliler Lifelong Learning http://www.thirteen.org/edonline/adulted/index.html Teaching and Learning Strategies In this area of the website you will find information on some of the best researched and the most widely implemented methods of helping all students to learn more successfully. The information includes a description of how the teaching and learning strategies work, where they have been applied, results, and where to find further information from experts in the field, books, websites, and other resources. They have been demonstrated to be successful with students of all ages and ability levels, including those with various kinds of disabilities and those who do not learn in traditional ways. Following are links to different teaching and learning strategies, a description of how they work, where they have been applied, results, and where to find more information from individuals, books, web sites, and other resources.
Accelerated Learning Techniques
Action Research Applied Learning Arts in Education Assessment Alternatives Character Education Cognitive Coaching Cooperative Learning Democratic Classrooms Differentiated Instruction Emotional Intelligence Environmental Education Environments for Learning Graphic Tools Instrumental Enrichment Keeping Fit for Learning Learning Styles Literacy Multicultural Education Multiple Intelligences Service Learning Teaching for Understanding Technology in Education Thinking Skills These strategies are most successful when they are implemented in a system that encourages collaboration among staff and students, and in which each is a part of a well-planned whole system. In some of the most successful sites, teachers themselves have become in-house experts in specific practices which they share with their colleagues. It is important to recognize that while these strategies are useful, little will be accomplished in implementing them unless there is ongoing documentation of their results. There must also be efficient methods of feeding that information back into the system so that there will be continuing progress in teaching and learning. It is also certain that these strategies are most effective when they are applied in positive, supportive environments where there is recognition of the emotional, social and physical needs of students and where individual strengths are recognized, nurtured, and developed. We welcome your feedback as we continue to build the Teaching and Learning Strategies area as an effective resource for teachers and students focusing on improved academic achievement and striving to meet new academic standards. Recommended Reading: In recent years, there has been an explosion of new research coming directly from applying in schools and adult training programs the most effective ways of teaching and learning. Following is a list of books that present such research in an informative and practical manner. Please click on the title for a description of each book. How People Learn: Brain, Mind, Experience, and School Committee on Developments in the Science of Learning Edited by John D. Bransford, Ann L. Brown, and Rodney R. Cocking, with additional material from the Committee on Learning Research and Educational Practice Editors: M. Suzanne Donovan, John D. Bransford, and James W. Pellegrino Commission on Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education and the National Research Council, Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 2000
How
People Learn: Bridging Research and Practice
Classroom Instruction That Works: Research-Based Strategies for Increasing
Student Achievement
Handbook of Research on Multicultural Education
Diversity Within Unity: Essential Principles for Teaching and Learning in a
Multicultural Society
Teaching to Change the World
So Each May Learn:
Integrating Learning Styles and Multiple Intelligences
Quantum Teaching: Orchestrating Student Success
The
Learner's Way: Brain Based Learning in Action Qualities of Effective Teachers James H. Stronge Related links:
The Center for Social Organization of
Schools
The Michigan Teachers Network
Technology in
Education
Articles Many people warn of the possible harmful effects of using technology in the classroom. Will children lose their ability to relate to other human beings? Will they become dependent on technology to learn? Will they find inappropriate materials? The same was probably said with the invention of the printing press, radio, and television. All of these can be used inappropriately, but all of them have given humanity unbounded access to information which can be turned into knowledge. Appropriately used-- interactively and with guidance-- they have become tools for the development of higher order thinking skills. Inappropriately used in the classroom, technology can be used to perpetuate old models of teaching and learning. Students can be "plugged into computers" to do drill and practice that is not so different from workbooks. Teachers can use multimedia technology to give more colorful, stimulating lectures. Both of these have their place, but such use does not begin to tap the power of these new tools. In this area, you will find descriptions of how computers can be used to stimulate and develop writing skills, collaborate with peers in foreign countries, do authentic kinds of research that is valuable to the adult world, and do complex kinds of problem solving that would otherwise be impossible. Articles
Technology
and Academic Achievement Les Foltos
Americans Need to Know More About Technology The National Academy of
Engineering
Take Back
the Afternoon: Preserving the Landscape of Childhood In Spite of Computers
David Sobel Classroom Applications:
Implications of New Media for K-12 Education Chris Dede
Nanoscale
Science and Technology: Connections with K-12 Education Ethan Allen
The Web of
Knowledge: Vision, Design, and Practice Patrick McKercher, Judy Bonne and
Andy Rogers
Intercultural Education and Virtual Reality Judy Bonne and Patrick
McKercher
Advancement of Science Knowledge In Language Learning ( ASKILL ) John
Shaffer and V. A. Lindley-Brunn
Learning with the Internet S. L. Muthukumar
Changing
the Face of Education in Missouri Monica Beglau
Generation Y: Student Inclusion = Technology Infusion Sylvia Martinez
Technology and MI Thomas Hoerr
Linking
Students with Their World: A Good Day in French Class Nancy A. Bacon
Technology in Environmental Education Clancy J. Wolf
Listen Up!:
Using Audio Files in the Curriculum Tuiren Bratina, Tom Bratina and
Anthony Bratina
A New
Generation Meets the Ancient Mariner Raúl daSilva
Harnessing the Best of Technology for an Exceptional Information Literacy
Library Program Deborah Gallaher and Sue Roberts
Working Together: Students with Disabilities and Computer Technology
Sheryl Burgstahler, Ph.D.
