Thursday, 28 July 2016

Four Ways to Keep Students' Attention

Four Ways to Keep Students' Attention

Creating classroom experiences that grab and hold students' interest is not only good teaching, it's good science, writes Karen Costa.

Want to learn the art of attention from an expert? Visit a kindergarten classroom. Clap-clap-clapclapclap! The sharp, intentional and unexpected rhythm rang out through the library while I was volunteering with my son’s class. And then, a retort from the now-quiet children. Clap-clap-clapclapclap! The children’s eyes settled on their teacher; the jubilant conversations had ceased. Attention was ready to be paid.

Consider this common expression: Pay attention. Currency is exchanged. There is an offering (our teaching) and a cost (students must divert their attention from other sources). Reflecting on both sides of this equation in the context of what science knows and what our teaching does can help us to improve the classroom experience for teachers and students.

John Medina, author of Brain Rules, reminds us of the stakes: the greater the attention that is paid, the more we learn. The neural mechanisms that influence attention are complex; Medina states that our attention is influenced by a combination of memory, interest and awareness. Our prior experiences (and how we remember them) affect attention. Whether or not we define something as aligned with one of our interests will also impact if the brain latches on to the new information. Finally, if we are so focused on something else (a cell phone, perhaps) that we lack awareness that our teacher is calling our name, we aren’t able to give our attention where it’s due. Creating classroom experiences that grab and hold students’ attention and teaching students the connection between attention and learning is not only good teaching, it’s good science.

Medina offers four critical components to becoming an attention-savvy educator.

Emotions as Chemical Post-it Notes

Think of emotions as chemical Post-it notes, Medina says. Emotions paint an experience in fluorescent orange, making us more likely to notice and retain the information at hand. How? Emotions trigger a release of dopamine into our system, and dopamine improves our ability to remember. For example, you probably remember vivid details from your wedding day, the birth of your first child or defending your dissertation. But do you remember the day before or after those momentous events? Probably not. Now reflect on your classroom learning experiences; your most vivid memories are probably tied to happiness, excitement, shame or fear.

How can we intentionally incorporate emotions into our classrooms to increase attention? First, share your enthusiasm for your subject with your students. What made you fall in love with the study of psychology in the first place? Why do you believe that the humanities will save the world? How did you feel the first time you looked into a microscope? This is as important as the theoretical or practical content you’re about to teach them.

Next, tell stories. If you don’t have a story, find someone else’s online (TED talks are a great emotional resource). Draw students into the topic emotionally to attach a Post-it note to your instruction. Think that your subject matter prevents you from incorporating emotional stories into your teaching? Check out the work of the late Randy Pausch, a computer science professor who considered storytelling one of his most powerful teaching strategies.

Do the Why Work 

Daniel Pink, an expert in motivation and the author of Drive, states that “why” is “the most underused word in the modern workplace.” Could we say the same of the modern classroom? Pink goes on to assert that people are “thirsting for context.” According to Medina, we can gain our students’ attention by quenching their thirst for why.

Much of this “why work” starts in the course development and lesson planning stages of teaching. Begin by answering this question in one sentence: What is the purpose of your course? Ideally, this will connect to the why of your program and the why of your institution. If you can’t articulate the answers to these questions, how can you expect your students to understand the big picture of their course, program, and college?

Concept mapping (or mind mapping) is an excellent next step. You can find a great free mind-mapping tool at Text 2 Mind Map. Draw your course. How do the concepts you’ll be teaching in week one connect to the overarching why of the course? How does week two connect to week one? If these connections aren’t there, build them or reconsider the value of including them in the first place. I’ve noticed teachers getting better at the what; many will place an agenda on the board at the start of a class or at the start of a new module in an online classroom. But for our brains, more important than the what is the why. Medina argues that brains are hierarchical and prefer to learn from the top down. He won a teaching award for designing 10-minute lectures that applied this model.

Medina also cites the work of John Bransford, emeritus endowed chair in learning sciences in the College of Education at the University of Washington, who argued that the difference between an expert and a novice is that an expert can explain connections between ideas, while a novice can only list the ideas. Step into your role as an expert. Don’t just tell -- teach.

