03210oam 2200577 450 991079327510332120210715122518.01-5443-5733-81-5063-6329-61-5063-6326-11-5063-6327-X(OCoLC)1102406840(MiFhGG)GVRL65RQ(EXLCZ)99410000000717704520170810d2018 uy 0engurun|---uuuuatxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierJust ask us kids speak out on student engagement /Heather Wolpert-Gawron ; foreword by Carol RadfordThousand Oaks, California :Corwin, a SAGE Company,[2018]1 online resource (xvii, 232 pages) illustrations (some color)Gale eBooks1-5063-6328-8 Includes bibliographical references and index.1. Let us work together -- 2. Make learning more visual and utilize technology -- 3. Connect what we learn to the real world -- 4. Let us move around -- 5. Give us choices -- 6. Show us you're human too -- 7. Help us create something with what we've learned -- 8. Teach us something new in a new way -- 9. Mix things up.Use these 10 strategies to teach and communicate content that sticks! Students learn best when collaborating, talking, and working with their peers. That's what Edutopia blogger and education expert Heather Wolpert-Gawron discovered when she surveyed students nationwide. Now you can hear from the students themselves and discover 10 comprehensive and fresh ideas on precisely what and how to capture your students' imagination and minds for deep learning, everyday. This research-based approach to cooperative learning provides plentiful lesson ideas, vignettes, videos, and insightful student interviews to help you: . Understand the research base for collaborative learning . Implement and manage competitively cooperative student work group . Incorporate movement, visual tools, and technology . Develop achievement-based PBL projects . Conduct your own student survey for increased student choice Move beyond just teaching content. Build a strong classroom community where students chew on, process, mull over, and retain information everyday using these 10 deep engagement strategies!Motivation in educationProject method in teachingActive learningVisual learningTeacher-student relationshipsStudent participation in curriculum planningEngagement (Philosophy)Motivation in education.Project method in teaching.Active learning.Visual learning.Teacher-student relationships.Student participation in curriculum planning.Engagement (Philosophy)370.154Wolpert-Gawron Heather1549904Radford CarolMiFhGGMiFhGGBOOK9910793275103321Just ask us3808318UNINA