pay attention

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Have you been paying attention?

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Page 1: Pay Attention

Have you beenpaying attention?

Page 2: Pay Attention

How do your students learn?

Page 3: Pay Attention

Are they…

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Interpersonal,

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Logical,

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Spatial,

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Intrapersonal,

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Musical,

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Linguistic,

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Naturalist,

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Or Bodily-Kinisthetic learners?

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Yes!

Gardner, H. (1983). Frames of Mind.

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But mostly they're…

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Digital Learners!

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Here's Why…

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Today's average collegegraduates have spent:

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Over 10,000 hoursplaying video games…

Interactive Videogames, Mediascope, June 1996.

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Over 10,000 hourstalking on cellphones…

Prensky, M. (2001). Digital Natives Digital Immigrants.

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And roughly 20,000hours watching TV.

Prensky, M. (2001). Digital Natives Digital Immigrants.

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Today's children and teensspend 2.75 hours a week using

home computers.

Institute for Social Research, 2004.

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70% of our nation's 4-6 year-olds have used a computer.

Kaiser Family Foundation, 2003.

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In any given day, 68% ofchildren under two will use a

screen media, for an average ofjust over two hours (2:05).

Kaiser Family Foundation, 2003.

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Why?

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“Richness.”

Bill Gates, in describing many of Microsoft's products.

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How much richness doesyour curriculum provide?

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Do your students…

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Remember,

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Understand,

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Apply,

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Analyze,

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Evaluate,

Page 32: Pay Attention

Anderson, L. W., & Krathwohl, D. (Eds.) (2001). A taxonomy forlearning, teaching and assessing: A revision of Bloom'staxonomy of educational objectives.

And Create?

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What do your students create?

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“These teens were born into adigital world where they

expect to be able to create,consume, remix, and sharematerial with each other”

Lee Rainie, Director, Pew Internet and American Life Project

Page 35: Pay Attention

Are you reachingyour students?

Page 36: Pay Attention

“We have learned to 'playschool'. We study the rightfacts the night before the

test so we achieve a passinggrade and thus become a

successful student.”

High School student

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“It's not attention deficit -I'm just not listening!”

Slogan on a current T-shirt

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Are you engaging them?

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“When I go to school, I have to'power down'.”

High School student

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One researcher claims that, onaverage, students in class onlyget to ask a question once…

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Every 10 hours!

Graesser, A.C., & Person, N.K. (1994). American EducationalResearch Journal.

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Why don't we pause forthe next 10 hours

to see how that feels?

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Do any of yourstudents use Google?

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Did you know that thereare over 2.7 billion

searches performed onGoogle each month?

ComScore Networks, results taken in April 2006.

Page 45: Pay Attention

To whom were thesequestions addressed B.G.?

(Before Google)

Page 46: Pay Attention

Why not use the technologythat our students love

to create more effectively?

Page 47: Pay Attention

Why not use the technologythat our students love

to reach more effectively?

Page 48: Pay Attention

Why not use the technologythat our students love

to engage more effectively?

Page 49: Pay Attention

Why not use the technologythat our students love

to teach more effectively?

Page 50: Pay Attention

Did you know that our DigitalLearners have sent and

received over 200,000 emailsor instant messages…

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By the time theygraduate from college!

Prensky, M. (2001). Digital Natives Digital Immigrants.

Page 52: Pay Attention

We accuse them ofnot reading…

Page 53: Pay Attention

But 200,000 written messagessure seems like a lot of time

spent with the 3 R's!

Page 54: Pay Attention

Rigor, Relevance, & Relationships

Daggett, W. (2005). Successful Schools: From Research toAction Plans.

Page 55: Pay Attention

How about your class website?

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How are you using the newWWW to teach your students?

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WWW:

WhateverWheneverWherever

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Consider these ways to use theInternet in teaching…

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Blogs

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Wikis

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Podcasts

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Online Collaboration

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Online Testing

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Online Learning

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Web-cams

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GPS

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Geocaching Games

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GIS

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Google Earth

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Webquests

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E-portfolios

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Virtual Manipulatives

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Virtual Pen-pals

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Virtual Tours

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Writing

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Reading

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Reflection

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And those evil cellphones?

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Did you know that over 1.5billion people, all over the

world, are walking around withpowerful computers in their

pockets and purses?

Prensky, M. (2004). What Can You Learn From A Cell Phone?

