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Saturday, November 30, 2013

Let the Little Ones Play by Deborah Williams

Dr. Jo Van Herwegen, a psychology researcher at London’s Kingston University, has released new

research findings that show that structured play should be the primary learning technique for pre-school children.  An article, “Structured Play Trumps Age for Future School Success,” on the Science Daily website reports that Dr. Van Herwegen opposes starting school early unless it involves “a formalized setting with trained people…but if it means sitting down and doing formal, proper learning at the age of four or five, then that’s wrong.”  She further asserts that pre-schoolers don’t have the learning foundation—including working memory and language–,so a formalized education setting is inappropriate.
Van Herwegen suggests a program that is similar to what is done in Belgian pre-schools.   Those programs include the following types of activities:
  • Carpet time discussions
  • School-related activities
    • Painting
    • Learning to hold a pen while sitting at tables and chairs
    • Standing in lines
    • Where to put things
    • How to listen

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Short video, yet so powerful




The message in this short video is so simple, yet so powerful. If you "get it," not only will it make
you a better person, but quite possibly...it will change your life.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

I-pads for note taking

Handwritten notes are good for many students to take notes; however, a recent post by Beth Holland on the Edutopia blog makes the case for teaching students to use multiple media to take notes so that they can use what works best for them and integrate online learning tools.  Holland explains that some students may prefer to use some of the iPad’s features to help them connect better to the information.
Cameras and Microphones
  • Students may want to take a picture of the whiteboard and insert it into their personal notes.
  • Students may want to include audio recordings of their thoughts during the note-taking process.
Typing and Drawing
  • Some students prefer typing and drawing their notes. Holland suggests the following apps:


Monday, November 11, 2013

Special Needs

With the dramatic increase in the diagnosis rate for Autism Spectrum Disorder (ADS) over the last five years, researchers have found few strategies that are helpful in developing social skills for autistic teens.  A recent report on the Science Daily website describes a promising method that is effective and available at a low cost.
Joshua Plavnick, assistant professor of special education at Michigan State University, acknowledges that strategies for ASD adolescents must be “effective and practical,” and he and his colleagues have found that regular video-based group instruction provides significant gains in various social behaviors.  The video teaching techniques that he and his colleagues published their findings in the research journal Exceptional Children that “the students demonstrated a rapid increase in the level of complex social behaviors each time video-based group instruction was used.”  What’s more, those students retained those behaviors even when the videos were not used as often.  The newly-acquired skills transferred to the students’ homes as well.  Parents reported on anonymous surveys that they were highly satisfied; one even reported that the student started asking family members to play games together, and this was a new behavior.
This instructional strategy seems promising.  It addresses the needs for a rapidly increasing group, and it is cost effective for schools.