Archive for the 'Science' Category

04 OctRe-examining concepts and indicators of quality education

Dear Loopers,

A very interesting exchange of notes and thoughts on assessing learning has “resurged” in the Loop. This is very good pedagogical issue to ponder on. When we assess measure the quality of education, just what do we mean? Which education, in the first place, should we measure? What should we measure and why? Let me contribute some earlier thoughts on the long-run debate on the meaning of “quality” which I penned in the early 90’s under socio-economic development backdrop. I thought this will open a more spirited conversation not just on educational assessment but will bring us back to the fundamental question of teaching and learning. Pagtiisan nyo na lang ang haba. Happy reading.

Napoleon B. Imperial

Lifelong Learning and Human Development: Towards a Re-examination
of the Concepts and Indicators of Quality Education
byNAPOLEON B. IMPERIAL
Social Development Staff
National Economic and Development AuthorityThe main purpose of this paper is two-fold, one is to help establish a paradigm for analysing lifelong learning through a critical analysis of its socio-educational foundations and the other is to raise some possibilities as regards methodologies and measurement of the impacts and outcomes of quality education under that paradigm.The Learning Society, “Open Learning” and Lifelong Learning For purposes of policy, the concept of lifelong learning in this paper is built around the intertwined and broad meanings of “learning society” and the concept of “open learning.” The term “learning society” is essentially viewed as a social goal that underpinned many countries’ efforts in universalizing the provision of basic education to all who will need and benefit from it. This is the same long-term vision in embodied in the Education for All (EFA) Philippine Plan of Action (PPA): 1991-2000 in the area of continuing education for development (CED) which are in turn based on the World Declaration of Education for All. The PPA envisions: “the development of a learning society where people continue to learn on their own to the end that they can improve their quality of life and participate in national development efforts.” Thus, while EFA is concerned with basic learning needs andbasic learning tools , the PPA’s CED component, nevertheless, also calls for a reconfigured national learning systems called alternative learning systems (ALS) that encompass other channels and higher levels of learning, both informal and nonformal, running parallel with the formal system.The envisioned scheme basically follows the idea of an open

07 MarCan we already do a massive MLE implementation?

2009/10/5

Dear Frederick,

What sort of items for teachers did you have in mind?

Basically two kinds: items for MLE coordinators, who might have limited teaching responsibilities and spend more of their time developing innovations and assisting classroom teachers in their implementation. Existing personnel are fully loaded, and MLE is unlikely to prosper unless somebody can focus their full attention on it.

Also items for additional classroom teachers, so that at least for piloting, normal sections of fifty can be split into sections of 2 x 25 or 3 x 18, sizes that are conducive to innovative teaching methods. The items will not necessarily go to the MLE pilot sections, but would free up the best and most experienced teachers to work on MLE innovation.

What is necessary is the help of bilingual teachers to teach and demonstrate instructions and directions in both languages.

Almost any candidates or teachers in our region would be bilingual, that is not a problem. I think the challenge is to shift the use of the Mother Tongue from “medium of repeated presentation to satisfy low expectations in reading English” to “medium of task-based goal-setting, organizing, reading, writing and assessment to achieve high level standards in fluent reading in the mother tongue.” At the same time, I indicated a strategy of reinvigorating ESL teaching, first for limited hours as a subject taught substantially in Cebuano, and later, if resources are available, in a well-supported “immersion-style” small section for intensive ESL which makes use of the mother tongue literacy they have already achieved. I have a detailed draft concept paper of the intensive ESL strategy if you are interested, and am working on drafting something for Kindergarten and Grade I focused on Cebuano reading and spoken English as a subject.

Having accepted that children learn best when there is good understanding of what is required.

We are an innovative and resourceful people. Let the teachers build networks among themselves and ask each other to help each other improve understanding of their lessons.

Yes, but as Mario Taguiwalo suggested a good strategy can make a difference between success and failure after the goal is agreed. And as Diane Dekker suggested, there are risks to a half-baked implementation.