Create a Device-Free Zone

When I was teaching in a land-based classroom, I used to allow laptops. It felt forward thinking to give students this option. I’ve since changed my mind. Brain science has confirmed that our brains cannot multitask. Each time we switch tasks, we have to restart that brain sequence. Medina estimates that multitasking takes 50 percent longer than focusing on one thing at a time. The recent findings on laptop use in classrooms support the idea that decreasing classroom distractions and limiting opportunities for students to attempt to multitask are valid teaching strategies.

I recently sat next to a young woman during a lecture where I was in a student role. Every 10 minutes, her phone buzzed. I would glance in her direction, pulled away from the teacher’s words. She didn’t flinch. I wondered to myself if we’ve entered a phase where we are so desensitized to our devices that vibrate is the new silent. I now have a personal habit of keeping my phone set to do not disturb unless I’m expecting an important call. I have a landline where I can be reached alternately. I get to choose when I turn my attention to my device, not the other way around.

Create distraction-free classrooms, but do so as a teacher, not a tyrant. In the first days of your course, share the research on distractions with your students. Talk to them about screen addiction and attention, and show them the value of focusing on their course instead of their device.

For online students, the stakes are even higher. If your online courses aren’t teaching students how to limit distractions while online, you are doing them a disservice. Teach students to turn off notifications and devices while working on their online courses. Again, do the why work here to show students the value of paying attention.

Rest and Digest

Does it seem like the number of course objectives associated with your course grows each term? Do you feel increasingly constrained by time? Many professors do. But beware of the urge to cram more content into your courses. Medina equates this to force-feeding and argues that brains need more time to digest. Because the brain is, as Medina explains, a “sequential processor,” it needs to fully process one idea before it can move on to the next. Simplify. Students will paradoxically learn more when you teach less.

Medina offers an outline for a typical 50-minute lecture-based class period. Break the class into five sections, because most people start to lose interest after 10 minutes. The first minute of each section should be spent on an emotional-meaning maker. Hook them. Writing teachers: you know the value of a great hook. Grab them with that first minute in order to hold them for the next nine when you can focus on details and explanation. Repeat.

Continue to do the why work throughout the lecture, bringing students back to the central purpose of the class so that their brains don’t have to switch tasks. Professors can swap out lecture segments with other strategies like individual journaling or small-group activities. The same overarching model of hook, big picture and details still applies.
By incorporating these rules into your teaching and your classrooms, you can begin to harness the power of attention. And remember, we are students, too. Reflecting on the role of attention in your own life can only serve to improve your ability to teach these concepts to your students.

 
Regards
 

 

Now, Maharashtra board will fine teachers for mistakes in paper checking

Now, Maharashtra board will fine teachers for mistakes in paper checking

Tired of facing the wrath of students and their parents because of errors in checking examination papers, the state board will now fine teachers Rs 10 for each mistake they make
 
When teachers make mistakes while checking exam papers, they cause students a lot of grief and anxiety. Now, the state board has figured out a way to make careless teachers pay for their mistakes, literally. Teachers serving as examiners under the state board were shocked to receive a notice demanding an explanation and a fine of Rs 10 for each mistake they made.

The notice was specifically addressed to every teacher found to have made errors in either SSC or HSC evaluations, and had details such as the teacher’s name, the exam subject and the number of errors during correction. The notice reads: ‘Teachers from your school who were given responsibility of examiners and moderators were given required training to do so. Considering students’ betterment, it is very important that evaluation is completely correct.

Because of such mistakes by teachers, board has to face the wrath of frustrated candidates and their parents, who have demanded strict action against such teachers. In the subsequent years, if board receives more complaints that are found to be genuine, stricter actions will be taken against teachers.’

Teachers were taken aback by the fine, but Mumbai Division secretary Siddheshwar Chandekar insisted, “There is a regulation in the bylaws of the state board that states that teachers can be charged if mistakes are found in evaluations. We do not understand why such an issue is being made out of it. Maybe they are receiving the notice for the first time. Teachers will first be given the chance to explain their stand; charging the fine will be the last step.”

English teacher from an Andheri school

I have seen this for the first time. I have an experience of around two decades of teaching and also take up the responsibility of evaluation and moderation of papers. Earlier, examiners were asked to explain why they had made mistakes. But being asked to pay a fine is shocking.

