Sunday, March 13, 2011

Must-have resource designed to assist K-12 educational organizations in planning out and launching their 21st century classrooms

Tutor.com connects students with live tutors online for tutoring in math, science, social studies, and English and is the largest online tutoring and homework help service around.  Tutor.com (with help from a $1.5 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation) is expanding its horizons to help teachers as well. 

Grants are being awarded to teachers to give them professional development and professional development models that will provide them with one-on-one support for math teachers this year.

Approximately 200 algebra teachers from selected schools will be able to access the service beginning in September 2011 and running through December 2012. Participating teachers will be able to connect with online teaching coaches for on-demand, one-to-one live help from Sunday through Thursday, 1 p.m. to 10 p.m. local time. Coaches will be standing by and will provide live help within minutes of a teacher request, Tutor.com says.

Research has proven that one of the most important factors in a student’s academic success is the quality of his or her classroom teacher. To maintain excellence in teaching, school districts must find new ways to provide the guidance and help that teachers need every day. But too often, professional development for teachers means sitting in a room and listening to a lecture a few times each year. Tutor.com believes that, to significantly move the needle on teacher effectiveness, schools and districts must provide new ways to support their teachers.

What does a 21st Century Connected classroom look like?

  1. Information and communications skills - The teacher\facilitator communicates to students how to process information that is being taught in the classroom through tools such as word, power point, e-mail, search engines, etc.... 
  2. Thinking and problem-solving skills - The teacher\facilitator communicates problem -solving tools such as spreadsheets and design tools to problem solve, critical thinking, creativity, etc...
  3. Interpersonal and self-directional skills - The teacher\facilitator communicates how to use personal development and productivity tools such as e-learning and collaboration tools to enhance productivity, performance and personal development.
  4. Use digital technology and communication tools to access, manage, integrate and evaluate information; Construct new knowledge; Communicate with others effectively. Examples: Using 21st Century tools such as: word processing, e-mail, presentation software, the Internet, spreadsheets, decision support programs, design tools, e-learning, time management programs, and collaboration tools) combined with learning skills in core subjects equals 21st Century Skills (ICT Literacy)Teach and learn in a 21st century context. 
  5. Learn academic content through real-world examples - Teachers\Facilitators, central office personnel, administration, etc... MUST be on board and realize that learning must expand beyond the four classroom walls.  Teach and learn 21st century content(3 emerging content areas) Global awareness Financial, economic and business literacy, and Civic literacy.  

    Why do we need to build 21st Century Classroom Skills with our Students?



    Sunday, March 6, 2011

    21 st Century Skills – What Are We Really Talking About?

    I’ve come to find that the term “21 st century skills” is a little like “family values”.  We’re all in favor of the idea; we’re just not always sure what we mean.  To me, 21st Century Skills means: critical thinking, problem solving, creativity and innovation, adaptability, collaboration, communication (written, oral and blended and advanced media), media literacy, self direction and self assessment, and application of technology to learned skills.
    The application of 21 st century skills requires context.  In order to think critically, we must have knowledge we can bring to bear to a process or problem. Academic content must be integral to the learning process.  Contrary to some recent debates on the subject of 21st century skills, it is not a question of skills vs. content. The challenge is to merge the two into engaging, relevant learning experiences.
                  

    What exactly is the 21st Century Classroom?


    Today, many educators, policy makers, parents, and even the general public respond with "That's impossible!" when challenged to adopt a new development of education for the 21st century.  Most people today can't escape the idea of education that is strictly 19th century.  However, a growing number of educators are believing in and accomplishing "the impossible" idea that will successfully lead students into the 21st Century successfully!

    So what is 21st century education?  It is bold.  It breaks the mold.  It is flexible, creative, challenging, and complex.  It addresses a rapidly changing world filled with fantastic new problems as well as exciting new possibilities.  Fortunately, there is a growing body of research supporting an increasing number of 21st century schools. We have living proof, inspiring examples to follow, in schools across the United States.