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blog of proximal development » Blog Archive » Conversation with Pre-Service Teachers - Teacher as Learner
blog of proximal development » Blog Archive » Conversation with Pre-Service Teachers - Teacher as Learner
And so, the challenge is that when I try to divest myself of my teacherly voice I need to remember that this process is not about losing the voice of the expert but about losing the voice of the traditional authoritarian teacher who enters the classroom as an official persona armed with a pre-defined set of goals and very specific lesson plans for his students to follow. It is about giving the students the freedom to engage with ideas that they find relevant and interesting, not about dictating every step of their learning process.
I believe that it is important to lose the authoritarian voice, the controlling voice, but not the voice of an expert who chose to teach because of his passion for the subject. The students need to see that the instructor is someone who lives and breathes whatever it is that they’re studying, that they have in their midst someone who has a wealth of expertise.
·teachandlearn.ca·
blog of proximal development » Blog Archive » Conversation with Pre-Service Teachers - Teacher as Learner
IgnitePhilly -- Five Minutes To Communicate - Practical Theory
IgnitePhilly -- Five Minutes To Communicate - Practical Theory
5 minute presentation (20 slides) by Chris Lehmann on school reform and what we need for School 2.0. Several good lines in here--a bunch of memorable ideas packed into a few minutes. Assessment should be projects, not tests. Data is what kids do every day, not what they do on a test. Passion, metacognition, and lifelong learning matter. "If you want to see what kids have learned, give them a project."
·practicaltheory.org·
IgnitePhilly -- Five Minutes To Communicate - Practical Theory