Sometimes it helps to know what children have in their homes and use these as building blocks for what can be done in schools.

I am definitely interested in involving parents and family members, and have some ideas how that can be done.

Maybe an English Cebuano dictionary?

I am quite interested in learner’s dictionaries, and have been working on developing English-Cebuano resources. This includes graded vocabulary lists for introducing specific senses of meaning at appropriate grade levels, and ensuring the children have active mastery of a core vocabulary (they can produce sentences with those words, during the first 2-3 years of school in spoken form, and in later grades in writing (or rewriting into English the themes they wrote first in the mother tongue). I suspect recognition vocabulary will come automatically if the children are supported in regular and ambitious reading targets, but a productive vocabulary needs serious learning support, including speaking and later writing tasks with feedback.

I have an English Filipino dictionary. Would this be useful? Are the common Cebuano words not known to most teachers in Cebu?

Almost any teacher or candidate in Region 7 would be fluent in Cebuano. The problem is not equivalents of common words, but how the teacher can be sensitized to the multiple senses of meaning of English vocabulary, so they can ensure students achieve mastery of multiple senses appropriate for their grade. For example, a common word like “break”.

—- excerpt from draft

“break” has a basic meaning of “an object suddenly separates into several parts, usually because it is dropped or hit” (= CEB nabuak, FIL nabasag), which will be introduced in Grade I. In Grade II, they can study the additional meaning “If someone breaks for a short period of time, they rest or change from what they are doing for a short period.” (= CEB nagpahuway, FIL nagpahinga) and the related noun (= CEB miryinda, FIL meriyenda).

In Grade III, they can learn some patterns of how common words have extended meanings. For example, a leg is broken (= CEB nabali ang bukog, FIL nabalian (ng buto)) even if it remains a physical whole, but the bone inside might be cracked. A machine breaks (= CEB naguba, FIL nasira) even if there is no separation of parts, what is important is that it doesn’t work anymore. Sometimes the focus is not on a object that breaks, but on an agent that breaks loose. Related to the idea of interrupting a continuing activity, you can break a silence, or break a journey. They can study derived words like breakfast (= CEB pamahaw, FIL almusal), perhaps in relation to learning that “fast” can also mean not eating (= CEB mag-puasa, FIL mag-ayuno), daybreak (=CEB banag-banag, FIL bukang liwayway?), breakage.

In higher grades, they can study how different prepositions help signal different meanings: break into X, break with Y, break from Z. The word also participates in “phrasal verbs” where the verb is used with a prepositional form that no longer carries its usual relational meaning but signals a special meaning of the verb: break down, break out, break up. They can study idioms using the word: break someone’s heart, break new ground, break even.

The vocabulary lists will identify specific senses of meaning for a word that will be studied at different grades, so that a common word with many different meanings will be studied systematically several times over the years. That way the pupils can achieve a better mastery of the core language in both writing and reading, and have greater confidence and effectiveness in using language as a tool for learning Science and Health.

—– end of excerpt

The above analysis is based on the COBUILD dictionary, which is very useful for teachers (and has a softcopy version). I also have the Longman Dictionary of American English, which is even more user friendly for students, but less detailed. What is lacking is an English-Cebuano (and English-Filipino) learner’s dictionary embodying similar principles in support of the needs of young learners. For Cebuano, there are several English-Cebuano dictionaries including a very large one just published by SunStar. Unfortunately, it is more like a bilingual thesaurus designed for fluent speakers of both English and Cebuano who are used to writing English and are trying to find the right word or phrase in Cebuano. The entries are not self explanatory for children, and are not necessarily very useful for parents or teachers.

If you know somebody who is interested in working on a bilingual learner’s dictionary (English into Cebuano or Filipino, or both) I am interested in collaborating. I am also interested in developing other kinds of language resources, including vocabulary development materials based on grade-level lists of targeted senses of meaning.

I notice your email address is at Miriam. If you are with the college, you might want to help organize research activities along these lines, I would be happy to give a talk the next time I am in Manila. I am a colleague of Dr. Ibe on the board of trustees of Philippine Science High School, give her my regards if she still is involved with MC.

