Welcome All Learners!

I believe that learning is a lifelong journey. I conduct workshops and training sessions helping learners of all ages develop their skills in critical thinking, reading, and communication. This site is an ongoing presentation of the conversations along my learning path. So join me.

Together We Are Smarter!


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November 2007

Chalk Talk 11/30/07

Chalktalk Chalk Talk Friday represents conversations and brilliance discovered on my travels 'round the Blogosphere.  From professional to personal development, these posts and links have in some way touched my head or my heart.

Be sure to check out this week's finds:

  • Cosmeo: This is a great online homework toolkit for grades k-12 from the Discovery Channel. It includes over 30,000 videos and math tutorials, close to 150,000 reference articles. Always educational and very interactive.

  • K-12 Online Conference 2007: Checkout this FREE conference for educators by educators from around the world. It is open to anyone interested in innovative ways Web 2.0 tools and technologies can be used to improve learning. This website has forty presentations that can be downloaded and viewed. TONS of conversations that will stretch your thinking!
  • Motivation Matters: Kevin Bushweller, assistant managing editor for edweek.org, explores what works and what doesn't in this great blog about the question most on educators minds: What really motivates students to learn?

  • LeaderTalk is the first group blog written by school leaders for school leaders. This blog is a wonderful resource for teachers and administrators. Lots of great insights and inspiration on teaching, learning, and leadership. Recently LeaderTalk was nominated in the 2007 Edublog Awards for Best Group Blog-way to go guys!

  • Edutopa Created and funded by The George Lucas Educational Foundation, this nonprofit site celebrates innovation in schools. You will find links to literally hundreds of relevant resources for teachers and students. This is definitely worth your time!

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Writer...Who Me?

I have had a blast talking to students about the way writers write, the way they think and work, and most importantly who they are as writers themselves. As I invited them to explore their WRITING TERRITORIES with me, I expected them to use the time to find out about who they were as writers and more importantly what they could do. I have been equally moved by what I was able to learn about them that reaches far beyond their writing potential.

5_2


Take a peek with me:

  • What do you hear whispered beneath the lines and phrases?
  • What can we learn about this student?
  • What would YOU say to these young writers to show here that you were listening?



Related Posts:

- Introducing Writing Territories
- Writing Essentials
- The Conversation Begins: Intro to Writing Workshop

Together We Are Smarter. What's Your Take? Comment Here.

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A Vision Of Students Today

A big thank you to David Warlick, via my RSS feed of his 2 Cents Worth blog for sharing with his readers a video created by Dr. Michael Wesch, in collaboration with 200 of his students at Kansas State University, entitled "A Vision of Students Today."

This short video summarizing some of the most important characteristics of students today - how they learn, what they need to learn, their goals, hopes, dreams, what their lives will be like, and what kinds of changes they will experience in their lifetime.

With over 1,000,000 views on YouTube, the project is getting strong reaction.  In reaction to the overwhelming response to video, Dr. Wesch explains his thinking behind the work:

Students are learning to read, navigate, and create within a digital information environment that we scarcely address in the classroom. The great myth is that these “digital natives” know more about this new information environment than we do. But here’s the reality: they may be experts in entertaining themselves online, but they know almost nothing about educating themselves online. They may be learning about this digital information environment despite us, but they are not reaching the levels of understanding that are necessary as this digital information environment becomes increasingly pervasive in all of our lives. All of the classic skills we learned in relation to a print-based information universe are important, and must now be augmented by a critical understanding of the workings of digital information...

To read the entire post and or to get a full transcript of the video, check out his blog Digital Ethnography.

Regardless of your reaction, it is an excellent watch and a sure conversation ignighter. 
Looking forward to hearing your reactions on your blog or mine~!

Together We Are Smarter. What's Your Take? Comment Here.

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Chalk Talk 11/23/07

Chalktalk Chalk Talk Friday represents conversations and brilliance discovered on my travels 'round the Blogosphere.  From professional to personal development, these posts and links have in some way touched my head or my heart.

Here are the great posts I discovered this week:

Chalk Talk Friday represents conversations and brilliance discovered on my travels 'round the Blogosphere.  From professional to personal development, these posts and links have in some way touched my head or my heart.