What's ONADIME? Bruce Mitchell The Internet:
Questions for Potential Online Instructors Nancy Prince-Cohen
Lessons on
Teaching Writing from Website Design Jennifer C. Stone
Clickers, Be Aware! Cheryl Edwards and Lydia McCardle
Mr.
Coulter's Internet Tendency: to Infinity and Beyond Brad Coulter
Instant
Messaging: Friend or Foe of Student Writing? Amanda O'Connor
Chaim
Potok's My Name is Asher Lev, Art History and Images From the World Wide
Web
The
Learning Space: A Unique Online Community of Teachers Bretta Beveridge
Releasing
the Isolated Warrior Marlene A. K. Goss, Ph.D.
e-Quality Dr. Miriam Masullo and Dr. Antonio Ruiz
People Are the Only Thing that Matter Dr. Miriam Masullo and Dr. Antonio
Ruiz
The Future of Learning in
a New Free World and how to Build a World Wide Learning Web Gordon Dryden
Americans
All: Searching for Sponsors for a History and Civics Data Base System
Allen S. Kullen
The Guilds:
A New Curriculum for Education and Internet Reform George Gorman Virtual and Augmented Reality:
Virtual
Reality In Education John Shaffer
Learning Through Virtual Reality Bill Winn
Augmented Reality in Education Mark Billinghurst
Augmented
Reality and Education: Current Projects and the Potential for Classroom Learning
Brett E. Shelton Multimedia:
Multimedia Technology and Children's Development Dee Dickinson
Technology As the Catalyst Linda A. Tsantis, Ph.D.
Learning by
Design: Integrating Technology into the Curriculum Through Student Multimedia
Design Projects Ted M. Kahn, Ph.D. and Linda K. Taber Ullah, M. Ed.
Multimedia Encourages New Learning Styles David Thornburg, Ph.D. Beyond the classroom:
Using New
Educational Technologies to Empower Youth: The Power of Youth-Adult Partnerships
in e-Learning Gary Goldman and Barbara L. McCombs
Inventing
Workshops: Hands on Technology Ed Sobey
Washington
Aerospace Scholars Program Bonnie J. Dunbar
Giant
Campus: Experience Based Technology Learning Maura Whalen
Technology Access Foundation (TAF) Trish Millines Dziko
WildTech Learning Eric Christianson
Learning to Do: Students Develop IT Projects that Deliver Service
A Call to Action:
A Global Youth Empowerment Society (YES)
Gary Goldman and Allen Schmieder
Campaign Against
American E-Partheid
Timothy Jenkins
Recommended Reading The Knowledge Web James Burke The New Basics: Education and the Future of Work in the Telematic Age David Thornburg Teaching Every Student in the Digital Age: Universal Design for Learning David H. Rose and Anne Meyer The Internet and the Law: What Educators Need to Know Kathleen Conn Using the Internet to Strengthen Curriculum Larry Lewin Project-Based Learning Using Information Technology, second ed. David Moursund Gene Genie Thomas Bass Making Technology Standards Work for You--A Guide for School Administrators Susan Brooks-Young Telecosm: How Infinite Bandwidth Will Revolutionize Our World George Gilder NETS�S Curriculum Series�Multidisciplinary Units for Grades 3�5 ISTE National Educational Technology Standards for Teachers: Preparing Teachers to Use Technology M. G. Kelly, ed. Visual Literacy: Learn to See, See to Learn Lynell Burmark Related links
Long Island
Consortium for Interconnected Learning in Quantitative Disciplines
New Jersey Center for Advanced Technological
Education
Learning in the Real World
Technology and Art: "Art Zone"
http://www.nga.gov/kids/zone/ Critical Questions How can technology help you personalize learning? How can technology engage multiple intelligences? How can technology bridge the digital divide in K-12 settings? How can technology assist the unique learner?
How can technology be used to simultaneously deepen
student understanding and accelerate student achievement standards?
Encourage students to use the web as a research tool on a topic of great personal interest. Give parameters for the expected product, but let the student emerge as chief designer. Review your favorite on-line educational game or activity. List the intelligences a student would have to tap to do well. Create a multiple intelligence rubric for the piece. Create an extended learning program which focuses on on-line learning activities that could be used to "reteach" skills which students missed in class. Identify software/on-line learning activities which can be used to accommodate a learner with unique learning capacities.
Choose one state standard relevant to your teaching and
have each student create a problem which requires the performance of that
standard. Use the web to find the resources to solve the problem.
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