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Howard Gardner: ‘Multiple intelligences’ are not ‘learning styles’
“Gardner’s theory initially listed seven intelligences which work together: linguistic, logical-mathematical, musical, bodily-kinesthetic, spatial, interpersonal and intrapersonal; he later added an eighth, naturalist intelligence and says there may be a few more. The theory became highly popular with K-12 educators around the world seeking ways to reach students who did not respond to traditional approaches, but over time, “multiple intelligences” somehow became synonymous with the concept of “learning styles.” In this important post, Gardner explains why the former is not the latter.”
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“… anew breed of educators, inspired by everything from the Internet to evolutionary psychology, neuroscience, and AI, are inventing radical new ways for children to learn, grow, and thrive. To them, knowledge isn’t a commodity that’s delivered from teacher to student but something that emerges from the students’ own curiosity-fueled exploration. Teachers provide prompts, not answers, and then they step aside so students can teach themselves and one another. They are creating ways for children to discover their passion—and uncovering a generation of geniuses in the process.”
HT @JamieReverb
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“The bottom line is, if you’re not the one controlling your learning, you’re not going to learn as well.”
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But when scientists build machines that are programmed to try a variety of motions and learn from mistakes, the robots become far more adaptable and skilled. The same principle applies to children, she says.
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Peter Gray, a research professor at Boston College who studies children’s natural ways of learning, argues that human cognitive machinery is fundamentally incompatible with conventional schooling.
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Gray points out that young children, motivated by curiosity and playfulness, teach themselves a tremendous amount about the world. And yet when they reach school age, we supplant that innate drive to learn with an imposed curriculum. “We’re teaching the child that his questions don’t matter, that what matters are the questions of the curriculum. That’s just not the way natural selection designed us to learn. It designed us to solve problems and figure things out that are part of our real lives.”
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taught the kids about democracy by letting them elect leaders who would decide how to run the class and address discipline.
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letting children “wander aimlessly around ideas.”
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higher graduation rate than the city’s average for the same populations. They do it by emphasizing student-led learning and collaboration
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Now that our society and economy have evolved beyond that era, our schools must also be reinvented.
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“Intelligence comes from necessity,”
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#MustRead Shares (weekly)
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Bringing Authenticity to the Classroom | Edutopia
“Authenticity — we know it works! There is research to support the value of authentic reading and writing. When students are engaged in real-world problems, scenarios and challenges, they find relevance in the work and become engaged in learning important skills and content.”
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PBL: What Does It Take for a Project to Be “Authentic”? | Edutopia
“Everyone thinks that Project-Based Learning has something to do with “authentic” learning. But not everyone agrees what this means.” In this piece, BIE’s John Larmer gives advice about a spectrum of authenticity in PBL.
#MustRead Shares (weekly)
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In defense of failure – Unstuck
What if we (schools across U.S.) tried the stuff in the HGSE article (http://www.gse.harvard.edu/news-impact/2013/09/whats-the-big-idea/?show=all) and used the tips here to help us overcome our fear of the ideas failing? I bet we’d learn a lot by way of the Edu R&D!
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What’s the Big Idea? | Harvard Graduate School of Education
Big Hat Tip to @MrsACBragg
“When it comes to “improving” schools, students, and teachers, there’s no shortage of opinions out there on what won’t work. We wanted to know, what could work? For several months, we asked people to tell us one tangible education idea they had that was worth spreading. Some writers are connected to the Ed School, others aren’t. Yes, there’s even an idea from a Muppet. As you’ll see, a few ideas are slight twists on thoughts we’ve heard before; others are quirky and curious. All, we hope, will get you thinking.”Read more: http://www.gse.harvard.edu/news-impact/2013/09/whats-the-big-idea/#ixzz2hJ4nzpsh
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As ‘Above,’ So ‘Below’: Leadership as Learning at #EdLeader21′s PLC Event | chris.thinnes.me
Leading IS learning.
HT @GrantLichtman
Outstanding recap of work, progress, sharing at #edleader21 via @CurtisCFEE http://t.co/rvk8G69lD1 @kenkay21 So many brushfires burning! -
Part of the untold iPhone story
Not getting it perfect, but prototyping to learn and improve. A part of a case study re: iPhone.
HT @TylerThigpen
Reminds me of putting together #TDed http://t.co/o7eN8lcPoC @EmilyBreite @boadams1 @TJEdwards62 @TheRealJamCam @StrotherZach @KristynGatesA
The Cardboard Challenge @K4MVPSchool #MVPSchool

Today, Lower School students at Mount Vernon Presbyterian School participated in the Cardboard Challenge, inspired by Caine’s Arcade.
People from 41 countries took part – more than 78,900 participants. Only two organizations in the state of Georgia (U.S.A.) flexed their scissors, spread their tape, and exercised their design muscles for the Cardboard Challenge. Thanks to collaboration among the faculty at Mount Vernon, and thanks to the creative confidence of our students, the Mustangs were in that number!
Mary Cantwell (@scitechyedu) set up a time-elapse camera to record the coordinated, staged efforts of five grade levels working in 45-minute shifts. So, we should be able to see the action from start to finish before too long.
Here’s the message Mary sent to invite the architects and engineers:
The DEETS:
Challenge: Students will be challenged to imagine and create the metropolises of the world! (decided we needed more than just ATL)
Time: 45 min blocks of building/play time; Sign Up Here [link removed] if you want to participate
Do B4 Arriving: Partner/Trio groups – have them research famous/interesting buildings/structures from around the world, plan out what they want to build, sketch it (with boxes in mind), and arrive on the CityBox party with a Plan of Action
AND/OR The HR selects a city together – plans out what they will build to represent different aspects of the city.
AND/OR The HR decides to create and build a fictional city/town and plans out all they want and need in this city (could be connected to a novel study, a story being studied, a SS moment in history)
Show Up. Respect what has already been created. Stake out your space. Get your boxes, imagine, create, play.
Mary Cantwell
People, Needs, Empathy
What an amazing sight to see the buildings take shape and form! At carpool this afternoon, I asked my typical question to a bunch of the students: What was the most incredible thing you did and learned today?
Usually I get a myriad of responses. Today, though, they ALL talked about their buildings – the Coliseum, Hancock Building, Notre Dame, Hippodrome, and the Taj Mahal, just to name a few. Zach even explained to me how he built the Burj Khalifa – the tallest skyscraper in the world!