Scooped by
Robin Good
June 1, 2013 6:36 AM
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To help others learn something they are interested in, one of the most effective approaches is one of providing suggestions, start-off points, tips on resources and playgrounds where the learner can jump into to build his own personalized learning journey.
Huzefa (Zef) Neemuchwala, an entrepreneurial educator with expertise in the application of games and simulations in education, has a very inspiring short post on his YellowSequoia blog.
He writes:
"One of the major stumbling blocks with our education clients is that they perceive games as yet another thing that they have to get their heads around to teach in class.
We have tried to address this by asking them to modify this approach in class from being an expert to being a facilitator.
In today’s connected classrooms, students have access to all the world’s content. Standing up in the front of the classroom and talking is not a relevant teaching method anymore.
Educators need to facilitate not teach; and curation is an important skill to enable facilitation."
Rightful. Insightful. Inspiring. 8/10
Original post: http://www.yellowsequoia.com/the-flawed-perception-on-curation/
More info about the author and his company: http://www.yellowsequoia.com/about/
P.S.: I wish the author had published a link to the original discussion on LinkedIN which inspired his post.
On this topic check also my article: http://www.masternewmedia.org/curation-for-education-and-learning/
¿Quién es quién?
An expert always provides feedback on the next steps....
A facilitator... facilitates the student to learn from peer feedback and self reflection
focus on chart. The other ideas are the ones we've been dealing with for...ten years?
Nire iritziz taula da interesgarriena. Gainerako ideiek +10 urte? dauzkate.