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Required Reading:
The articles below, written for the New Horizons website, provide a review of materials associated with educational change and renewal, much of which have been inspired by innovations in curriculum design.
Dee Dickinson: Learning Society of the Future: Questions to Consider
In Maturing Outcomes Arthur L. Costa and Robert J. Garmston present a map of educational outcomes intended for use by educational leaders.
Although the focus is on business, there is much wisdom that can be applied to schools and learning in this article byTachi Kiuchi: What I Learned in the Rainforest
Stephanie Marshall: Principles for the New Story of Learning
Willam Ayers: Teacher Talk: Teachers Building A Professional Community by Talking to Other Teachers About Teaching
PDF Files below:
Dickinson: Learning Society of the Future: Questions to Consider
Costa and Garmston: Maturing Outcomes
Kiuchi: What I Learned in the Rainforest
Principles for the New Story of Learning
Teacher Talk: Teachers Building A Professional Community by Talking to Other Teachers About Teaching
Assignment 9: Active Reading and Creating Dialogue
HOW TO GET TO ASSIGNMENT 9:
One Way
To do this assignment, click on the link in color at the top of the page. When it appears, press "Save" and name the file so that you can work on this assignment "off-line." You can type right on the assignment template. Be sure to save your assignment on a disk or on your computer hard drive.
Another Way
You can also copy the text below, and save it to your disk or computer.
GOAL: To reflect on contemporary issues in education through the use of a tool known as "Focused Freewriting."
GIVE: Feedback to others on their assignments at the TWB Learning Cafe by clicking here.
Assignment 9: Active Reading and Creating Dialogue
What do students see, hear, taste, touch, smell when they enter your classroom? How do they see something of themselves reflected in the classroom? Is there evidence of student work? Interesting works in progress? Colorful posters on the wall?
Stand in your own classroom and, using this list as a starting point, carefully consider the various aspects of your room as a space for teaching and learning:
Student seating: How is student seating arranged? Do students sit alone, in pairs, or in groups? How flexible is it? Can it be moved or re-arranged easily?
We suggest that some arrangements of the room itself lend themselves to effective teaching. Some arrangements do not. If students are asked to listen to a presentation, the rows might work. If students are to work on projects, their chairs and the room should be arranged to meet these needs. In short, the physical space makes a difference.
Circulation: How easy is it to move around the space? Are there aisles? Which areas cannot be reached? Where is the natural place to stand? Can everyone see? Can students get to the teacher? To each other?
Learning resources: How much of your needed resources are in the room? How will students have access to these resources? If there are resources, how many students can use them? What teaching equipment do you have? Do you have electricity?
The room itself: Is it lit well or poorly? Is it hot in the summer? Can everyone hear? How can you and other teachers use this space effectively?
Assignment 10: Starting With Your Classroom
HOW TO GET TO ASSIGNMENT 10
One Way
To do this assignment, click on the link in color at the top of the page. When it appears, press "Save" and name the file so that you can work on this assignment "off-line." You can type right on the assignment template. Be sure to save your assignment on a disk or on your computer hard drive.
Another Way
You can also copy the text below, and save it to your disk or computer.
GOAL: To make practical improvements in your classroom that also reflect your thinking about Multiple Intelligences.
GIVE: Feedback to others on their assignments at the TWB Learning Cafe by clicking here.
Assignment 10: Starting With Your Classroom
Assignment 11: Professional Reflections
HOW TO GET TO ASSIGNMENT 11:
One Way
To do this assignment, click on the link in color at the top of the page. When it appears, press "Save" and name the file so that you can work on this assignment "off-line." You can type right on the assignment template. Be sure to save your assignment on a disk or on your computer hard drive.
Another Way
You can also copy the text below, and save it to your disk or computer.
GOAL: To refine and gather your thoughts into one professional statement and vision.
GIVE: Feedback to others on their assignments at the TWB Learning Cafe by clicking here.
Assignment 11: Professional Reflections
Please prepare a final Reflection Paper incorporating what you have learned in Course 1. Follow the instructions for each part:
Part One: Professional Statement
Write a 1 - 2 page statement that responds to the following and includes these as topic headings:
What I Believe
Why I Teach
What I Teach
How I Teach
(For an example of a Professional Statement, click on the Word icon below.)
Part Two: Reflection
Please answer the following questions:
Part Three: The Imagined Classroom
Imagine one day in the life of a student at your school in the year 2010.
Congratulations on completing Course 1: Education for the New Millennium!
As you know, there are several other courses for you to choose from. However, before you begin another course, please send an email to us at: ctm@teacherswithoutborders.org and let us know that you are ready to receive the "Effectiveness of Course 1 Survey." We ask that you complete this simple survey as your final assignment for Course 1.
We are eager to learn how to make this course even better. Thank you, in advance, for completing this survey as it will have an enormous impact for future versions of Course 1: Education for the New Millennium.
HOW TO POST TO YOUR E-PORTFOLIO
If you would like to learn how to post your "Professional Statement" and "Imagined Classroom" documents (both from Assignment 11) to your
E-Portfolio, please click here.
SAVE YOUR STUDENTS' WORK
Save examples of your students' work as you go through these courses. You'll be glad you did. Course 5 asks you to post samples of your students' work for your final E-Portfolio.