Cheers,

Fred

———-
Frederick B. Kintanar
Cebu City

Jasmin

-

07 JulMIT Adapts Free Online Courses for High Schools, eSchool News

This was posted on one of the NACOL forums.
MIT adapts free online courses for high schoolsNew secondary-school web site contains OpenCourseWare resources for teaching STEM disciplinesFrom eSchool News staff and wire service reportsThu, Nov 29, 2007 http://www.eschoolnews.com/news/top-news/?…76-1d460f3866e9

Primary Topic Channel: 21st Century skills

A new MIT web site gives high school students and teachers access to STEM

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has created a new web site with free online resources that aim to improve science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) instruction at the high school level.

“Highlights for High School,” which builds on MIT’s OpenCourseWare (OCW) initiative, is designed to inspire the next generation of engineers and scientists and to serve as a valuable tool for high school teachers. OCW publishes educational materials under an open license that encourages their reuse, redistribution, and modification for noncommercial purposes.

“Strength in K-12 math and science will be increasingly important for America if the nation is to continue to lead the innovation economy,” said Susan Hockfield, MIT president.

“Highlights for High School will provide students and teachers with innovative tools to supplement their math and science studies,” Hockfield added. “We hope it will inspire students to reach beyond their required class work to explore more advanced material through OCW and also might encourage them to pursue careers in science and engineering.”

Highlights for High School features more than 2,600 video and audio clips, animations, lecture notes, and assignments taken from actual MIT courses. The site organizes these resources to match the Advanced Placement physics, biology, and calculus curricula. Demonstrations, simulations, and animations give educators engaging ways to present STEM concepts, while videos illustrate MIT’s hands-on approach to the teaching of these subjects.

On the web site, students can access materials that will help them strengthen their writing skills, develop sustainable solutions to challenging world problems, and learn how to build new things, such as robots, electronic devices, and furniture, MIT says.

Students also will find introductory MIT courses, including chemistry, computers and electronics, engineering, math, and physics. Introductory math classes, for example, include courses on problem solving, mathematics for computer science, single-variable calculus, and linear algebra. Engineering courses include such topics as toy-product design and how and why machines work.

Thomas Magnanti, former dean of the School of Engineering at MIT, chaired the committee that developed the site.

“As has been well documented, the U.S. needs to invest more in secondary education, particularly in the STEM fields. MIT, as a leading institution of science and technology, has an obligation to help address the issue,” he said.

Highlights for High School represents MIT’s first step in adapting the successful OpenCourseWare model to secondary education, the university said. The web site organizes the course materials currently featured on OCW-including syllabi, lecture notes, assignments, and exams-into a format that is more accessible to high school students and teachers.

An estimated 10,000 high school instructors and 5,000 high school students in the United States already visit MIT’s OpenCourseWare site each month, and MIT says it expects Highlights for High School to make its course materials even more useful to these audiences.

MIT operates more than 40 K-12 outreach programs, including the Edgerton Center, MIT’s Minority Introduction to Engineering and Science program, and its Educational Studies Program.

Now that MIT has launched Highlights for High School, the university is considering a broader plan for an open-courseware secondary education program-OCW SE-that could include creating a teacher-in-residence program to develop new open curricula with high school educators and organizing an MIT secondary-education mentor corps.

Links:

Highlights for High SchoolMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyMIT OpenCourseWare

Thanks Allison for bringing this to our attention…

Tags: NACOL , virtual school , cyber school , high school , education

17 DecGet Involved in NACOL

I am thinking about attending this conference. It seems like it would be a good one and it is nice to see something that is K-12 based and not higher learning with k-12 tacked on the end to up the participants.
If there is something that we could do from up here in the cold, to assist in this conference just let us know. If you have some great ideas for a joint presentation or something we are all about partnerships…I have talked to my staff and asked them to submit proposals and I will send and pay their way if their proposal is accepted.

D. Cannell

P.S. Really like the new look of the blog.