Here are the great posts I discovered this week:

  • Can Kindle change the way we read? Explore a great discussion with Dr. Ellen Weber at Brain Based Business as she explores the lastest on the new Kindle ebook reading toy. Lots to ponder about this new reading gadget!
  • Kids are amazing teachers! CoolCatTeacher had her students explaining Thomas Friedman's first trend "Connecting the World Online" using the concept of "Play" from Dan Pink's book A Whole New Mind. Incredible!
  • Bud the Teacher has a powerful article in the English Journal "New Voices" entitled Linkin (B)logs: A New Literacy of Hyperlinks. It is a terrific article speaking about the read/write Web. Definitely worth the read!
  • Read/WriteWeb is a popular weblog that provides Web Technology news, reviews and analysis. This growing network of blogs about web technology is a great resource for other sites as well. While you are there, also check out last100 (a blog about Digital Lifestyle), AltSearchEngines (about search) and Read/WriteTalk (a podcasting show about the people behind the Web)
  • Looking for a great set of ready to use Web exercises and handouts? Created by Debbie Abilock, editor of Knowledge Quest, Noodletools is definitely the place. In both HTML and PDF formats, you will have access to materials that will help you and your students sharpen their 21st Century Literacy Skills!

In both HTML and PDF formats, you will have access to materials that will help you and your students sharpen their 21st Century Literacy Skills!

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Giving Thanks

"I awoke this morning with devout thanksgiving for my friends, the old and the new." - Ralph Waldo Emerson


Happy Thanksgiving Friends,

There is no better time to express my appreciation for all those I am grateful for. This is a day for being with family and friends, so have a wonderful Holiday with those you love. Take this time to give gratitude to all who make your life blessed.  I am so fortunate to have met so many incredible minds and hearts through my work and new blog.  It is month three for me, and I feel like I have lived a lifetime in the conversations we have had.  Thank you to all of you who make the world, both on and off line a truly better place.  God Bless.

Gratitude_2

Photo on Flicker by BidWiya

His wonderful story behind the photo:

There is a proverb that says, who does not thank for little will not thank for much. The dried leaves symbolize that ‘the days will pass, the leaves will dry and I have still not given you enough to say thank you’. That’s basically the whole idea behind it! In this image, I am expressing my own gratitude.. I mean, feeling gratitude and not expressing it is like wrapping a present and not giving it. Is it not? One can pay back the loan of gold, but one dies forever in debt to those who are kind…

Thank you!


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8 Minutes More PLEEEEASE!

Money_bagpln Each conversation we have with students in some way deposits knowledge and  experiences that can be "withdrawn" for future use.  I knew that I was a part of a million dollar conversation when I heard these words: 8 more minutes please!

It was 2:21 on a Friday afternoon.  I was teaching a lesson to a group of high school seniors.  I was not working the "checklist" the students were used to.  As I explained to the students, my purpose of my lesson was to share with them some of the struggles that some of my undergraduate students had there first weeks and months in college. 

I began the conversation by sharing a story of my struggle as a student making the transition from high school to college. I spent many hours trying to figure out the right way to study, the right way to take notes, the right way to manage myself, and yet in all my education there was never one teacher that stood before me telling me how to learn.  As usual, I got involved in the learning conversation, and looked up at the clock realizing quickly that time for the lesson had run out. 

Thinking that school was letting out, I announced to the students that I would not be able to finish the rest of the "learning how to learn" lesson, but I would share the techniques that helped me with their teacher. Within seconds of the announcement, students looked at me and spoke the words that changed everything for me: "Mrs. Maiers, would you please stay? We have eight more minutes in class left."

I spent the last eight minutes of that Friday modeling and demonstrating ways that learners work things out in order to be as successful and they know they have potential to be.  I asked the students to share with me what this conversation meant to them as a learner.  what did it get them thinking about, what changed for them...most importantly why did they want more?

Here is what they shared:

  • It would be great to know more about how to study right. I think no student really knows it.
  • Yes, I like this because I am extremely worried about college and how to study in college, because you have to learn a lot by yourself. I think we do need to learn about it, but I don’t necessarily think that we should take out our lessons for it.
  • I think that if there was a class like this it would be very helpful in my later education. I would actually understand what was going on in class.
  • This lesson was more than helpful, it should be required!
  • In today’s society people are rushing to and from. We need to learn fast and immediately. I personally like these classes. Love them. I want to learn now, not later.
  • I wish everyone could have this experience. It’s just amazing and I think we should have this opportunity more often.
  • I think this is definitely worth it. So many times I learn stuff, but it’s difficult to apply it systematically to our lives. I really need this stuff to stick to my brain and help me. I don’t want to fake my brain to absorb stuff in an organized way.
  • I would like to learn this now because it will help me more. It would make college simpler.
  • I think that it was good as a refresher to be aware that I don know how to do these things and I am doing these things.
  • I think it will be a great addition to our curriculum. Yes, it may take some time, but in the long run it will benefit us to learn and pick up ideas faster.
  • I think it would be a great idea because then we are all getting the effects of it. It could help for the rest of our lives.
  • I think it would be a good idea to do it every once in awhile because it would help us. We know some of the things but it would help refresh us.
  • I think it would be helpful. They would help us understand and actually get what we are talking and doing in class. A lot of kids never understand fully what’s going on. It would help prepare us.
  • I think this is a great idea to teach, because there have been numerous times when I read stories and I don’t know what is going on and so I just give up on reading the book.
  • I think that all students need to learn how to understand what they are learning. I wish I would have heard the information sooner, because the information will be very helpful. I feel a lot more prepared for college now.Thanks!