Science teacher from a Borivli school

This was never the practice. If such orders were given before, we would have known about it. How come nobody knows of it?

Junior college teacher, Mahim

During training sessions for examiners and moderators, there were talks about such strict actions if mistakes are found in evaluation after students apply for re-evaluation. However, there was no specific announcement to prepare teachers.

20%

The percentage of genuine cases where teachers have made mistakes in evaluation

Source | Mid Day | 28 July 2016
 

Wednesday, 27 July 2016

GREEN OLYMPIAD 2016

GREEN OLYMPIAD 2016 

Circular from Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan 
Read more 
Circular: CBSE-TERI 'Green Olympiad' - 2016
Read more 


Date of Examination: 30 August 2016 AND 22 November 2016
(school can opt for only one of these dates)
  • Registration Form (National)
  • Registration Form (International)
  • Poster
  • Open for students of classes IV - X
  • Sample Questions and Answers Keys
    Level 1 - Class IV-V
    Level 2 - Class V-VIII
    Level 3 - Class IX-X
  • The GREEN Olympiad is designed in an innovative manner to test the knowledge of students in the field of environment and in turn create awareness about issues touching their daily lives. This annual initiative reaches out to regions across India having limited access to such educational programmes. The purpose is to improve and expand environment education both at the national and international level. It aspires to develop human resources, institutional infrastructure and a diverse mixture of locale-specific, regional and national action plans to sensitize schools on the need for environmental protection.

    Project objectives

    • To raise awareness amongst school students on environmental issues
    • To instil a sense of responsibility amongst students, teachers, and the larger school community towards the planet
    • To educate students about interdependence between man and the environment
    • To encourage students to actively participate in efforts to conserve the environment and help mitigate climate change
    • Realize potential of ‘students’ for national and international leadership as knowledge-based agents of change in the field of energy, environment, other natural resources and sustainable development
    • Inspire and reach out to diverse stakeholders for realizing a shared vision of global sustainable development
    • Enhance networking for sustainable interventions
    The following are certain indicators that point towards the growing popularity and acceptance of this programme in the academic circle.
    • UNESCO and DESD (Decade of Education for Sustainable Development -2004-2015) has endorsed GREEN Olympiad since 2011
    • Constant support from the Ministry of Environment and Forests, Government of India, since 1999
    • Repeat participation of schools
    • Regular support from corporates, such as Hero Moto Corp Limited
    • Interest shown by other organizations to start similar programmes, for example by Department of Biotechnology, Department of Consumer Affairs, Ministry of New and Renewable Energy, and so on

    Target group and outreach

    The GREEN Olympiad is open to students from classes VIII, IX and X enrolled in schools affiliated to recognized education boards and educational trusts from across India and abroad. Over the years, besides India, the programme has reached out to schools in Nepal, Singapore, Kenya Indonesia, Iran, Bhutan, ,Sultanate of Oman, United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Qatar, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Russia, and Mexico D.F 
    With a modest beginning of 10 cities in 1999, this programme has reached out to all parts of the country, also covering several remote areas.
    The GREEN Olympiad addresses the need for networking amongst the schools to establish a 'Platform' and helps the students to connect and understand what is happening in the world around them. Schools in the semi-urban and rural areas often have limited access to information on environment. To address this problem, TERI partners with regional education boards and trusts which have schools in remote areas.

Tuesday, 26 July 2016

New Rules for SSC private candidates @ Maharashtra State

New Rules for SSC private candidates @ Maharashtra State
The minimum qualification to appear for the Secondary School Certificate (SSC) exam as a private candidate is now Class 5 to instead of Class 4.
Anyone above 14 years of age, who is not studying in a regular school, can appear for the exam by filling form 17.
The change in minimum qualification is made as the Right to Education Act (RTE) considers Classes 1 to 5 as primary, while earlier it was classes 1 to 4. Classes 6 to 8 are considered upper primary and 9 and 10 secondary.
“According to board rules, private candidates must have at least completed their primary education, so we proposed raising the minimum criteria as primary is now extended to Class 5 under RTE,” said Gangadhar Mhamane, chairperson of the Maharashtra State Board of Secondary and Higher Secondary Education.
Source | Hindustan Times | 26 July 2016

