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Autores principales: Davis, Ann W., Kappler-Hewitt, Kim
Formato: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1015175
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author Davis, Ann W.
Kappler-Hewitt, Kim
author_facet Davis, Ann W.
Kappler-Hewitt, Kim
Davis, Ann W.
Kappler-Hewitt, Kim
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Australia's Campfires, Caves, and Watering Holes Davis, Ann W. Kappler-Hewitt, Kim Foreign Countries Teacher Role Educational Environment Educational Technology Technology Uses in Education Teacher Collaboration Computer Uses in Education Space Utilization Faculty Development Educators recognize that they need to create new learning and teaching environments where the curriculum and instructional tools reflect today's world. Schools are full of students who want to engage, socialize, communicate, create, and collaborate in meaningful ways that reflect the world in which they live. How can education re-create itself to engage these learners and keep up with the pace of this change? What can educators do in response to change and to reach their digital students? These questions led a group of 17 educators (university professors, directors of technology, classroom teachers, tech coordinators, library media specialists, corporate representatives, researchers, ISTE's president, and two board members) from the United States and Norway on a two-week study tour to Australia to seek answers. This article describes how educators on ISTE's Australian Study Tour discovered ways to create new learning and teaching environments where curriculum and instructional tools meet the digital age.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1015175
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2013
record_format eric
spellingShingle Australia's Campfires, Caves, and Watering Holes
Davis, Ann W.
Kappler-Hewitt, Kim
Foreign Countries
Teacher Role
Educational Environment
Educational Technology
Technology Uses in Education
Teacher Collaboration
Computer Uses in Education
Space Utilization
Faculty Development
Australia's Campfires, Caves, and Watering Holes Davis, Ann W. Kappler-Hewitt, Kim Foreign Countries Teacher Role Educational Environment Educational Technology Technology Uses in Education Teacher Collaboration Computer Uses in Education Space Utilization Faculty Development Educators recognize that they need to create new learning and teaching environments where the curriculum and instructional tools reflect today's world. Schools are full of students who want to engage, socialize, communicate, create, and collaborate in meaningful ways that reflect the world in which they live. How can education re-create itself to engage these learners and keep up with the pace of this change? What can educators do in response to change and to reach their digital students? These questions led a group of 17 educators (university professors, directors of technology, classroom teachers, tech coordinators, library media specialists, corporate representatives, researchers, ISTE's president, and two board members) from the United States and Norway on a two-week study tour to Australia to seek answers. This article describes how educators on ISTE's Australian Study Tour discovered ways to create new learning and teaching environments where curriculum and instructional tools meet the digital age.
title Australia's Campfires, Caves, and Watering Holes
topic Foreign Countries
Teacher Role
Educational Environment
Educational Technology
Technology Uses in Education
Teacher Collaboration
Computer Uses in Education
Space Utilization
Faculty Development
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1015175