Archive for December, 2010

Free Teacher Resources – Now And Before

December 28th, 2010


The latest technology and global digital improvements have opened up multiple options for teachers worldwide.

The teaching resources are freely available on the internet. Traditional ways of using black boards, chalks are now replaced by the Interactive white boards. The new technology has revolutionized the teaching methods drastically. The older ways of using black board and chalks were replaced by the white boards and markers. As the time progressed the white boards and markers are now replaced by the interactive white boards. The IWBs have made learning faster and fun filled. Students enjoy their studies due to the interactive free teacher resources.

Similarly there have been changes in the ways of teaching as well. Now the teacher’s don’t have to sit for hours together and make notes, but can use the free teacher resources available on the internet. These free teacher resources have proved beneficial for both the teachers and their students. Teachers can save their notes and lessons on these resources directly and share it with the students as and when required. The teachers can also make changes by editing the online data as per requirement. The students can refer to the same notes from home.

There are many online websites including the government which provide free teacher resources. The new change has reduced the daily chores of most of the teachers. In order to make use of these online free resources teachers and students need to find the right site and then take the benefit. They can be saved and used for later use as well.

By: Thomas Radcliff

About the Author:
If you are looking for a wide range of Free Teacher Resources, please check out the Promethean Planet website. Teaching resources, teaching software and Interactive Whiteboard Resources are available.

The Promethean Planet site also contains a huge range of Free Teaching resources.



Resources For Primary School Teachers

December 28th, 2010


Adam Singleton writes for a digital marketing agency. This article has been commissioned by a client of said agency. This article is not designed to promote, but should be considered professional content.As a primary school teacher, you probably know that children learn well through interactivity. In fact, the same goes for adults as well – which is why it’s particularly good to get kids involved in activities and learning in such a way that they’re really made to think. The more you get your pupils involved in what you’re doing, the more fun they’re likely to have – which means they will pay more attention and have a greater level or learning than what they might take in if you were just going through the same boring Mathematics or English lessons which they’re used to.

Learning isn’t meant to be boring – it needs to be fun and enjoyable, and something that we ultimately use to get a greater sense of fulfilment out of life. That’s why our primary school experience is so important because it sets us up for how we view learning in later years and could heavily influence our attitudes throughout high school. So if you’re a primary school teacher, the chances are you’ll only be too willing to do what you can to help shape the young minds of your pupils as best as you can.

Thankfully, there are plenty of new technologies geared specifically towards helping you do this. While it’s important to continue the usual interactive learning tools you already use that encourage your class to think on their feet and really get involved with the lesson, there are other resources now available that could really boost what your pupils get from your class. One such technology is the interactive whiteboard, a fantastic classroom asset that can bolster your teaching and ensure that your pupils look forward to lessons every day.

Using an interactive whiteboard, you can teach Maths, English, languages and everything else you need to pass onto your class in a fun and informative way. You can set questions on the electronic whiteboard, which is projected onto one wall for all of your class to see, and have pupils answer questions by coming up and inserting the answer themselves. Best of all, interactive whiteboards are easy to use and you can even programme your own lesson plans, systems and games on them without spending too much time working out how to use them.

Interactive whiteboards are just one of the many teacher resources out there that can really increase the interactivity and enjoyment of your lessons, and make a great condition to any primary school classroom.

By: Adam Singleton

About the Author:
Adam Singleton writes for a digital marketing agency. This article has been commissioned by a client of said agency. This article is not designed to promote, but should be considered professional content.



Teacher Resources That Will Document Student Learning

December 28th, 2010


Our competitive American nature makes it difficult to be out of first place in the world for long. But that’s where we have been in education and we’re doing something about it legislatively. One of the hallmarks of the new national “No Child Left Behind” legislation, written to improve education, is the measurement of student academic achievement.

To fulfill this new mandate every State developed rigorous achievement standards and enlisted professional testing companies to prepare subject matter test questions. These tests purport to measure current status and learning growth that validates the States’ standards. Every student at specific grade levels is expected to complete these “standardized tests”.

By comparing baseline test data with tests that follow a period of teaching, growth is documented. In most cases this documentation takes the form of compiled test scores on a school-by-school basis. Those schools that underachieve are identified for corrective resources in hopes of improving achievement by the next test cycle.

This process of teaching and testing is a timeworn activity that assumes the student is responsible for learning, and is not a measure of the ability of teachers to impart knowledge. Apart from standardized testing, teachers are the authors of most classroom tests, pop quizzes, unit tests, and semester tests. Most of these amateur test authors use their test results to assign arbitrary values to a report card and permanent record. Little use has been made of modern technology to improve this teaching/learning/testing ancient ritual.

Apart from the classroom the precision of professional test writers has developed dramatically. Employed by major test preparation centers in Princeton, Iowa City and Palo Alto, these specialists produce almost all the questions used to determine the schools that are meeting standards and those that are not.

Test questions are now so precisely crafted that each one becomes a valuable test of learned knowledge. Each of the three Centers has compiled large databases of these questions that could easily produce unique boutique tests for classroom use, using the electronic internet capability.

Replacing amateur teacher tests with professional ones on an as-needed basis could add more precision to the teaching/learning process. The medical profession’s diagnosis/prescription model would then be more appropriate, and shift the burden for learning success to the teacher- the professional; and away from the student- the learning novice.

While some readers might think this sea change might take time to develop, the model for the procedure has been perfected for nearly 35 years. The National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) was established to provide “the Nations report card”. Its results demonstrate what America’s students know and can do in common school subjects, over time.

For test efficiency, a simple premise was devised to gather and interpret test results in specific school subjects: Small samples of students were chosen from a large universe of schools. Each student is given a small number of questions from a large database covering the subject. The questions are a mix representing ones unique to the student and ones that others also answer. In this way, a group score is similar to one where all students answer all test questions, for the score. That’s how we do it now. The NAEP model takes far less time, is more precise, and can produce reports immediately.

Now, lets speculate how a teacher could use this technology to guide learning in a single classroom. At the end of a specific period of teaching, the teacher would electronically request enough mini-tests for each student in the classroom. Tests would be a mix of unique and duplicates covering the learning unit.

Following this shortened test period, answers would be electronically scored producing a test result for the classroom, along with diagnostic information regarding problem areas. Shared with the students, the teacher and her student team now have feedback for focusing teaching efforts.

By compiling these test results over the whole school, electronically, progress in all subject areas could be observed and documented for administrative decision making, as required by the new Education law.

Professional test centers would reduce revenue from printed test and scoring services, but would probably enhance their income stream from new services to teachers directly.
Local schools testing costs would reduce through loss of testing downtime and the purchase of printed tests and score reports.

And more important, the student would have a better sense of personal progress and greater involvement and ownership of learning outcomes. Our competitive place in the education world would move toward the top.

By: Gerald Dudley Ph D

About the Author:
The author has used similar statistical research in the development of a career assessment that individuals can use. It can be found on the website: http://careerfit-test.com/