Friday, 22 July 2016

Biographies

Biographies

More children are going to school, but they’re not really learning

Innovative technologiescan help bridge the gap

Roughly three million children are out of school in India. Civil society estimates show that of the children in school, at least 53 per cent are behind expected learning levels.
India has often been hailed as a laboratory for enterprise and innovation but how do we channel that spirit and know-how into tackling the problems we have in education? At an event organised by the Asia Society on Tuesday, Maheshwar Peri, founder and chair of Careers360 moderated a discussion about how innovative platforms and tools can be used to improve learning levels and make education more equitable in India.
Explaining the learning problem in India’s schools, Rukmini Banerji, CEO of Pratham Education Foundation, said that over 90 per cent of children at primary school-going age have actually been enrolled in schools and that over the past 10 years or so, the number of children in an age group like Class 8, for instance, has risen from eight to 10 million to about 25 million. “This means that more kids are staying in school and staying for longer. The demand for schooling and education has expanded, and that means that we have to manage both the numbers and the expectation related to schooling. That it is a magic bullet that can improve the lives of children and their families.”
When Pratham released its first Annual Status of Education Report (ASER), Ms. Banerji said that they decided to see if rising enrolments were actually corresponding to an increase in learning and capabilities. Pratham took reading and basic arithmetic as basic measures. “When we did the first survey ten years ago, people were shocked; ten years later the results continue to be shocking. The headline fact is that half the children surveyed in Class Five are not able to read at a Class Two level. In arithmetic it is a little worse.” The reality, she said, is that while India has reached near universal enrolment levels, something is still missing. Curricula are moving forward in a linear kind of way but children are routinely being left behind. Luckily, she said there were solutions to this problem and Pratham was working on getting kids at every age level to master reading and arithmetic to a level where they can propel their own education.
Rohini Nilekani spoke about EkStep, an early learning platform she and her husband, Infosys co-founder Nandan Nilekani, launched last year. EkStep wants to solve the ‘learning problem’ by creating a technology-led platform to help children improve their learning outcomes quite early in their lives. It is an open platform where content will eventually be crowdsourced, with teachers and educationists being able to add to it. “We are at a point where we can do something at a large scale using our collective imagination and build learning journeys for millions of children,” Ms. Nilekani said.
The backbone of EkStep will be an app called Genie — which will be freely available on the Android platform — which provides knowledge through stories, games and easy-to-engage-with worksheets. The platform’s data analytics will eventually let users know what content works best for early learning. Eventually Ms. Nilekani hopes EkStep will provide an ecosystem of collaboration that can be scaled up to meet the needs of 200 million children who need access to better ways of learning.
Shantanu Prakash, founder of Educomp Solutions, a company that equips schools with digital products and online solutions, said that classroom learning had to move toward a level where there is personalisation for each child. Smart classrooms, he said, have shown that problems such as poor teaching quality and rigid curriculum can be overcome but the challenge is ensuring that digital learning is properly incorporated into the fabric of the curriculum. “There are about a million digital classrooms already in schools across India but we have to look at what the outcomes are in terms of learning.” Another challenge, he said, was to keep in mind whether the skills being taught to children today were going to be relevant in a few years’ time. “If the structure of our education system is itself going to become irrelevant, then how do you innovate?” Mr. Prakash said that a key challenge is personalisation; he pointed out that a mobile phone can possibly be the biggest driver here, with kids using apps like EkStep or Educomp’s Fliplearn.


