B-1-30, Blog Post Jenny White & Chelsea Waite B-1-30, Blog Post Jenny White & Chelsea Waite

5 myths to bust about blended learning, what it is, and the benefits it has for students

Over the past several years, more and more schools across the U.S. have been implementing blended-learning strategies for their students. What is blended learning? … This isn’t an exhaustive picture of K-12 blended implementations across the world. But it provides a framework for busting some common myths about what blended learning is, and isn’t.

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B-1-30, Blog Post Kathryn Kennedy B-1-30, Blog Post Kathryn Kennedy

Are we too quick to judge innovation grant findings?

A recent column from The Hechinger Report shared findings from U.S. Department of Education’s innovation grants and what Hechinger calls “the ‘dirty secret.’” These grants were created to boost the economy after the 2008 recession and served as a “first test of using rigorous scientific evidence as a way of issuing grants in education.” Those programs that had a concept that was well-proven were issued $25-50 million while programs who did not have an evidence-based concept were given $5 million or less to help build that base. Unfortunately, the results show that only 18%, or 12 out of 67, innovations have shown an increase in student achievement.

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B-1-30, Blog Post John Watson B-1-30, Blog Post John Watson

The research-to-practice gap in education is especially important to digital instruction

Many educators and most researchers know that there’s a gap between research and practice in K-12 education. This gap is especially important regarding online courses, tools, and resources, because digital instructional practices are new and often considered to be unproven.

But relatively few people seem to understand the extent of the gap, why it is important, and what to do about it.

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B-1-30, Blog Post Lindsay Marczak B-1-30, Blog Post Lindsay Marczak

Using technology to teach critical thinking skills

Results from the latest Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) set off alarm bells when they revealed that US high school students lacked critical thinking skills. The test, designed to measure the capacity for 15-year-old students to apply reading, mathematics, and science knowledge to real-world settings, found that American students ranked 31st in math, 24th in science, and 21st in reading, in a comparison with students from 65 other countries. These findings indicated that American students not only struggle to recall rote procedures and facts, but they also had trouble analyzing, reasoning, and communicating effectively as they solved or interpreted problems.

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B-1-30, Blog Post John Watson B-1-30, Blog Post John Watson

We think this is important, so let's make kids learn it

The idea that school leaders, teachers, and students should have more autonomy seems to be gaining traction, as the centralized approach of NCLB gives way to (some) increased flexibility in ESSA.

But for this greater autonomy to truly take hold, we need fewer stakeholder groups advocating that their area of expertise is something that all K-12 students should learn and know.

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B-1-30, Blog Post Thomas Arnett B-1-30, Blog Post Thomas Arnett

Should schools ban spiral notebooks?

From the first-hand experiences of millions of students and teachers worldwide, it’s clear that paper notebooks are a deterrent to quality education. For generations, students have used them in class to scribble or doodle, pass messages to their friends, or construct wads, planes, and spitball projectiles. Given the numerous ways students can use their notebooks to derail learning, it’s a wonder that most schools still permit them in class, right? … Hold on a sec.

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B-1-30, Blog Post John Watson B-1-30, Blog Post John Watson

Post-secondary online learning is more developed than K-12

Evidence that online learning is more developed at the post-secondary level than at the K-12 level includes:

  • A higher percentage of college students than K-12 students take all of their courses online.

  • A higher percentage of college students take at least one course online.

  • Federal data systems at the post-secondary level are better at distinguishing online courses and online schools/programs from physical schools/courses.

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B-1-30, Blog Post John Watson B-1-30, Blog Post John Watson

Lessons from the rise and fall of the federal Learning Registry

Nov 9, 2011

Departments of Education and Defense to Launch “Learning Registry” Tools and Community

“The U.S. Departments of Education and Defense announced last night the launch of ‘Learning Registry,’ an open source community and technology designed to improve the quality and availability of learning resources in education. The launch is an important milestone in the effort to more effectively share information about learning resources among a broad set of stakeholders in the education community.”

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