Slides from a workshop on effective use of IWBs (SMARTboards) in the Basic French classroom. Hosted by Bureau de l'éducation française, Winnipeg, 16 March 2011.
Introduction à l'Analyse et conception
des systèmes d’information en 1ère année d'IUT Informatique
* Système d'information
* Analyse et Conception : Phases de Développement du logiciel
* La Complexité du logiciel
* Votre rôle dans l'entreprise
Behind Their Eyes - making thinking visible is not enough
Walk into any classroom and watch the breakneck pace at which teachers are working hard to help students learn. Mind you, if we don’t uncover what students are thinking while learning, they may be running down the wrong path. OK, so we need ways to make student thinking visible. Seeing their thinking is important, but we also need to create the time and space for teachers to absorb, reflect, and act on what their students thinking reveals. This workshop shares strategies both for making student thinking visible and for creating time and space for teachers to meaningfully act on what they learn about what’s going on behind their eyes.
“If you really want to understand something, try changing it.” - Kurt Lewin
As the Director of Learning for a school division made up of 18 schools, my job is to help lead the largest change initiative ever undertaken in our school community. One of the most important, difficult, messy things any school leader does is lead change. While we can learn from the change leadership of others, copying their work most often leads to failure. Success is more likely to come from adapting others work to our own context. In this workshop I share the journey we’ve undertaken collectively in our schools; how we developed a shared vision, cultivated collaborative cultures, maintained a focus on deep learning, and wrestle with the nuances of accountability. Informed by the latest research on change management in education, we also model strategies for fostering deep learning conversations in your schools. We’ll engage in some deeper learning conversations together and take back a wealth of ideas you can adapt to your own context. Developing collaborative cultures is careful and precise work that has profound impact when carried out well. So how do you do that? Come, let’s learn together. Good people are important, but good cultures are moreso.
In a world where knowledge is more a verb than a noun how do we foster deep learning in our students? Good questions cause thinking. Unfortunately, many of the questions regularly asked in classrooms focus on knowledge as a noun. This presentation will explore inquiry as a pedagogical stance and the effective use of thinking and learning tools in the classroom. We will work together to model teaching practices that lead to students co-constructing a networked (real world) rather than hierarchical (artificial) understanding of their world regardless of grade level or discipline.
Participants will leave this workshop with a toolkit of research based questioning and thinking strategies they can begin using with their students tomorrow.
The document is a presentation about digital citizenship given by Darren Kuropatwa at the Building Learning Communities Conference in Boston, MA in July 2017. It discusses the importance of digital citizenship and responding to adversity with persistent kindness. It provides examples of digital citizenship issues and scenarios for discussion. It encourages participants to think about their own digital footprint and how to be good digital citizens.
Presented at the Riding the Wave Conference in Gimli, Manitoba. May 2017.
In two words, you remember the whole story: glass slipper, sour grapes, cold porridge. You remember more than facts, you recall relationships & deeper connections between characters. Some of the powerful ways we leverage digital for deeper learning includes challenging sources of information (fake news), exploring bias (developing empathy through multiple perspectives), and creating powerful feedback loops that foster deeper learning.
Powerful narratives, in a word or two, bring to mind a wealth of ideas & relationships; more than just facts. How can we find stories that make our teaching sticky and help kids find, and more importantly tell, stories that make learning stick? This workshop will equip teachers with the skills & knowledge to foster deeper learning across the curriculum by intentionally leveraging digital tools to foster deeper learning.
Tales of Learning and the Gifts of Footprints v4.2Darren Kuropatwa
This document appears to be a presentation about digital learning and storytelling. It discusses shifting from compliance to care, private to public learning, and consumer to participatory models. It addresses what digital storytellers look like and principles of learning including starting where students are, learning being done by and for students, students talking about learning, having learning targets, and feedback. It encourages generosity, sharing tales of learning, and giving the gifts of footprints.
Presented at the Richmond District Conference, Feb 2017.
A series of stories woven together to start a conversation with middle and high school students, teachers, and parents about living our lives on and offline (on The Fourth Screen) more thoughtfully.
This talk focuses primarily on the ideas of Empathy, Empowerment & Persistent Kindness and shares resources teachers can use to lead these sorts of conversations with their own students.