The discussion was on how innovative platforms and tools can be used to improve learning

 

Tuesday, 19 July 2016

To go beyond textbook study, schools log on to e-libraries Freny Fernandes | Jul 18, 2016, 10.46 PM IST

Thane: It's the age of technology and information where most students own their personal tablet or iPads for e-learning and seeking information. Keeping pace with the technology, even the educational institutes are pushing themselves beyond boundaries to match up to the kid's pace with technology.
Observing the growing need for research and acquiring additional knowledge to rise above the text book knowledge, a number of city school students have started embracing the concept of e-libraries.
Rajani Pattabhiraman, principal, Euro School, said, "Education today is not limited to textbooks. Within the curriculum itself students are expected to go beyond classroom lectures and refer to as many research papers and gather as much information in order to get a holistic perspective. School is where they need to explore and garner this knowledge. As it is not possible to buy all genres of books and research papers and thesis and fit it in our library, we have started an e-library where students can access any book, journal or paper. This saves a lot of paper as well."
These libraries are not only equipped with a plethora of otherwise unavailable books, but also are made available to students at their fingertips. They are simultaneously stocking their bookshelves with book lovers who refer spending time browsing.
"In addition to academics and knowledge about current events, students today are participating in an array of science competitions like the National Children's Science Congress, debates, projects and so on which require quick information at one's finger tips. An e-library facilitates this. It also helps them develop the lost habit of reading," said Rupa Dey, principal of Shrirang Vidyalaya, who is soon have an e-library installed for her students.
"While we have to move with time, we also have to maintain some elements of traditional learning that do work. E-learning is the way ahead, but we have to ensure students don't let go of reading books. Our e-library has eight computers which have access to a variety of books. It however, also has encyclopaedias, fiction and non-fiction books and other books," added Simmi Juneja, principal of DAV public school.
While these institutions have not discarded the traditional library, they have used technology and coding systems to make them better accessible to students.
"We first segregate all books on the basis of their genre, subject, author, title etc. and then assign each book a particular code which is fed into the system. The books are arranged in the library according to the system. If any student wants to find a particular book, they have to only key it into the system and find its location," Shraddha Sansare, librarian at Shrirang Vidyalaya.

Thursday, 7 July 2016

Review: ‘Jughead’ Vol. 1

Review: ‘Jughead’ Vol. 1

Jughead vol 1Jughead Vol. 1
Writer: Chip Zdarsky
Artist: Erica Henderson
Archie Comics; $19.99
Rated Teen
When Archie Comics decided to remake their red-headed company namesake in a brand-new comic book in 2015, it was a pretty drastic move, one entailing a new look, a new format and the courting of a new, wider audience. They turned to writer Mark Waid, one of the most reliable mainstream comics writers of the last few decades, andSaga artist Fiona Staples, a universally popular artist whose style could barely be further removed from that of the simplified, two-dimensional, almost coloring-book house style of Archie Comics.
It worked out beautifully, and the book’s popularity and quality has survived Staples leaving and passing the artistic duties off to another talented artist, Veronica Fish.
When it came time to launch a companion book to the new and improved Archie, this one starring the lazy, food-obsessed, comedic sidekick to America’s Favorite (and/or Most Generic) Teen, well, more idiosyncratic talent was called for.
Archie looked to Marvel and their burgeoning roster of humorous comics (funny books that were actually funny, if you will), and hired cartoonist-turned-writer Chip Zdarksy (who was writing Marvel’s Howard The Duck revival, and working on an Image comic that much of Archie’s traditional audience probably shouldn’t even know about, let alone read) and up-and-comer Erica Henderson, artist for Marvel’s The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, which is probably their funniest book at the moment (and definitely my favorite).
It worked out every bit as well as Archie did, maybe even better, as the nature of Jughead and his sidekick status in the overall Archie narrative allowed for wilder, sillier, more imaginative and teen melodrama-free stories. For readers who skipped the serially published comics–and, obviously, librarians looking to stock their shelves with collections and graphic novels–Jughead is now available in trade collection, and it is fantastic.
The first volume contains the first six issues of the series, which comprised a single and complete story arc (and thus the trade reads like a novel, with a beginning, middle, and end).
Jughead finds himself at odds with Mr. Stanger, the new principal of Riverdale High, who has replaced their beloved Mr. Weatherbee. Blase about the change until Stanger goes too far and changes the cafeteria menu, Jughead soon begins to notice increasingly strange things about Stanger and his many new hires among the faculty, until he’s convinced that they are turning Riverdale High School into some sort of covert training camp for a brainwashed teenage military strike force.
Is Jughead crazy? Everyone seems to think so! And so it’s up to him and his reluctant pals to discover the truth, expose Stanger, and save the school. Zdarsky gives Jughead a very, very rich videogame, comic book and film inspired imagination and subconscious, so each issue/chapter includes an extended dream sequence related to the plot, as Jughead falls asleep and/or loses consciousness and reimagines himself and his classmates in a Game of Thrones-like fantasy world, or as pirates, time police, secret agents, and superheroes.
The usual rules of the Archie line are reversed here, too, so that Jughead is the star and Archie his occasional sidekick, while the rest of the gang–Betty, Veronica, Kevin, Reggie, Moose, Dilton–appear throughout, some eventually siding with Jughead against Stanger, others serving as foils.
Between the deadpan serious presentation of the ridiculous real-world conflict and the parody gags in the flights-of-fancy sections, Zdarsky packs the book with character-driven and structural gags, all of which Henderson beautifully executes in a style as far removed from Staples’ first issues of Archie as those were from the Archie Comics they were reimagining in the first place (like, its one thing for Zdarsky to write that school genius Dilton’s greatest ability is really dance, but it takes an artist like Henderson to pull it off with a fantastic dance sequence).
The individual issues of Jughead each featured reprints of classic strips from the character’s decades-long history, each introduced in a page of prose from Zdarsky, and those aren’t included here. In their stead is a generous helping of about 30 pages of back-up material, including character sketches, scripts, a gallery of variant covers, and the entirety of Archie #7, by Waid and Fish.
Overall, the new Jughead proves the primacy of the second banana.