Comment by Darren Cannell — February 6, 2008 @ 6:48 pm | Reply

Merry Christmas from VHSM!!!.

A Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays from Virtual High School Meanderings!!!!!

In keeping with the season, a little Christmas Cheer for you in the form of a podcasted story from Stuart McLean of CBC Radio’s Vinyl Cafe Stories .

VC: December 15th, 2007, “Dave raises the Christmas turkey”

Enjoy…

Blogging About Virtual Schooling.

Still cleaning out that Bloglines acount… This time the topic is virtual schooling.

- Online learning experience suits some students better than sitting in class from Distance-Educator.com’s Daily News

- MIT adapts free online courses for high schools from Distance-Educator.com’s Daily News

- Illinois School Looks to Tech Tools to Teach from Distance-Educator.com’s Daily News

- Resources and Materials from 2007 VSS from E-Learning & Online Teaching

- Virtual schools offer flexible education – Sarah Horner, Duluth News Tribune from Online Learning Update

- Online learning experience suits some students better than sitting in class – David steindorf, Times Union from Online Learning Update

- Online learning resources make homework enjoyable (almost) – Dave Chalk, canada.com from Online Learning Update

- More students learning online – Stephanie Takach, the Triangle from Online Learning Update

- Eve: An Understanding Virtual Teacher – Bill Christensen, Live Science from Online Learning Update

- Illinois School Looks to Tech Tools to Teach – Larry Abramson, NPR from Online Learning Update

- More students logging on for class – Encarnacion Pyle, COLUMBUS DISPATCH from Online Learning Update

- ‘Online Nation: Five Years of Growth in Online Learning’ – University of St. Thomas from Online Learning Update

- Online Learning Growing, Needs More Oversight – David Kopf, THE Journal from Online Learning Update

- University of Florida to Present Results of Online Learning Research – Government Technology from Online Learning Update

- And so it begins in earnest… from Situativity

- Online teacher Characteristics from Teaching and Developing Online

- In the News from Teaching and Developing Online

- Hybrid class instructor speaks out from Teaching and Developing Online

- Greater Saskatoon Catholic Schools teachers among Canada’s most innovative educators from Teaching and Developing Online

- Web opening new classroom doors – AMY HETZNER, Journal-Sentinal from Online Learning Update

- Jeff Bush: Virtual schools here to stay; law, courts must adapt – Capital Times from Online Learning Update

Until next time…

Tags: blog , blogging , blogs , virtual school , cyber school , high school , education

02 MayI particularly love anything that comes out of CJ’s mouth

Wayfarer
November 13, 2006 at 6:12 pm

97 for me, too! The one I wasn’t sure of was the Cubism question, so I went to look it up.

It’s not a good day if you don’t learn something new, and I did.

Reply

Going on a Field Trip.
Jump to Comments

I’m going on a field trip with a friend today. We’re heading to the Museum of Science in Boston to see this:
I’ll write about it when I get back tonight.

Stay with your chaperone and DON’T TOUCH ANYTHING!

-Mrs. Chili

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Filed under Uncategorized

7 Comments.
organic mama
November 8, 2006 at 7:55 pm

When I went back to my school for my MEd in my mid thirties, I quickly got used to the fact that if I had been very precocious, I could have birthed many of the students around me. I loved being an older student and found my motivation and focus to be much better than it had been when I was younger, I also found that the profs really appreciated having grown-ups in their classes!

Congrats to your friend. I think he will love going back to school.

Reply

2 Comments.
Mrs.Chili
November 7, 2006 at 7:10 pm

Oh, the good quotes abound! Click on the link in the post and it will take you to a GREAT site that has a TON of transcripts for the show.

I particularly love anything that comes out of CJ’s mouth – she had some gorgeous lines. I still laugh out loud when Bartlet stumbles into the Oval Office after having taken both a Vicodan AND a Percoset (“you mean I wasn’t supposed to take them both?!”) and Charlie’s defense of CJ in the second half of the 4th season opener.

I just love the whole show.

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