creating a culture of learning 2013
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Creating A Culture Of Learning
Jim PetersonDirector of Secondary Instruction and TechnologyHolland Christian SchoolsIntegral Faith Instruction and Technology
jpeterson@hollandchristian.org@weathertationweathertation.posterous.com
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Thursday, March 21, 13
Praxis Leads Theory
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Partnership for 21st Century Skills - p21.org
Thursday, March 21, 132. Learning and Innovation Skills
1 Creativity and Innovation2 Critical Thinking and Problem Solving3 Communication and Collaboration
Analytical & Creative Thinking – Problem SolvingComplex Communication – Oral and Written
Leadership and TeamworkDigital and Quantitative Literacy
Global PerspectiveAdaptability, Initiative, and Risk Taking
Integrity/Ethical Citizenship/Faith ApplicationsPersonal Accountability
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The skills are not new.
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The conditions are.
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Everyone knows what they don’t know.
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Everyone shares.
“I had the power of the school culture on my side. Students... have shared their work with
pride since they were four years old.” Ron Berger
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Everyone has to manage their connections.
“But all of you are likely spending more time than you realize selling
in a broader sense—pitching colleagues, persuading funders,
cajoling kids. Like it or not, we’re all in sales now.” Dan Pink
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Everyone leads.
Thursday, March 21, 13He talks about decisions and that is not important what direction you go, but that you choose and do. He bases this on the idea that the project you choose now will end so it makes the choices less important than getting started and seeing what happens.
Everyone is in charge.
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Everyone improves.
“He’s engaged in assessing his own work, scrapping it and
starting over when something fails, building or refining when he gets new ideas, and offering
feedback to his peers on a regular basis.” Will Richardson
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Everyone uses feedback
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•Google slowed down search results from 100 to 400 milliseconds.•The first three weeks, people searched 0.4% less. •The second three weeks, it was 0.75% less.•After speed was restored people searched 0.2% less.
Go to m.socrative.com Enter room number 236236
Do you have any conditions you would add?
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How do you create a culture of learning?
Step 2: Collaboratively design systems to implement new ideas that show you believe it.
Step 1: Pick one condition by listening to: data, research, observations, and people.
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The design phase is where you get people on the bus.
http://goo.gl/J0fkvThursday, March 21, 13
Everyone.
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StudentFacilitator: I encourage those around me to use the 4Cs.Role Model: I demonstrate the 4Cs for students teachers and administrators.Transformer: I use the 4Cs to transform my school.
TeacherFacilitator: I encourage those around me to use the 4Cs by asking questions.Role Model: I demonstrate the 4Cs for students teachers and administrators.Transformer: I use the 4Cs to transform my school.
Source: Ken Kay for edutopia
http://goo.gl/B1ZOF
AdministratorFacilitator: I encourage those around me to use the 4Cs by asking questions.Role Model: I demonstrate the 4Cs for students teachers and administrators.Transformer: I use the 4Cs to transform my school.
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Minor Bird
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Celebrations acknowledge what people know and do not know. Celebrate what they do by asking them about it, celebrate what they don’t by asking them how they got there and putting them in groups where they can.
Department Confering
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everyone shares
Tech Tips
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Everyone is in charge. Everyone improves. Everyone leads.
Circle Of Seven
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everyone improves. leave room for alternative assessment.