A valuable addition : study guides on a variety of contemporary novels


SuperSummary (http://www.supersummary.com) is another great site. They have in-depth study guides on a variety of contemporary novels (including many newer books that aren't covered by the older study guide sites.) I think visitors would find it to be a valuable addition
Source: http://www.supersummary.com/all-study-guides/
Courtesy to: Betsy for informing and updating  me regarding SuperSummary links

Additional Study Guides

Additional Study Guides

Additional Study Guides

SuperSummary, a modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, offers high-quality study guides for challenging works of literature.  The guides below provide detailed summaries and insightful analysis that will deepen your understanding and ensure that you are always prepared for class. For an even larger list of book titles, check out our premium study guides.
Source:http://www.supersummary.com/additional-study-guides/

IN-IN-DEPTHIN-DEPTH STUDY GUIDES

AT YOUR FINGERTIPS STUDY GUIDES

AT YOUR FINGERTIPSDEPTH STUDY GUIDES
AT YOUR FINGERTIPS

Internet access is a basic human right: UN Resolution

Internet access is a basic human right: UN Resolution

 By :  |July 6, 2016
Image courtesy of amalkhosh at FreeDigitalPhotos.net
Next time, if you feel some kind of hesitation (fearing censoring or censuring) before expressing yourself online, just remember, it’s your right to do so and UN Human Rights Council backs this human right of yours.
In a new, non-binding resolution, the UN condemns deliberate “measures to intentionally prevent or disrupt access to or dissemination of information online.” This condemnation means the UN is against governments shutting down the Internet at any time, and especially during times where information must be urgently disseminated such as during an election or immediately after a terror attack.
CIOL Internet access is a basic human right: UN Resolution
Not only this, but the resolution also focuses on the freedom of expression online, security concerns surrounding this expression, accountability on all human rights violations, and an effort to expand and provide Internet access to those to whom it’s currently unavailable.
The resolution also aims to bridge the gender digital divide and make it easier for people with disabilities to access the Internet on top of protecting those that are already online.
This resolution covers aspects of Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which asserts: “Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”
The UN is expanding the scope of this article to the Internet, which builds on a 2012 UN resolution on Internet free speech that affirmed: “the same rights that people have offline must also be protected online.”
The resolution was passed last Friday but was opposed by countries including Russia, China, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, and India. The issue was with the passage that “condemns unequivocally measures to intentionally prevent or disrupt access to our dissemination of information online.”
However, more than 70 countries rejected the revisions made by this minority opposition and adopted the resolution that emphasizes “the promotion, protection and enjoyment of human rights on the Internet.” Although the resolution cannot be legally enforced, it is still a powerful move as we move further into the Digital Age.
Source:http://www.ciol.com/internet-access-is-a-basic-human-right-un-resolution/
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