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Autore principale: Fee, Heidi
Natura: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: 2022
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1333948
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author Fee, Heidi
author_facet Fee, Heidi
Fee, Heidi
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Students as Teachers Fee, Heidi Video Technology Teaching Methods Student Empowerment Mathematics Instruction Student Participation Technology Uses in Education Elementary School Mathematics Using videos to supplement live instruction has gained momentum in the past year because teachers often scrambled to find ways to instruct students from different locations. The author, like many of her colleagues, began recording herself teaching short lessons and adding them to her Google Classroom library. But then she realized that despite her best efforts, her students were becoming passive learners, and she was, once again, center stage, spoon-feeding them information. It was not collaborative. It did not encourage mathematical discourse or critical thinking. It was not working. In this article, the author shows how to empower students in their own learning by their own creation of instructional videos and assessment.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1333948
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2022
record_format eric
spellingShingle Students as Teachers
Fee, Heidi
Video Technology
Teaching Methods
Student Empowerment
Mathematics Instruction
Student Participation
Technology Uses in Education
Elementary School Mathematics
Students as Teachers Fee, Heidi Video Technology Teaching Methods Student Empowerment Mathematics Instruction Student Participation Technology Uses in Education Elementary School Mathematics Using videos to supplement live instruction has gained momentum in the past year because teachers often scrambled to find ways to instruct students from different locations. The author, like many of her colleagues, began recording herself teaching short lessons and adding them to her Google Classroom library. But then she realized that despite her best efforts, her students were becoming passive learners, and she was, once again, center stage, spoon-feeding them information. It was not collaborative. It did not encourage mathematical discourse or critical thinking. It was not working. In this article, the author shows how to empower students in their own learning by their own creation of instructional videos and assessment.
title Students as Teachers
topic Video Technology
Teaching Methods
Student Empowerment
Mathematics Instruction
Student Participation
Technology Uses in Education
Elementary School Mathematics
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1333948