Educational Pedagogy
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Rescooped by Dennis Swender from Higher Education Teaching and Learning
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What College Professors Should Know About Learning Science

What College Professors Should Know About Learning Science | Educational Pedagogy | Scoop.it
Researchers are gaining a better understanding of how people learn—both what works and what doesn’t go so well—in the classroom. The next step is t

Via Peter Mellow
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Six factors of academic performance

Six factors of academic performance | Educational Pedagogy | Scoop.it

"First, a definition. An academic classroom is one where the primary goal is to promote proficiency of academic standards. Everything else, while appreciated and winked at, comes after. The class, curriculum, and instruction, by design, are built to move students in their academic proficiency ..."


Via Leona Ungerer, Lynnette Van Dyke
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Rescooped by Dennis Swender from iPads, MakerEd and More in Education
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Data Was Supposed to Fix the U.S. Education System. Here’s Why It Hasn’t. - Harvard Business Review

Data Was Supposed to Fix the U.S. Education System. Here’s Why It Hasn’t. - Harvard Business Review | Educational Pedagogy | Scoop.it
For too long, the American education system failed too many kids, including far too many poor kids and kids of color, without enough public notice or accountability. To combat this, leaders of all political persuasions championed the use of testing to measure progress and drive better results. Measurement has become so common that in school districts from coast to coast you can now find calendars marked “Data Days,” when teachers are expected to spend time not on teaching, but on analyzing data like end-of-year and mid-year exams, interim assessments, science and social studies and teacher-created and computer-adaptive tests, surveys, attendance and behavior notes. It’s been this way for more than 30 years, and it’s time to try a different approach.

The big numbers are necessary, but the more they proliferate, the less value they add. Data-based answers lead to further data-based questions, testing, and analysis; and the psychology of leaders and policymakers means that the hunt for data gets in the way of actual learning. The drive for data responded to a real problem in education, but bad thinking about testing and data use has made the data cure worse than the disease.

Via John Evans
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