![]() |
Podcasts | Community | Create a Podcast |
|
|
|||||||
Turkey CrossingHow to get connected with classroom 2.0 tools and most importantly how to get connected with you students. |
|||||||
Why does lecturing sometimes work?
July 31, 2007 06:00 PM PDT
Lectures can be very effective...so what do you think about that. At least some can...well at least one or two a year under the right circumstances, or maybe everyday if given by the right person and during the right time and...well...I know that some of my best classes, most memorable classes and teachers, most life changing classes have been lectures. So you can't tell me that lectures don't work. Some do. Why?
Music by Runaway Hudson...check em' out! |
Podcast SummaryThis is a podcast about education and my attempt to use classroom 2.0 tools in my classroom. I examine topics that often go unmentioned in education classes, professional development, and journals. In this crazy world of NCLB and amazing technologies entering the classroom, this podcast is a reminder that we need to first give children our love, not our thoughts. If you are focused on getting your kids to get higher test scores and learn facts, this is not the podcast for you. If you are focused on building relationships with your students and letting them develop the skills needed to survive in the 21st Century, then take a listen. My Blog and wiki http://www.blogush.edublogs.org
Class wiki and Blog www.collaborationnation.wikispaces.com
The following story captures the spirit of my podcast. I awoke early, as I often did, just before sunrise to walk by the ocean's edge and greet the new day. As I moved through the misty dawn, I focused on a faint, far away motion. I saw a youth, bending and reaching and flailing arms, dancing on the beach, no doubt in celebration of the perfect day soon to begin.
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://www.google-analytics.com/urchin.js">
About Paul<!--cut and paste--> Fans of this ShowFavorite LinksPaul's Friends
Contact MeSubscribe to this Podcast
![]() Program Archive
|
||||||