Educational Pedagogy
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Rescooped by Dennis Swender from Professional Learning for Busy Educators
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The Power of Being Seen - Edutopia

The Power of Being Seen - Edutopia | Educational Pedagogy | Scoop.it
When the bell rang for early dismissal on a recent afternoon at Cold Springs Middle School in Nevada, students sprinted toward the buses while teachers filed into the library, where posters filled with the names of every child in the 980-student school covered the walls.

Taking seats where they could, the teachers turned their attention to Principal Roberta Duvall, who asked her staff to go through the rosters with colored markers and make check marks under columns labeled “Name/Face,” “Something Personal,” “Personal/Family Story,” and “Academic Standing,” to note whether they knew the child just by name or something more—their grades, their family’s story, their hobbies.


Via John Evans
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Rescooped by Dennis Swender from Culture: Education, Arts
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Should Achievement Be the Point of Education?

Should Achievement Be the Point of Education? | Educational Pedagogy | Scoop.it

In a changing culture of education and work, more students are questioning what it means to be successful, and what path to take to get there. With races to the top--the top of the class, of standardized test scores, of college acceptance letters--being laden with the pressure of finding a dream job and being academically successful, achievement has a grip on our academic culture like never before. Everything we promote in schools points to an exact definition of success, a ladder to be climbed in order to grasp the next tier of achievement that stands to define not just what we do, but who we are. Our identities are interwoven with our academic successes, with good grades and college names serving as ways of defining ourselves.


Via Pantelis Chiotellis
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Rescooped by Dennis Swender from Professional Learning for Busy Educators
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When Schools Forgo Grades: An Experiment In Internal Motivation - MindShift

When Schools Forgo Grades: An Experiment In Internal Motivation - MindShift | Educational Pedagogy | Scoop.it
Lots of factors affect whether and what students learn in school, but most often that conversation gets boiled down into a single letter grade, a symbol of everything a student knows or doesn’t know. Because grades are often required, and easy to understand, they have become the focus for many parents, teachers and students. The problem is that grades are often subjective, arbitrary and can be demotivating to students. They are also gatekeepers for advanced classes and college admissions, so grades can’t be ignored. This complicated dynamic means that grading policies are at the center of discussions around how to change teaching and learning.

Via John Evans
Koen Mattheeuws's curator insight, August 16, 2017 3:56 AM
Scoreloos evalueren. Hopelijk geen doel op zich. Motiverend evalueren is dat (voor mij althans) wel.