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Investing in leadership capacity: The amazing, wonderful District 59 | Dangerously Irrelevant
From Scott McLeod
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Three Examples of Using Instagram in K-12 Settings
A look at some ways to incorporate Instagram i the classroom
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MoocNote 2.0 - More Features for Creating Video Lessons
From Richard Byrne You can now build video lessons on MoocNote by using videos from your Dropbox or Google Drive account. This is a huge enhancement for teachers who work in environments that block YouTube. It's also great for anyone who has made his or her own videos and wants to add interactive question elements to them.
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Using Flipboard to Curate Tweets From my Staff — Medium
“Using Flipboard to Curate Tweets From my Staff” by @timlauer #ce15 #edtechchat https://t.co/AXAJRw50lV
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Moving from Digital Citizenship to Digital Leadership
Great visual on how we need to support students. But the teachers need to get their first and also share exemplars
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What Close Reading Actually Means
Great stuff from the late Grant Wiggins -
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From Mashable - In today's technology-infused world, the executive assistant of today is the "avatar relationship manager" of tomorrow. Job descriptions on reed.co.uk, now include responsibilities and buzzwords that may not even have existed as few as five years ago.
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Beyond ‘turn it off’: How to advise families on media use
In a world where “screen time” is becoming simply “time,” our policies must evolve or become obsolete. The public needs to know that the Academy’s advice is science-driven, not based merely on the precautionary principle.
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Charter school to study 'What learning matters most'
They hope to design curriculum and assessment systems that value the diversity of their students...Don't we all!
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If you are claiming disruption then, you believe the following three things: A complete, systemic change will overtake the sector The current incumbents will not survive The current incumbents are incapable of dealing with the new world, which will be populated by new entrants.
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Education Reforms Are Here to Stay
Over the last eight years, largely since President Barack Obama's election, states have recruited schools chiefs who have ushered in major education policy changes during their tenures. In large part, they were criticized for their brash leadership styles and for asking too much of teachers and students. Most of them have now been replaced by new state superintendents who take on that role with more discretion and sensitivity, and are thought of as being more inclusive of community input – but they aren't getting rid of the policy changes.
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A Brief History of the End of the Comments | WIRED
Interesting phenomenon here. Wondering why this is happening...
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Twitter For Teachers – Part One: The Skittlefall | Blog | Sparky Teaching
#satchat Get colleagues onto Twitter by using candy. It works! ---> http://t.co/MJDQ8CWbTu http://t.co/4tM49zu9dI
The blogging space of the Burlington Public Schools Assistant Superintendent for Learning
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