Educators guide: Difference between revisions

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== Talking to other XO teachers ==
== Talking to other XO teachers ==
[[http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Classroom_2.0_XO_Educator_Group Classroom 2.0 XO Educator Group]]
[http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Classroom_2.0_XO_Educator_Group Classroom 2.0 XO Educator Group]

[http://classroom20.ning.com/group/xo Classroom 2.0 group of educators interested in the XO]
[http://classroom20.ning.com/group/xo Classroom 2.0 group of educators interested in the XO]



Revision as of 04:02, 14 December 2007

Really, a facilitator's guide, ideally, this page serves as a guide for parents, teachers and other students who are interested in leading students with the XO as a constructivist learning tool.

Workflow for facilitation planning

Lesson plans in a constructivist or inquiry-based scenario are really plans for facilitation of learning, with the teacher role being one of facilitator rather than the source of all knowledge.

You can loosely structure lessons, allowing student questions to drive the learning process without sidetracking it. These plans could follow a general outline of:

Setting the foundation and discovering students' prior knowledge

Exploring, determining how questions for exploration are chosen, how to manage investigations and group students

Connecting concepts, figuring out how to help students reflect on their investigations, promote dialog between students to communicate their findings, and critically reflect on their investigation and the process

Collaborating and sharing, determining how to help students share their new knowledge to act on their new mental models

Workflow for daily use of the XO

Refer to the Simplified User Guide for many of the daily maintenance and exploration tasks you can do with the XO laptop.

Basics of constructivist learning theory

Rather than using teaching as a term because of the connotation of lecture-based or non-inquiry-based learning that can be associated with the term "teaching," a learning intervention can be used to described guiding a student to understanding.

Think of an intervention as a task where activities in context provide learners with an opportunity to discover and collaboratively construct meaning as the intervention unfolds.

With this mind shift, learners are each treated as unique individuals, and instructors act as facilitators rather than as teachers. Parents, siblings, classmates, other aged kids, any of these people can be facilitators.

Additional reading

Understanding why the XO is important to education

Scenarios about extra practice on XO basics, based on age of child

(Look at LeapFrog's sample content)


Talking to other XO teachers

Classroom 2.0 XO Educator Group

Classroom 2.0 group of educators interested in the XO

Getting help with the XO

[Support]

Getting help with the school server

[School server]