Slides to support a master class on making student thinking visible through practical hands-on activities and structured around Dylan Wiliam's work on formative assessment and active learning. Held at the BYTE Conference 2017 in Portage la Prairie, Manitoba.
A group of educators from the BYTE Conference 2017 (Build Your Teaching Experience) share their ideas about learning as a series of visual metaphors they found on their phones.
The document discusses storytelling and how it can be used as a tool for learning. It suggests that storytelling allows students to think in metaphors and learn through stories. It provides examples of how digital tools like QR codes and apps can be used to incorporate storytelling into the classroom. It also outlines some rules of thumb for using storytelling, such as personalizing tasks to students' experiences, collaborating on group projects, and getting feedback from both inside and outside the classroom.
In a world where knowledge is more a verb than a noun how do we foster deep learning in our students? Good questions cause thinking. Unfortunately, many of the questions regularly asked in classrooms focus on knowledge as a noun. This presentation will explore the effective use of thinking and learning tools in the classroom. We will work together to model teaching practices that lead to students co-constructing a networked (real world) rather than hierarchical (artificial) understanding of their world regardless of grade level or discipline.
Participants leave this workshop with a toolkit of research based questioning and thinking strategies they can begin using with their students tomorrow.
This document contains multiple sections on topics related to technology and its impact on society, including how the internet allows information to be easily shared but also persist indefinitely, issues around online privacy and bullying, and ways for parents to support their children's safe and responsible internet use. The document advocates for empowering youth and promoting kindness both online and off.
Slides to support a master class on making student thinking visible through practical hands-on activities and structured around Dylan Wiliam's work on formative assessment and active learning.
A group of educators from the Anderson Union High School & Redding School Districts and share their ideas about learning as a series of visual metaphors.
In a world where knowledge is more a verb than a noun how do we foster deep learning in our students? Good questions cause thinking. Unfortunately, many of the questions regularly asked in classrooms focus on knowledge as a noun. This presentation will explore the effective use of thinking and learning tools in the classroom. We will work together to model teaching practices that lead to students co-constructing a networked (real world) rather than hierarchical (artificial) understanding of their world regardless of grade level or discipline.
Participants leave this workshop with a toolkit of research based questioning and thinking strategies they can begin using with their students tomorrow.
Introduction à l'Analyse et conception
des systèmes d’information en 1ère année d'IUT Informatique
* Système d'information
* Analyse et Conception : Phases de Développement du logiciel
* La Complexité du logiciel
* Votre rôle dans l'entreprise
Behind Their Eyes - making thinking visible is not enough
Walk into any classroom and watch the breakneck pace at which teachers are working hard to help students learn. Mind you, if we don’t uncover what students are thinking while learning, they may be running down the wrong path. OK, so we need ways to make student thinking visible. Seeing their thinking is important, but we also need to create the time and space for teachers to absorb, reflect, and act on what their students thinking reveals. This workshop shares strategies both for making student thinking visible and for creating time and space for teachers to meaningfully act on what they learn about what’s going on behind their eyes.
“If you really want to understand something, try changing it.” - Kurt Lewin
As the Director of Learning for a school division made up of 18 schools, my job is to help lead the largest change initiative ever undertaken in our school community. One of the most important, difficult, messy things any school leader does is lead change. While we can learn from the change leadership of others, copying their work most often leads to failure. Success is more likely to come from adapting others work to our own context. In this workshop I share the journey we’ve undertaken collectively in our schools; how we developed a shared vision, cultivated collaborative cultures, maintained a focus on deep learning, and wrestle with the nuances of accountability. Informed by the latest research on change management in education, we also model strategies for fostering deep learning conversations in your schools. We’ll engage in some deeper learning conversations together and take back a wealth of ideas you can adapt to your own context. Developing collaborative cultures is careful and precise work that has profound impact when carried out well. So how do you do that? Come, let’s learn together. Good people are important, but good cultures are moreso.
In a world where knowledge is more a verb than a noun how do we foster deep learning in our students? Good questions cause thinking. Unfortunately, many of the questions regularly asked in classrooms focus on knowledge as a noun. This presentation will explore inquiry as a pedagogical stance and the effective use of thinking and learning tools in the classroom. We will work together to model teaching practices that lead to students co-constructing a networked (real world) rather than hierarchical (artificial) understanding of their world regardless of grade level or discipline.
