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B.Y.O.T Bring Your Own Thoughts

K-12 Education Resources

The latest on all student-centered models, leadership development, strategic planning, teacher retention, and all things innovation in K-12 education. We answer questions before you think to ask them.

Amy Jenkins - Guest Author

Amy Jenkins was the chief operating officer of Education Elements.

Blog Feature

EE Summit  |  Education Elements  |  Personalized Learning

2016 PL Summit Sparks New Friendships and Ideas

The room was suddenly, almost eerily, silent. Dananjaya Hettiarachchi stood on the stage at our 2nd Annual Personalized Learning Summit and we all watched him, mesmerized. We held our breaths for a few seconds while our fingers slowed down their constant tweeting. And then, like the world champion public speaker he is, he made us burst out into laughter. I leaned forward, excited to hear more. Finally, after months of planning, this was happening. We had gathered some of the best and brightest personalized learning leaders all in the same room. The PL Summit was off to a roaring start.

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Blog Feature

Classrooms  |  Innovative Leadership  |  Personalized Learning  |  Teachers

Sitting in their Seats: Reflections on the Shadow a Student Challenge

This is not the blog post I intended to write. When I heard about the Shadow a Student Challenge I was excited. Last year I was among the many educators that read a teacher’s account of what it was like to be a student for a day and felt despair rather than hope, and I’m pretty sure by 3rd period despair was high on the emotion list of that teacher and all of her “classmates” as well. So when this year’s Shadow a Student Challenge opportunity came along I went for it: I downloaded the packets, set up the day and got ready to see what it felt like to be a student again.

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Blog Feature

Curriculum Strategy & Adoption  |  Education Elements

Digital Learning Day

My first year of teaching I was in a room with around 20 computers and 40 students. While this may give away my age, this was in 1999, when computers in classrooms weren’t as much of a “thing” as they are today.

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Blog Feature

Education Elements  |  Personalized Learning

My Holiday Wishlist - It’s Personal

Last year I wrote a blog post about what I wanted for the holidays too (seems I get assigned this one every year!) and came up with the one big thing I wanted - for every student, every day, to feel like the people who educate them, get them. It was a big wish and one for all students, everywhere. But this year my wish is much more narrowly focused. In fact, rather than being about every kid, it’s about one...in fact, it’s about mine. As I write this Ella is sleeping in bed upstairs, dreaming the dreams of a four and three-quarter year old which I think are a mix of unicorns, soccer, fairies, and ice cream. She is still in preschool now and loves going to school. She spends a lot of her day coloring and doing projects. She also practices letters (still writes many of them backwards) and numbers. But in less than a year her whole little world will get rocked when she goes from being a big kid in her small preschool to a little kid in her big(ger) elementary school. So my holiday wish is for her to start “real” school and to keep loving learning not just next year, but every year that follows. My hope is next year Ella has an amazing teacher. So, if by chance Ella’s future teacher is reading this post, I will tell you what I am looking for so you can fulfill my holiday wish. I hope you will take the time to get to know Ella. I want you to know what makes her laugh and what makes her sad. I want you to know that family is the most important thing to her followed by chocolate, Pirate’s Booty and My Little Pony, in no particular order. I hope when I ask you how she is doing you can tell me things like who she is playing with and if she is still mixing up her bs and ds. I hope you will lead her, but also let her have some control. I do not want her education to be something she just takes in, I want her to have to give some too. I want her to develop a thirst for learning and get excited about discovery. I want her to learn what she needs to learn (and you know more than I what a kindergartner should be able to do) but also have some voice in what she learns. I want her to understand why she is learning it, and get to make some choices about what she is learning or how she is learning it. And speaking of how she learns, I want her to get to learn at her own pace, not the pace of her neighbors. When Ella runs she runs fast -- I see her winning races on the playground all the time. But when she learns? I don’t know. Maybe some ideas will take her longer than others, while other ideas she will learn quicker than her peers. I don’t want her to be rushed or held back. I want Ella to know its ok to not learn the same way, or at the same time, as everyone else. I want her to love learning and not look at it like she does races - where when she is not ahead she is so sad to be behind. I want Ella to be excited to see you and her classmates every day. I want her to look forward to reading as much as she does to science or math. I want school to be just as good as stay-at-home days (what she calls weekends). I want day one to set her up for 2339 more amazing days of her K-12 education. And so much of that depends on you, her kindergarten teacher. So yes, I want for Ella next year what I want for every students all the time. Teachers who care about each and every student, learning that is personalized, a school experience that sets them up for a lifetime of loving to learn. And even though this is the opposite of instant gratification, I am willing to have this be the one big thing on my holiday list this December, if it means Ella’s first August in school will be all that I hope it can be.

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Blog Feature

Education Elements  |  Personalized Learning

Inspiration and Exhaustion: Highlights from the iNACOL 2015 Blended and Online Learning Symposium

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Blog Feature

Blended Learning  |  Innovative Leadership  |  Personalized Learning  |  School Districts

Sorry, Jessie J, It Is About The Money: A Guide on Paying for Personalized Learning

It’s happened to all of us. We have a great idea. We google it and learn more. Our excitement grows. We see pictures online, we watch videos and we decide, YES!, I want to do that! We run and tell someone and then that person stops us in our tracks. All they say is, “How are you going to pay for it?” and poof! we deflate. We think, “Right. How are we going to pay for it,” and trudge back to our desks. Less enthusiastically googling this time things like “how to pay for….”

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