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Loose Change

Loose Change

Change is all around us and the modern teacher needs to be adaptable, innovative and willing to take a risk. Flipped classrooms, MOOCs, wearable technology, cloud computing, mobile, tablets, 4G, internet TVs, social learning, learning analytics, game based learning, augmented reality and e-books are all been used now or are just on the horizon. Change is all around us and the modern teacher needs to be adaptable, innovative and willing to take risks. The rate of technological change appears to be getting faster. Can our existing cultures allow us to take advantage of the potential of emerging technologies? Or do we need to change the way we change?

James Clay

June 26, 2013
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  1. During Presentations As a courtesy to presenters, please do not

    type on your laptop during a presentation.
  2. So much is exhibited to the eye that nothing is

    left to the imagination. It sometimes seems almost possible that the modern world might be choked by its own riches... G. J. Goschen, First Annual Address to the Students, T oynbee Hall. London 1894
  3. The managers of sensational newspapers ... do not try to

    educate their readers and make them better, but tend to create perverted tastes and develop vicious tendencies. The owners of these papers seem to have but one purpose, and that is to increase their circulation. Medical Brief, V olume 26 1898
  4. It is, unfortunately, one of the chief characteristics of modern

    business to be always in a hurry. In olden times it was different. The Medical Record 1884
  5. T o take sufficient time for our meals seems frequently

    impossible on account of the demands on our time made by our business... W e act on the apparent belief that all of our business is so pressing that we must jump on the quickest car home, eat our dinner in the most hurried way. Louis John Rettger. Studies in Advanced Physiology 1898
  6. If we teach the children how to play and encourage

    them in their sports ... instead of shutting them in badly ventilated schoolrooms, the next generation will be more joyous and will be healthier than the present one. A Comprehensive Summary of the Press Throughout the W orld, V olume 18 1895
  7. First, we as educators must establish new goals for learning.

    W e must move from emphasizing decontextualized reading and computational skills to developing independent thinkers and learners who engage in life-long learning.
  8. Learners bring their own needs and experiences to a learning

    situation. W e must incorporate those needs and experiences into learning activities to help students take ownership and responsibility for their own learning.
  9. Grabinger, R. Scott and Dunlap, Joanna C. (1995) Rich environments

    for active learning: a definition. Association for Learning T echnology Journal, 3 (2). pp. 5-34. ISSN 0968-7769 http://repository.alt.ac.uk/11/1/CALT_A_00302005_O.pdf
  10. REALs: promote study and investigation within authentic contexts; encourage the

    growth of student responsibility, initiative, decision making, and intentional learning; cultivate collaboration among students and teachers;
  11. ...utilize dynamic, interdisciplinary, generative learning activities that promote higher-order thinking

    processes to help students develop rich and complex knowledge structures; and assess student progress in content and learning-to-learn within authentic contexts using realistic tasks.
  12. “If I asked people what they wanted, they would have

    said faster horses!” Henry Ford
  13. “A lot of times, people don't know what they want

    until you show it to them.” Steve Jobs, Apple, 1998
  14. 4G