Participants will leave this workshop with a toolkit of research based questioning and thinking strategies they can begin using with their students tomorrow.
The document is a presentation about digital citizenship given by Darren Kuropatwa at the Building Learning Communities Conference in Boston, MA in July 2017. It discusses the importance of digital citizenship and responding to adversity with persistent kindness. It provides examples of digital citizenship issues and scenarios for discussion. It encourages participants to think about their own digital footprint and how to be good digital citizens.
Presented at the Riding the Wave Conference in Gimli, Manitoba. May 2017.
In two words, you remember the whole story: glass slipper, sour grapes, cold porridge. You remember more than facts, you recall relationships & deeper connections between characters. Some of the powerful ways we leverage digital for deeper learning includes challenging sources of information (fake news), exploring bias (developing empathy through multiple perspectives), and creating powerful feedback loops that foster deeper learning.
Powerful narratives, in a word or two, bring to mind a wealth of ideas & relationships; more than just facts. How can we find stories that make our teaching sticky and help kids find, and more importantly tell, stories that make learning stick? This workshop will equip teachers with the skills & knowledge to foster deeper learning across the curriculum by intentionally leveraging digital tools to foster deeper learning.
Tales of Learning and the Gifts of Footprints v4.2Darren Kuropatwa
This document appears to be a presentation about digital learning and storytelling. It discusses shifting from compliance to care, private to public learning, and consumer to participatory models. It addresses what digital storytellers look like and principles of learning including starting where students are, learning being done by and for students, students talking about learning, having learning targets, and feedback. It encourages generosity, sharing tales of learning, and giving the gifts of footprints.
Presented at the Richmond District Conference, Feb 2017.
A series of stories woven together to start a conversation with middle and high school students, teachers, and parents about living our lives on and offline (on The Fourth Screen) more thoughtfully.
This talk focuses primarily on the ideas of Empathy, Empowerment & Persistent Kindness and shares resources teachers can use to lead these sorts of conversations with their own students.
Slides to support a master class on making student thinking visible through practical hands-on activities and structured around Dylan Wiliam's work on formative assessment and active learning. Held at the BYTE Conference 2017 in Portage la Prairie, Manitoba.
A group of educators from the BYTE Conference 2017 (Build Your Teaching Experience) share their ideas about learning as a series of visual metaphors they found on their phones.
The document discusses storytelling and how it can be used as a tool for learning. It suggests that storytelling allows students to think in metaphors and learn through stories. It provides examples of how digital tools like QR codes and apps can be used to incorporate storytelling into the classroom. It also outlines some rules of thumb for using storytelling, such as personalizing tasks to students' experiences, collaborating on group projects, and getting feedback from both inside and outside the classroom.
In a world where knowledge is more a verb than a noun how do we foster deep learning in our students? Good questions cause thinking. Unfortunately, many of the questions regularly asked in classrooms focus on knowledge as a noun. This presentation will explore the effective use of thinking and learning tools in the classroom. We will work together to model teaching practices that lead to students co-constructing a networked (real world) rather than hierarchical (artificial) understanding of their world regardless of grade level or discipline.
Participants leave this workshop with a toolkit of research based questioning and thinking strategies they can begin using with their students tomorrow.
This document contains multiple sections on topics related to technology and its impact on society, including how the internet allows information to be easily shared but also persist indefinitely, issues around online privacy and bullying, and ways for parents to support their children's safe and responsible internet use. The document advocates for empowering youth and promoting kindness both online and off.
Slides to support a master class on making student thinking visible through practical hands-on activities and structured around Dylan Wiliam's work on formative assessment and active learning.
A group of educators from the Anderson Union High School & Redding School Districts and share their ideas about learning as a series of visual metaphors.
In a world where knowledge is more a verb than a noun how do we foster deep learning in our students? Good questions cause thinking. Unfortunately, many of the questions regularly asked in classrooms focus on knowledge as a noun. This presentation will explore the effective use of thinking and learning tools in the classroom. We will work together to model teaching practices that lead to students co-constructing a networked (real world) rather than hierarchical (artificial) understanding of their world regardless of grade level or discipline.
Participants leave this workshop with a toolkit of research based questioning and thinking strategies they can begin using with their students tomorrow.