Page 80: Pay Attention

“When you lose your mobile,you lose part of your brain.”

Student from Japan

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“Phones have become aninterestingly enabling tool.Invented to connect us alltogether, it has become

something much more…”

Warlick, D. (2007). At Your Service.

Page 82: Pay Attention

Since your students alreadyknow how to use this

technology, why aren't youusing it to teach?

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Think of the ways you coulduse cellphones to teach…

Page 84: Pay Attention

Language

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Poetry

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Literature

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Public Speaking

Page 88: Pay Attention

History

Page 89: Pay Attention

Math

Page 90: Pay Attention

Storytelling

Page 91: Pay Attention

Geography

Page 92: Pay Attention

Writing

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Text Messaging (SMS)alone could be used for…

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Pop Quizzes

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Student Polls

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Peer Tutoring

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Spelling Bees

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Math Experiments

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Science Experiments

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Book Reports

Page 101: Pay Attention

Class Presentations

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Imagine giving yourclass this assignment:

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“Class, you've got 10 minutes toreceive a text message from

anyone outside of this school…“

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Please find out:

1. What they had for breakfast2. What the weather is like where they are3. The one thing they last purchased

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Bonus points will be given formessages received from

people in other countries…

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Using languagesother than English.

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Talk aboutacquiring useful data!

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This data could then be used innearly any class…

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To teach a wide variety ofessential skills:

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Graphing Data

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Food Preparation

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Predicting Economic Trends

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Cellphones to teach?

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Absolutely!

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Did you know…

Page 116: Pay Attention

Only 28% of 12th-gradehigh school students believe

that schoolwork is…

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Meaningful.

National Center for Education Statistics, 2006.

Page 118: Pay Attention

21% believe that their coursesare interesting…

National Center for Education Statistics, 2006.

Page 119: Pay Attention

And a mere 39% believethat school work will

have any bearing on theirsuccess in later life.

National Center for Education Statistics, 2006.

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And these are theopinions of students thatwill actually graduate!

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How do the nearly 50% of ournation's students that don't

graduate feel about the schoolsthey once attended?

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Engage them,don't enrage them!

Page 123: Pay Attention

Perhaps they wouldn't hateschool if they could use

their iPods in class!

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There are nearly 90,000,000iPods out there!

(Surely you've noticed the little white budshanging from your students' ears)

Apple Press Release, January 17, 2007.

Page 125: Pay Attention

iPod+

Podcast=

Anytime Learning

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Did you know that there areover 90,000 unique video

and audio podcastscurrently being served to over

1.6 million subscribers?

http://www.feedburner.com/

Page 127: Pay Attention

If you can't reach your studentsby speaking directly to them…

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Teach them via podcast!

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Why not, when there arealready thousands available for

you to use…

See the iTunes Music Store for an enormous listing.

Page 130: Pay Attention

In every subject imaginable…

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Even Basketweaving!

Fashiontribes Fashion Podcast: Basketweaving 101

Page 132: Pay Attention

“If you can'tbeat 'em, join 'em!”

Sam Ray, Principal of Provo High School - On why heconsiders podcasting to be an effective form of instruction.

Page 133: Pay Attention

In conclusion, hopefullyyou're seeing the point…

Page 134: Pay Attention

“How do we turn ourclassrooms into learning

engines? Pay attention to ourchildren's intensely rich

information experiences.”

Warlick, D. (2006). Teaching and Learning on the Edge ofChange.

Page 135: Pay Attention

If you're not usingblogs to teach,

Page 136: Pay Attention

If you're not usingemail to teach,

Page 137: Pay Attention

If you're not usingGPS to teach,

Page 138: Pay Attention

If you're not usingwikis to teach,

Page 139: Pay Attention

If you're not usingwebquests to teach,

Page 140: Pay Attention

If you're not usingthe Internet to teach,

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If you're not usingcellphones to teach,

Page 142: Pay Attention

If you're not usingpodcasting to teach,

Page 143: Pay Attention

If you're not usingtechnology to teach,

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You should be!

Page 145: Pay Attention

But then again,you already knew that…

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And your students did too!

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Pay attention tohttp://t4.jordandistrict.org/

to learn how you canbecome a better teacher.

TransformingTeachingThroughTechnology

Page 148: Pay Attention

http://t4.jordandistrict.org/payattention