Into the Driver's Seat
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Into the Driver's Seat
Building learners' independence through thoughtful technology use
Curated by Jim Lerman
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Rescooped by Jim Lerman from Learning & Mind & Brain
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5 Interactive Online Learning Strategies You Don’t Want to Miss

5 Interactive Online Learning Strategies You Don’t Want to Miss | Into the Driver's Seat | Scoop.it
A teacher or instructor is the driving force behind any classroom learning session. He/she communicates topical knowledge with the learners, engages them with various discussions or questions, clears their doubts, and ensures their attention doesn’t stray much during the course. An e-learning course has to do all of the above, only without the presence of an instructor. That’s where the real challenge lies.

To compensate for the absence of a teacher and communicate better with learners, e-learning courses use interactive elements. Interactive learning makes your employees part of the learning process as opposed to being passive spectators. For topics that are difficult on the mind, interactive learning techniques help take the edge off and ensure necessary knowledge reaches the target audience. Interactivity largely increases the appeal of your course as it ceases to be a bland entity with loads of content, and becomes something that can facilitate communication.

Via Miloš Bajčetić
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Rescooped by Jim Lerman from Lyseo.org (ICT in High School)
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Teachers: your guide to learning strategies that really work

Teachers: your guide to learning strategies that really work | Into the Driver's Seat | Scoop.it

"Research on effective learning reveals that an awful lot of what goes on in the classroom simply doesn’t matter. There are many pointless activities that take up valuable time in the name of engagement, merely demonstrating progress as opposed to actually making progress. Often, these approaches not only have limited impact on student learning but can have a hugely detrimental impact on teacher workload and wellbeing.

There is significant evidence to suggest that teachers should prune back what they do and focus on a more streamlined approach in the classroom. So it’s less about spending hours cutting things up and putting them in envelopes, and more about creating conditions in which students can gain long-lasting knowledge that can be applied in a range of situations. The following six principles are a distillation of key research on what really matters in the classroom."


Via John Evans, Mika Auramo
Ashley Hoyer's comment, November 16, 2017 9:59 PM
@Tera S. Ellis You're right- it is possible that they could become a behavior problem. That makes me think of a child in my classroom- he hasn't been identified in our TAG program; however, I will be recommending him for next year. He tends to distract others and interrupt the learning of others quite possibly because he is completed and not being challenged enough.
Cheryl Turner's comment, November 16, 2017 11:13 PM
Ashley and Tera , thanks for your comments but you are misunderstanding the definition of cognitive load. It doesn't have any thing to do with gifted learners not being stimulated. It has to do with the amount of information any person can handle focusing on at any one time. For instance, if you are trying to do a difficult math problem while listening to a challenging jazz riff or perhaps watch a movie at the same time, the cognitive load of those tasks in combination is going to be excessive. in that situation, you would not be effective at the math problem, because you have increased the cognitive load of the task. You have not increased the difficulty level of the task, in terms of its abstractness or the level of challenge for the mind trying to figure it out, but you have made the conditions less than optimal for that mind to operate on that task.
Ashley Hoyer's comment, November 19, 2017 4:12 PM
@Cheryl Turner I really appreciate the clarification!