In all my years as a classroom teacher, planning instruction, creating lessons, addressing a standards…it is only recently, after exploring success in a broader sense, that I really understood HOW to teach students to be successful learners and not just wish it upon them.  By understanding the anatomy of those who have achieved success, it has allowed me to turn encouragement into action and instruction.  It is my hopes that this same knowledge will afford you the same exciting opportunities with your students.





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Finding Big Ideas: It's as Easy as 1,2,3!

Who says five year olds can not find big ideas in text? This is a new lesson I created for students, (young and old alike) that helps them understand how readers extract "Big Ideas" from text. It is as easy as putting together a puzzle!  Watch and find out for yourself!

RSS Readers click through to watch The Puzzle Lesson video


Related Posts:

- Finding Big Ideas: Nonfiction - Penguins
- What's the Big Idea?

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Don't Judge a Meme By Its Cover

Phil Gerbyshak introduced me quickly to what a blogosphere meme is by "tagging" me on a subject dear to my heart -- books.

Total Number of Books I Own: Over 1,000 if you count books I use in workshops, probably close to 400 if you don't.

Last Book Read: Innovate Like Edison by Michael J. Gelb

Last Book Bought: Reading Doesn't Matter Anymore by David Boothe

Five Meaningful Books:

1.  The Art of Teaching Reading by Lucy Calkins

2.  The Seven Habits of Highly Effectively People by Steven Covey

3.  Bird by Bird by Ann Lamount

4.  How the Brain Learns to Read by Dr. David Sousa

5. Good to Great by Jim Collins

Five People I'm tagging (your turn):

Delaney Kirk

David Warlick

Mike Wagner

David Armano

Pat Hensley

Together We Are Smarter. What's Your Take? Comment Here.

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2007 Edublog Awards - Nominations Open

Nominations The 2007 Edublog Awards nominations are up until November 21, 2007.

The categories (and a few examples):

  1. Best individual blog (2 Cents Worth)
  2. Best group blog (LeaderTalk)
  3. Best new?!?  :-) 
  4. Best resource sharing blog
  5. Best designed blog
  6. Most influential blog post
  7. Best blogged research paper or project
  8. Best teacher blog
  9. Best higher-education student blog(Andy Drish)
  10. Best librarian / library blog
  11. Best educational tech support blog (Always Learning)
  12. Best elearning / corporate education blog
  13. Best educational use of audio
  14. Best educational use of video / visual
  15. Best educational wiki
  16. Best educational use of a social networking service
  17. Best educational use of a virtual world
  18. Best educational use of open source
  19. Digizen’s 13-19 competition (more info)
  20. Conveners award

These are a few worth checking out.  This is a wonderful way to support education and our colleagues working towards making us the best 21st Century teachers and learners we can be.  Love to hear who you would like to see nominated!

Together We Are Smarter. What's Your Take? Comment Here.

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The Conversation Begins: Intro to Writing Workshop

Here are some highlights from my WRITING TERRITORIES conversation with middle school students this week.  The conversation was fantastic, when it came time to for students to share with me WHO THEY ARE AS WRITERS...pencils were hittin' the paper! Looking forward to sharing their responses soon!

234


Related Posts:

- Listening to Writing
- Introducing Writing Territories

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Learn More about Angela

Angela Maiers
Maiers Educational Svcs, Inc
Des Moines, IA
Ph:515-554-2004
Fx: 801-772-8257

Email me: angela@angelamaiers.com

Why A Blog?

  • Teachers need to be great learners to lead great learners. I believe that learning is a lifelong journey, an ongoing exploration and way of life. I challenge myself and others to always be striving to find and share big ideas in every million dollar conversation.

2008 EduBlog Award Winner

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