This document contains a collection of images, quotes, and short passages on topics related to online communities, sharing, and empowerment through technology. The snippets discuss how the internet allows information to be easily shared, encourages learning, and can help empower victims of bullying. The overarching theme is about the positive impact community and connection through online platforms can provide.
Slides to support a master class at the Building Learning Communities Conference in Boston, MA. 18 July 2016.
How can we make learning sticky using powerful storytelling frameworks that tap into peoples' emotions? How do we involve all students in creating digital content that doesn't also create hours of content for teachers to assess? This interactive session will showcase Digital Storytelling activities teachers can use in class tomorrow! Document student learning & foster reflective ways for students to share their learning. 1st: we play! Then we'll discuss how to practically adapt these ideas, make them your own, and figure out what sort of infrastructure needs to be in place to support these kinds of powerful learning experiences. We’ll learn how to exercise your students' & your own creativity muscles and share simple strategies for collecting & publishing student work.
Slides in support of a professional learning day for administrators in Hanover School Division focused on developing a common language & understanding of Deep Learning Design.
Newsletter SPW Agriculture en province du Luxembourg du 12-06-24BenotGeorges3
Les informations et évènements agricoles en province du Luxembourg et en Wallonie susceptibles de vous intéresser et diffusés par le SPW Agriculture, Direction de la Recherche et du Développement, Service extérieur de Libramont.
Le fichier :
Les newsletters : https://agriculture.wallonie.be/home/recherche-developpement/acteurs-du-developpement-et-de-la-vulgarisation/les-services-exterieurs-de-la-direction-de-la-recherche-et-du-developpement/newsletters-des-services-exterieurs-de-la-vulgarisation/newsletters-du-se-de-libramont.html
Bonne lecture et bienvenue aux activités proposées.
#Agriculture #Wallonie #Newsletter #Recherche #Développement #Vulgarisation #Evènement #Information #Formation #Innovation #Législation #PAC #SPW #ServicepublicdeWallonie
Cycle de Formation Théâtrale 2024 / 2025Billy DEYLORD
Pour la Saison 2024 / 2025, l'association « Le Bateau Ivre » propose un Cycle de formation théâtrale pour particuliers amateurs et professionnels des arts de la scène enfants, adolescents et adultes à l'Espace Saint-Jean de Melun (77). 108 heures de formation, d’octobre 2024 à juin 2025, à travers trois cours hebdomadaires (« Pierrot ou la science de la Scène », « Montage de spectacles », « Le Mime et son Répertoire ») et un stage annuel « Tournez dans un film de cinéma muet ».
Conseils pour Les Jeunes | Conseils de La Vie| Conseil de La JeunesseOscar Smith
Besoin des conseils pour les Jeunes ? Le document suivant est plein des conseils de la Vie ! C’est vraiment un document conseil de la jeunesse que tout jeune devrait consulter.
Voir version video:
➡https://youtu.be/7ED4uTW0x1I
Sur la chaine:👇
👉https://youtube.com/@kbgestiondeprojets
Aimeriez-vous donc…
-réussir quand on est jeune ?
-avoir de meilleurs conseils pour réussir jeune ?
- qu’on vous offre des conseils de la vie ?
Ce document est une ressource qui met en évidence deux obstacles qui empêchent les jeunes de mener une vie épanouie : l'inaction et le pessimisme.
1) Découvrez comment l'inaction, c'est-à-dire le fait de ne pas agir ou d'agir alors qu'on le devrait ou qu'on est censé le faire, est un obstacle à une vie épanouie ;
> Comment l'inaction affecte-t-elle l'avenir du jeune ? Que devraient plutôt faire les jeunes pour se racheter et récupérer ce qui leur appartient ? A découvrir dans le document ;
2) Le pessimisme, c'est douter de tout ! Les jeunes doutent que la génération plus âgée ne soit jamais orientée vers la bonne volonté. Les jeunes se sentent toujours mal à l'aise face à la ruse et la volonté politique de la génération plus âgée ! Cet état de doute extrême empêche les jeunes de découvrir les opportunités offertes par les politiques et les dispositifs en faveur de la jeunesse. Voulez-vous en savoir plus sur ces opportunités que la plupart des jeunes ne découvrent pas à cause de leur pessimisme ? Consultez cette ressource gratuite et profitez-en !