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For more FreeBIEs visit bie.org © 2 0 1 1 B U C K I N S T I T U T E F O R E D U C A T I O N
P R E S E N T A T I O N R U B R I C(for secondary and upper elementary grades)
Below Standard Approaching Standard At Standard Above Standard
Eye Contact & Physical Presence
f�does not look at audience; reads notes or slides
f holds things in hands nervously or keeps hands in pockets
f posture does not show confidence; (fidgets, slouches)
f clothes are not appropriate for the occasion
f makes some eye contact, or scans the room quickly, but reads notes or slides most of the time
fuses a few gestures but they do not look natural, or keeps hands too still to look natural
f posture shows some confidence, with only a little fidgeting or nervous movement
f some attempt to wear appropriate clothing for the occasion
f keeps eye contact with audience most of the time; only reads notes or slides sometimes
f uses hands naturally, making some gestures
f confident posturef clothes are appropriate for the occasion
In addition to At Standard criteria:! keeps eye contact all the time, slowly
scanning all of the audience; does not read notes or slides
! uses gestures smoothly, naturally to emphasize or illustrate points
! moves with purpose
Speaking f mumbles or goes too fast or slowf speaks too softly to be heardf frequently uses “filler” words (“uh, um,
so, and, like”)f pronounces several words incorrectlyf speaks in a style that is not appropriate
for the occasion
f speaks clearly some of the time; sometimes too fast or slow
f speaks loudly enough for some of the audience to hear, but may speak in a monotone
f occasionally uses filler wordsf pronounces a few words incorrectlyf speaks in a style that is appropriate for
the occasion, most of the time
f speaks clearly; not too fast or slowf speaks loudly enough for everyone to
hear; changes tone to maintain interestf rarely uses filler wordsf pronounces words correctlyf speaks in a style that is appropriate for
the occasion
In addition to At Standard criteria:! adds variety to speaking style (lower or
higher volume, change of pace, use of character voices)
! uses pauses for dramatic e!ect or to let ideas sink in
Organization f�does not meet requirements for what should be included in the presentation
f�selects too much or too little information or the wrong kind of information
f�gets ideas mixed upf�time is not used well; the whole
presentation, or several parts of it, are too short or too long
f�does not have an introduction and/or conclusion
f�meets most requirements for what should be included in the presentation
f�sometimes selects too much or too little information, or the wrong kind, about some topics
f�some ideas are connected, but not allf�some parts feel too short or too long; too
much or too little time is spent on one topic, slide, or idea
f�has an introduction and conclusion, but they are not clear or interesting
f�meets all requirements for what should be included in the presentation
f�selects the right amount and kind of information to present
f�states main idea & moves from one idea to the next clearly, in an order that makes sense
f�time is well spent; no part feels too short or too long
f�has a clear and interesting introduction and conclusion
In addition to At Standard criteria:! has a memorable introduction and
conclusion! connects introduction and conclusion
(returns to a story, theme, or metaphor)! e!ectively uses humor, stories, or
metaphors
Audio/Visual Aids
f does not use aids (pictures, drawings, objects, posters, maps, recordings, slides, other electronic media, etc.)
f uses aids but they do not add much to, and may distract from, the presentation
f aids are hard to read or hear, or are messy (writing or graphics are not neat or sound is not clear)
f aids are not ready to use and are not smoothly brought into the presentation
f aids add to the presentationf aids are easy to see and/or hear, and are
neat f aids are ready to use and included
smoothly into the presentation
In addition to At Standard criteria:! aids are especially creative and/or
powerful! shows skill in creating aids and/or using
technology! smoothly handles problems with aids
and technological glitches, if they occur
Response to Audience Questions
f does not address the audience’s questions; says little or goes o! the topic
f may answer some of the audience’s questions, but not clearly and/or completely
f may try to answer a challenging question by faking it
f answers audience’s questions clearly and completely
f when asked a question he or she does not know the answer to, says “I don’t know” or explains how the answer could be found
In addition to At Standard criteria:! answers questions in a way that adds
details, examples, or new points to the presentation
! smoothly handles questions that are unclear, o! the topic, distracting, or challenging
Teach Presentation Skills
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Everyone Shares
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everyone leads - the students are the recommenders
Digging Into Nature
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everyone improves - ePortfolio
Teach (and use) Google Forms
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everyone uses data.
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Everyone leads - teachers paint walls green, sups build coffee shops
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Everyone Learns in a culture of learning.
Please bless me with feedback.
http://bit.ly/FeedJim
Jim Petersonjpeterson@hollandchristian.org@weathertationweathertation.posterous.com
Thursday, March 21, 13
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