50 Challenging Activities To Promote Digital Media Literacy In Students
Here are 50 ways teachers across content areas–and homeschooled learners too–can promote digital media literacy.
Here are 50 ways teachers across content areas–and homeschooled learners too–can promote digital media literacy.
From rubrics and presentations to apps, definitions, and frameworks, here are 25 of the best resources for critical thinking.
Bloom’s Taxonomy verbs include Evaluate: Criticize, Judge, Defend, Appraise, Value, Prioritize, Revise, Argue, Support, and Re-design.
Bloom’s Spiraling is the process of starting first at lower levels of Bloom’s–recalling, defining, explaining, etc.–and then progressively increasing the level of thinking.
Many educators have a mistaken view of the Bloom’s Taxonomy and the levels in it, as the following errors suggest.
Bloom’s Taxonomy is a powerful teaching and learning tool that can help you shape nearly everything that happens in your classroom.
From making an observation and drawing a conclusion to forming and improving a question, here are 27 strategies for critical learning.
Learning Innovation Can’t Come From Teachers Alone by Terry Heick A few years ago, the late Grant Wiggins, a learning expert who inspired me since my first year in the classroom, wrote about the intersection of academic standards and creativity. “Why do people insist on viewing the Standards as inconsistent with teacher creativity and choice?…
From Accountable Talk to interactive RAFT Assignments, podcasting to debate, there are countless alternatives to lecturing.
How can you teach digital students non-digital things? 21st century reading & thinking is linked in a web of physical & digital media.
Digital learning allows students to grasp concept more quickly to connect theory & application more adeptly to engage in learning.
Like anything else in your classroom, promoting critical thinking skills is a matter of planning, priority, and practice.
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