Professional Learning for Busy Educators
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Professional Learning for Busy Educators
Professional learning in a glance (or two)!
Curated by John Evans
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How Student Talk Saved My Teaching - ASCD.org

How Student Talk Saved My Teaching - ASCD.org | Professional Learning for Busy Educators | Scoop.it

"Last September I had 14 students staring at me, waiting for me to teach them how to solve a word problem. "Well, the operation is subtraction because the key word is difference," I would say. I found myself spoon-feeding 8-year-olds the answers because I was unsure of how to help this particular group of children solve difficult word problems. Seven months later, I am the one staring at my students, listening to them teach each other different ways to correctly solve the word problem. "Classroom discussion facilitator" is my new favorite title.

Not only was I doing all the talking in math at the beginning of the year, but I also found myself creating all the dialogue in English language arts. After observing my class, my supervisor guided me to "do less!" Such a simple phrase, but it really resonated with me. I realized I was doing too much talking, explaining, and assisting. How were my students supposed to take ownership of their learning if I never gave them the chance?"

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Who Owns the Learning in Your Classroom?

Who Owns the Learning in Your Classroom? | Professional Learning for Busy Educators | Scoop.it
It took me years to transform my instruction toward a more student-centered approach. This is my story where I share my journey toward student ownership. 

Nando Castellanos's curator insight, May 15, 2017 5:49 PM
Once more time, I decided to read an article about students' autonomy and how to promote critical thinking in students. It becomes crucial in the learning process that we guide students in their routes more than we choose the routes for them. This article exemplifies, with a real stiry, how can affect (in a good way) the learning process the fact that we allow the students to decide on the destinationa, sked the questions, set the pace, select the tools, and decide when they need help. In other words, it is decisive to promote students' autonomy and make them think and decide by themselves.