Podcast FAQ

cult of pedagogy podcast

by Mr. Merle Jacobi I Published 2 years ago Updated 1 year ago
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What are the 5 pedagogies?

Center for Research on Education, Diversity and Excellence The five pedagogy standards are joint productive activity (JPA), language and literacy development (LD), meaning making (MM), complex thinking (CT), and instructional conversation (IC).

Who is Jennifer Gonzalez cult of pedagogy?

Jennifer Gonzalez. Editor in Chief I earned my National Board Certification in 2004. Then, after having my first child, I left teaching to be a stay-at-home mom. In 2008, I was hired by a local university to teach pre-service teachers. This work gave me new passion for preparing and supporting educators.

What are the 4 pedagogical approaches?

The different pedagogical approaches could be broken down into four categories: behaviourism, constructivism, social constructivism, and liberationist.Behaviourism. A behaviourist pedagogy uses the theory of behaviourism to inform its approach. ... Constructivism. ... Social constructivism. ... Liberationism.

Why do I need a teacher when I've got Google summary?

As wide-ranging and exhaustively-researched as it is entertaining and accessible, this book is designed to challenge teachers and inform them – as well as encourage them – as they strive to design a twenty-first century learning experience that really does bring the best out of all young people.

How do you teach narrative writing in middle school?

A Narrative Writing Unit PlanStep 1: Show Students That Stories Are Everywhere. Getting our students to tell stories should be easy. ... Step 2: Study the Structure of a Story. ... Step 3: Introduce the Assignment. ... Step 4: Read Models. ... Step 5: Story Mapping. ... Step 6: Quick Drafts. ... Step 7: Plan the Pacing. ... Step 8: Long Drafts.More items...•

What is education curation?

Simply put, content curation is the process of sorting through content and presenting it in a meaningful, organized way around a specific theme or category.

What is the difference between teaching and pedagogy?

If teaching is the act of encouraging learning activities through discovery and acquired knowledge, pedagogy is the method of teaching, both as an academic subject or theoretical concept.

What are 21st century pedagogical approaches?

In 2010, UNESCO recommended the following teaching strategies for the twenty-first century: experiential learning, storytelling, values education, enquiry learning, appropriate assessment, future problem solving, outside classroom learning, and community problem solving [30].

What is the difference between pedagogy and andragogy?

Pedagogy is the teaching of children, or dependent personalities. Andragogy is the facilitation learning for adults, who are self-directed learners.

What does invite guardians mean on Google Classroom?

When you invite guardians, they can't see the Stream, Classwork, People, or Grades pages. Instead, guardians get an email summary of their student's work. They get information about missing and upcoming work and class activities. For more details, go to About guardian email summaries.

Can parents view Google Classroom?

It is important to note that parents cannot access any part of your Google Classroom or view your class stream. Therefore, they do not have access to view their child's grades.

Is Google a better teacher?

Google can answer anything even those thing which a human teacher cannot. Google is like your personal tutor who can help you anytime for any question. It also explains better than a human teacher and therefore makes things very easy to understand for those who find ot difficult....

How Teachers Can Support Arab-American Students

Even when they appear to be navigating school successfully, Arab-American students aren’t thriving like they could. But we can change that.

6 Ed Tech Tools to Try in 2022

A platform that makes video conferencing feel more real, relevant math lessons, and playing around with art. We’ve got good stuff this year!

Teachers are being silenced. What can be done about it?

How is the anti-CRT movement harming and silencing teachers, what damage will it ultimately do to students, and what can be done to fight it?

Make Units More Inspiring with Vision Boards

Planning units can be less than exciting when all you have to deal with is words. A vision board can generate fresh enthusiasm and help you focus on what really matters.

Street Data: A Pathway Toward Equitable, Anti-Racist Schools

So many equity initiatives fall short because our test-obsessed system doesn’t support them. Street Data takes a completely different approach, and it may very well change everything.

How to Find, Read, and Use Academic Research

Want to use more research but don’t have enough formal training? This post is for you.

How Teachers Can Support Arab-American Students

Even when they appear to be navigating school successfully, Arab-American students aren’t thriving like they could. But we can change that.

Teachers are being silenced. What can be done about it?

How is the anti-CRT movement harming and silencing teachers, what damage will it ultimately do to students, and what can be done to fight it?

Street Data: A Pathway Toward Equitable, Anti-Racist Schools

So many equity initiatives fall short because our test-obsessed system doesn’t support them. Street Data takes a completely different approach, and it may very well change everything.

If Equity is a Priority, UDL is a Must

This framework rejects one-size-fits-all teaching and offers options for how to engage, what materials to use, and how to demonstrate learning.

Subversion: An Essential Tool of the Master Teacher

Sometimes, to do right by their students, good teachers have to break the rules.

