Being a
21st century teacher is a challenge for some teachers..
Yah,,
that's the responsibility for teacher to teach students in modern era. Teachers
should maximize the usage of ICT in the classroom as well as develop student's
ability in using ICT.
but,
don't worry.. I've found an interesting article.. It's really good post..
36
Things Every 21st Century Teacher Should Be Able To Do
1.
Select the right platform to communicate.
Whether
you choose a text message, email, social media message, Skype session, or a
Google+ Hangouts depends on who you need to communicate with and why—purpose
and audience. So whether you’re sending an email to a parent when a phone call
is necessary, or responding in a closed Google+ circle,choosing the right
platform is everything.
2. Send
large files.
Email
won’t always work. You can use Evernote or dropbox; yousendit or SugarSync; a
blog or a YouTube channel. Whatever you’re sending, a teacher in 2013 should be
able to get it there quickly, and with minimal hassle from the recipient.
3. Take
a screenshot on PC, Mac, and mobile devices.
Hit the
Print Screen button near your number pad on a keyboard on Windows. Push down
volume rocker and power buttons simultaneously on iOS and Android devices.
Command-Shift-3 on Mac OSX.
4.
Appreciate memes.
Know
what it means to be Rick Roll’d, the difference between a fail and an epic
fail, why Steve is a scumbag, and who sad Keannu is. You may not care, but your
students do. Even if you choose not to speak their language and instead prefer
the king’s tongue, you can at least understand what they’re saying, lol.
5.
Explain how and why to use technology to those who don’t use it.
Not
everyone loves technology. Not only is it not necessary for learning, it’s not
even the most important part of learning (how did Socrates every get along
without twitter?) That being said, it can indeed transform learning given the
right instructional design and learning model. Communicating this to others
that may not use it is increasingly important as a network building strategy
and as a tool to be used locally to change culture.
An RT as
an olive branch.
6. Use
digital media in light of privacy, copyright, and other legal issues.
Terms of
Use, copyrights, spam, phishing, age requirements–the whole ever-evolving and
hopelessly complex shebang. You may never master this, but don’t teach in the
dark.
7.
Communicate clearly.
Tone is
lost when you type. Know this and pre-emptively address is with clarity,
choosing the right platform to communicate, and even smiley faces if you have
to.
8.
Search for, install, organize, use, and delete apps.
This is
dead-simple, but you never know.
9. How
to create, open, use, and share a variety of filetypes.
What are
the benefits of a PDF over a .doc file? When should you send a .wav file and
when you should send an .mp3? How about a .jpg versus a png?
10. Help
students share files.
Students
need help “turning in” digital work. Digital portfolios help, as can blogs and
social media platforms. Learning management systems can too. Whatever you use,
help them figure it out.
11.
Subscribe to and manage YouTube channels, podcasts, learnist and pinterest
boards, and other dynamic sources of digital media.
Self
explanatory, yes?
12.
Create and maintain digital portfolios.
Of your
own work, and for your students. The tools, habits, and strategies to do it
well are accessible to anyone in the 21st century. You know, especially if you
follow any blogs that cover this kind of thing.
13.
Blog.
That
doesn’t mean you have to blog, but blogging is the among the best ways for
students to survey, combine, and share digital media. You may not have the
energy—or desire—to blog, but to effectively teach your students, you should
know the basics.
14.
Share learning data with students.
Sharing
is easy. Sharing visual and digestible data not so much. More on this one below
on #34.
15.
Support students in managing their online “brand.”
And this
starts with what you model–your visible social media profiles, Google search
results for your name. That means a professional image, and no cliché quote
from Gandhi in 24 point yellow font.
16.
Manage your own social media and internet use.
It’s a
tool, not an end. Self-manage accordingly.
17. Plan
around a lack of technology elegantly.
Not all
students have access. Do all that you can to give students that lack it a
similar experience.
18.
Delineate the difference between academics and entrepreneurial learning for
students.
And in a
way that doesn’t completely undercut academic learning, but rather
contextualizes it.
19.
Troubleshoot stuff that breaks.
Be
MacGyver with a keyboard. If the Wi-Fi signal drops, the app freezes, or the
password just won’t take, have a plan.
20. Skim
and process large quantities of information.
Otherwise
you’ll drown in the very thinking and resource stream you’re trying to benefit
from. A powerful combination to use here? An RSS reader like Google Reader
connected to Pocket.
21. Use
the cloud to your advantage.
Offline
access. Automatic syncing. Push notifications on apps. Writing and composition.
Use the cloud.
22.
Model digital citizenship.
To model
it, we have to agree on what it means. We’ll talk more about this one soon, but
for now, these resources should help.
23.
Casually name-drop reddit.
Reddit
is a downright cultish community of active and intelligent forum users that are
addicted to socializing everything. And it’s awesome. If you don’t use it, try
to mention it here and there as if you do (#streetcred), and when students ask
just smile and nod your head a lot.
24.
Support students in finding their own voice.
It’s not
as simple as “band, books, or cheerleading” anymore. With visibility comes
nuance. Now we have facebook groups of cheerleaders who are left-handed and
prefer Fiji water over Dasani 50,000 members strong. Luckily, technology can
step in and help–drawing, music, acting, writing, a charismatic YouTube
channel; it’s now unnecessary for any student to be anonymous and isolated.
25.
Research effectively.
And then
model that effective research for students constantly in highly visible ways.
26. Use
formal or informal learning management systems.
Whether
you use a formal LMS, or just setup a Google+ Circle or community, either can
help frame your curriculum for students and parents.
27.
Leverage the relationship between physical and digital media.
What is
the relationship between the app, the YouTube channel, the podcast, the play,
and the poem? This is something you need to figure out–especially the
English-Language Arts/Literature teachers among you.
28.
Highlight the limits of technology.
If we
don’t understand both the micro and macro impact of technology–the good and the
bad–we’re doomed as a species to be completely overran by it. Sounds dramatic,
but it just might be true.
29.
Connect students with communities using project-based learning.
This can
be one of the most powerful things you do, as it moves the learning from
sterile classrooms to authentic audiences.
30.
Model the value of questions over answers.
This
shift changes the whole tone of the learning process.
31.
Understand how play leads to learning.
Play is
not a whimsical recreation, but a zen-like cognitive resonance that rips
learning out of the hands of well-meaning adults and seeks to self-direct
children by allowing them to experiment, fail, and try again.
32. Use
Game-Based Learning effectively.
That
doesn’t mean to just play video games, or make students play them then ask them
awkward questions about their experience, but to understand how video games
support both academic and authentic learning.
33.
Curate functionally.
What to
save and how to save it? Great questions. And what kind of process do you have
to keep from hoarding digital resources
and actually use all the crap you save? An even better one.
34.
Record, process, mash, publish, and distribute digital media.
Digital
media is likely the future of learning. So, begin the transition.
35.
Visualize learning data for students.
This is
different than just sharing an alphanumeric digit–this is about knowledge,
progress, and the right data and the right time that is packaged in a
highly-digestible way.
36.
Connect with other educators both in person and online.
Don’t be
a twitter diva; don’t be a Luddite. Find a blend.
37.
Personalize learning.
To
genuinely personalize learning for all of your students in a typical K-20
public school or university is impossible (unless we have different definitions
of personalized learning).
All
these information are exactly 21 st century supposed to do..
Yah,
it’s quite hard.. Keep fighting teacher !! :D
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