En rapport avec les " conseils pour les jeunes, " cette ressource peut aussi aider les internautes cherchant :
➡les conseils pratiques pour les jeunes
➡conseils pour réussir
➡jeune investisseur conseil
➡comment investir son argent quand on est jeune
➡conseils d'écriture jeunes auteurs
➡conseils pour les jeunes auteurs
➡comment aller vers les jeunes
➡conseil des jeunes citoyens
➡les conseils municipaux des jeunes
➡conseils municipaux des jeunes
➡conseil des jeunes en mairie
➡qui sont les jeunes
➡projet pour les jeunes
➡conseil des jeunes paris
➡infos pour les jeunes
➡conseils pour les jeunes
➡Quels sont les bienfaits de la jeunesse ?
➡Quels sont les 3 qualités de la jeunesse ?
➡Comment gérer les problèmes des adolescents ?
➡les conseils de jeunes
➡guide de conseils de jeunes
Formation M2i - Onboarding réussi - les clés pour intégrer efficacement vos n...M2i Formation
Améliorez l'intégration de vos nouveaux collaborateurs grâce à notre formation flash sur l'onboarding. Découvrez des stratégies éprouvées et des outils pratiques pour transformer l'intégration en une expérience fluide et efficace, et faire de chaque nouvelle recrue un atout pour vos équipes.
Les points abordés lors de la formation :
- Les fondamentaux d'un onboarding réussi
- Les outils et stratégies pour un onboarding efficace
- L'engagement et la culture d'entreprise
- L'onboarding continu et l'amélioration continue
Formation offerte animée à distance avec notre expert Eric Collin
1. Le TBI ouvre les
fenêtres au monde!
L'efficacité d'un Tableau Blanc
Interactif (TBI) en français de base
eBeam Edge by flickr user eBeam
Arla Strauss Darren Kuropatwa
Conseillère pédagogique Conseiller pédagogique
Bureau de l’éducation française Bureau de l’éducation française
Éducation Manitoba Éducation Manitoba
16 mars 2011 16 mars 2011
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11. Fort Myer Health and Wellness event - "Let's Move!" (http://www.flickr.com/photos/commissary/5217471901/) / Defense Commissary
Agency (http://www.flickr.com/photos/commissary/) / CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/)
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13. Mormon Boys Eat (http://www.flickr.com/photos/moregoodfoundation/
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moregoodfoundation/) / http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/
2.0/ (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/)
14.
15. Je suis une pizza!
Ô, je suis une pizza Je suis une pizza
avec du fromage du poivron vert.
beaucoup de sauce Je vais du four
des tomates jusqu'à la boîte.
des oignons, des champignons Dans la voiture
épices mélangées. à l'envers,
Je suis une pizza, prête à manger. je suis une pizza, tombée par terre.
Je suis une pizza J'étais une pizza,
pepperoni trésor de la cuisine.
pas d'anchois Je suis une pizza,
ou « Phoney Bologna ». tombée en ruine!
Je suis une pizza.
Téléphone-moi.
Je suis une pizza, apporte-moi chez toi.
par Charlotte Diamond
17. Mormon Boys Eat (http://www.flickr.com/photos/moregoodfoundation/
5138600365/) / More Good Foundation (http://www.flickr.com/photos/
moregoodfoundation/) / http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/
2.0/ (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/)
18. lier les idées
Chain Link par membre de flickr Matti Mattila
http://www.flickr.com/photos/mattimattila/4001225904/
19. Mormon Boys Eat (http://www.flickr.com/photos/moregoodfoundation/
5138600365/) / More Good Foundation (http://www.flickr.com/photos/
moregoodfoundation/) / http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/
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moregoodfoundation/) / http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/
2.0/ (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/)
21. Mormon Boys Eat (http://www.flickr.com/photos/moregoodfoundation/
5138600365/) / More Good Foundation (http://www.flickr.com/photos/
moregoodfoundation/) / http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/
2.0/ (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/)
22. Mormon Boys Eat (http://www.flickr.com/photos/moregoodfoundation/
5138600365/) / More Good Foundation (http://www.flickr.com/photos/
moregoodfoundation/) / http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/
2.0/ (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/)
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par la fenêtre aujourd'hui ?
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français avec vos élèves ?
Autres questions
et suggestions ?
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