Historically Responsive Literacy: A More Complete Education for All Students

Based on the work of 19th century Black literary societies, this fresh approach to curriculum focuses on identity, skills, intellect, and criticality.

Why White Students Need Multicultural and Social Justice Education

Some educators wonder if multicultural and social justice education are relevant if most of your students are white. The answer is yes.

Teachers are being silenced. What can be done about it?

How is the anti-CRT movement harming and silencing teachers, what damage will it ultimately do to students, and what can be done to fight it?

Make Units More Inspiring with Vision Boards

Planning units can be less than exciting when all you have to deal with is words. A vision board can generate fresh enthusiasm and help you focus on what really matters.

Introducing the HyperRubric: A Tool that Takes Learning to the Next Level

Unlike the traditional rubric, which serves mainly to evaluate, the HyperRubric pushes students to keep moving forward.

Why You Should Bring Podcasts Into Your Classroom

Podcasts are a screen-free, movement-enabling, ear-stimulating and eye-opening way to deliver content. Learn the benefits and where to find great ones.

How ELA and Special Ed Collaboration Can Produce Great Student Writing

Writing can be especially difficult for students with learning differences. How can ELA and special ed teachers optimize their partnership to get the best from these kids?

Does Your School Need a Literacy Check-Up?

Literacy is arguably the most valuable asset we develop in our students, but many classrooms are missing the teaching practices that would make the biggest difference.

The Magic of Mistakes: 4 Ways to Boost Critical Thinking with Mistake Analysis

Wrong answers can be an incredible tool for learning. Discover how easy it is to add mistake analysis to your classroom.

No More Easy Button: A Suggested Approach to Post-Pandemic Teaching

With this fresh start, let’s take the wisdom we’ve gained over the last year and use it. Let’s not go back to the way things used to be.

Why White Students Need Multicultural and Social Justice Education

Some educators wonder if multicultural and social justice education are relevant if most of your students are white. The answer is yes.

Are Your Diversity Strategies Missing the Mark? Nine Ways to Get it Right

These tips will help you improve your practice and avoid some of the faux pas that come with teaching students who look, think, or opine differently than you.

Time to Take a Look at Your Dress Code

Many dress codes unfairly target students in certain populations, doing more harm than good. This guide will help you review and revise your current policy.

Kindergarten Redshirting: How Kids Feel About it Later in Life

More parents are opting to delay their child’s entry into kindergarten. Years later, how do these students and their parents feel about the decision?

How Ordinary Teachers Become Activists

All over the U.S., teachers, students, and parents are organizing to fight the policies that are wreaking havoc on education. And slowly but surely, they are succeeding. How are they doing it?

Could You Teach Without Grades?

There’s a new movement of teachers who are giving up traditional grading and finding different ways to measure student learning. Starr Sackstein is at the front of the pack, and in a new podcast episode, she tells me how it all works.

Teachers are being silenced. What can be done about it?

How is the anti-CRT movement harming and silencing teachers, what damage will it ultimately do to students, and what can be done to fight it?

Street Data: A Pathway Toward Equitable, Anti-Racist Schools

So many equity initiatives fall short because our test-obsessed system doesn’t support them. Street Data takes a completely different approach, and it may very well change everything.

Does Your School Need a Literacy Check-Up?

Literacy is arguably the most valuable asset we develop in our students, but many classrooms are missing the teaching practices that would make the biggest difference.

Subversion: An Essential Tool of the Master Teacher

Sometimes, to do right by their students, good teachers have to break the rules.

Why White Students Need Multicultural and Social Justice Education

Some educators wonder if multicultural and social justice education are relevant if most of your students are white. The answer is yes.

Reopening School: What it Might Look Like

Some thoughts on what post-COVID instruction might look like. (Spoiler alert: None are as good as face-to-face, but a few aren’t too bad.)

Distance Learning: A Gently Curated Collection of Resources for Teachers

An overview of the nuts and bolts of distance learning, including general tips, advice on tech, and troubleshooting some common problems.

4 Laws of Learning (and How to Follow Them)

In a teaching tailspin? These four research-based principles of instruction will help you focus on what really moves the needle.

Backward Design: The Basics

Are we planning with clear, measurable, meaningful learning goals to guide us, or are we just keeping students busy?

How to Spot Dyslexia, and What to Do Next

Learn the traits that might indicate dyslexia in students and what you can do inside and outside the classroom to better support these students.

Four Research-Based Strategies Every Teacher Should be Using

Learn the simple, quick strategies cognitive scientists say can boost student learning in any classroom.

Is That Higher-Order Task Really Higher Order?

Ask any group of teachers if their goal is to simply have students regurgitate facts, and every one of them will say no. Despite that, it keeps happening.

To Boost Learning, Just Add Movement

Physical movement makes learning stick better. Explore six different ways to add more movement to your classroom.

Note-taking: A Research Roundup

A summary of 8 best practices in note-taking, straight from the research.

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