Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Multitasking’s making you worse at your job


I love TV. But I'm bad at watching it. Which is crazy since it only just includes three very straightforward steps:

Turn the TV on.

Face eyeballs toward the TV.

Watch.

I typically go wrong by adding a fourth step in with the general mish-mash: Scroll through my phone until the point that the battery dies or my thumb goes numb — really whichever comes first. Also because of that, I have to rewind a lot. An hour long episode takes me, on average, around four hours to get through.

I mean, I don't plan on this happening. I always think I can do both. However each and every time, I'll get so fascinated in my social media that when I glance back at the TV, the main character's dead.
And I'm all like, What? How did that happen? Mere minutes ago she was getting married.

Furthermore, now her ex (they wedded and separated!) is at her burial service with their three children (she didn't even want kids!)… in space (they used to live on Earth!).

I approach meetings at work the similar way. I get my laptop along just in case I have to reference details, facts, emails, dog memes, charts, et cetera. I generally plan on focusing. But one "let me just respond to this email real quick " transforms into another. Also, before I know it, I'm deep into a project that is not due for months. What's more, I don't realize I'm not exactly focusing until I'm called on.

You know who doesn't earn a reputation as a hard working employee? The person who reacts to "Jenni, what do you consider of that?" with "Um, well, in my brain I have thoughts, which do things like think, so I think a lot about that, however with my reasoning thoughts, I'd have to say, yes? Or, on the other hand the face you're making suggests that the appropriate response is no? Hm, is it not a 'yes or no' question? Would I be able to get a hint? Can I interest you in a dog meme?"

Recently, I had a three-hour meeting that my colleague banned laptops from. I protested. I cried. I claimed the world would fall apart. The answer remained — even if I got my laptop with me, I was not permitted to even consider opening it up.

And I'll tell you what!

In that meeting, not only did the world not fall to pieces, but I so much more out of it. It's astonishing how productive a meeting can be when you're not half-listening, half-passsive-aggressive-email-chain-fighting about a bridal shower gift.

 So, why am I telling you this story? Because I bet you're like me. That you believe you're the one special case to the "multitasking makes you less productive" rule. Even if you can't bring your laptop to meeting, or you don't have meetings, I'd guess there are times when you attempt to do two things at once. And, that you're worse off for it.

This week, I challenge you to try doing one thing at a time. Maybe that's putting aside time to check your email — and just your email. Maybe it's turning off your Wi-Fi while you complete that big presentation. Maybe it's putting your phone away till your project's finished. Or, maybe it's not deep diving into your secondary school frenemy's Instagram while you're trying to watch your favourite show.

Whatever you do, do it — just for one week. I don't want to play psychic, but I feel confident that you'll be amazed at how much better you are at accomplishing something when you're concentrating on just that.


Wednesday, August 2, 2017

Customized Learning: Teachers listen when the Student speaks


Customized learning is turning out to be a major player in the 21st-century classrooms. It's a new approach to dealing with teaching and learning that includes less teacher talking and more contribution from students. It's changing the way students are learning around the world.

The thought behind customized learning is straightforward. Students direct their own learning, going at their own pace and, now and again, settling on their own choices as to what to learn. Preferably, in a classroom using customized learning, students pick what they're interested in and teachers fit the curriculum and standards to the students' advantages.

This sort of adapting totally reverses the traditional approach in the classroom. Rather than the teacher being the focal point of attention and leader of the classroom, the students are in the spotlight. Customized learning gives students a voice and enables them to take responsibility for their education.

For teachers who need to bring more customized learning into their own particular classrooms, it may appear to be threatening. Surrendering control of the classroom can be startling. Teachers may wonder, will the Students truly be interested in this? Will they get the hang of everything that they have to know for the year-end tests? Will I totally lose control over my classroom?

Customized learning doesn't need to be win big or lose. Teachers can begin by talking somewhat less and giving students a chance to have to a greater degree of control. Enabling students to settle on a few decisions in the classroom can have a powerful impact.

Teachers can give students various options for showing proof of what they've learned. One approach to this is to specifically give students the standards they have to know and request that they present proof that they've aced those standards. Another alternative is to give students choices, for example, composing an article as opposed to making a visual representation of their learning.

Teachers can take another course and give students diverse alternatives for how they learn the material. This requires somewhat more preparation, yet teachers can enable students to pick amongst say reading and watching a video. Again, this enables students to have more options and they feel that they have a voice in the classroom.
Small changes like these are simple for teachers to make, and they empower students. When students have little power in the classroom, they start to put resources into their learning.

Customized adapting also enhances student and teacher relations. In the traditional classroom, teachers are frequently struggling for control. They need to demand that students sit down, quit talking, and pay attention to the teacher. This automatically makes a sort of power dynamic that can cause issues. Teachers are basically telling students, "I have more value than you."

But when teachers give students a voice, they're telling the students, "You are important." They are giving students control over what and how they learn. Students often react positively to this change in the power dynamic. Students who are given the power to decide, feel esteemed and regarded. Thus, they are less likely to create issues for teachers. When teachers quit demanding that students take a seat, be calm, or respect them, students will probably do every one of those three things.

For teachers who are searching for a way to get students engaged and excited for what they're learning, customized learning is the way. Teachers who talk less and give students a voice in the classroom are engaging students and empowering them to take responsibility of, and really appreciate their learning.

Tuesday, July 25, 2017

Building an Ed-tech Eco-system in your Classroom

It has, for quite some time, been observed that education technology is a key tool in enhancing students' academic performance and overall learning. In the current age, technology is a significant component of our educational scene, yet this asset has remained almost untouched in the classroom.
Finally, since last few years, it appears that the Indian educational system is taking advantage of the capability of edtech by implementing 1:1 ratios for students and technology. Be that as it may, is this enough to make a flourishing environment for students to grow?

Students approaching technology is, obviously, the first phase in making a flourishing edtech environment. However, once innovation turns out to be readily available, teachers must make their own landscape in which students are allowed to explore, create and develop.

Ecosystems are unique but very responsive to change. A teacher hoping to build an edtech ecosystem in their classroom has the distinct part of making a landscape that will nurture every individual student with utmost attention. These days, the raw materials accessible to edtech centered teachers are extensive and can be carefully selected to suit the requirements of their classrooms.



Begin From The Ground Up
A classroom is basically a place where the sharing of data can occur. Commonly, the teacher gives the data which is then distributed to the students. This exchange is still the establishment on which an edtech ecosystem is built. A teacher planning to build an edtech environment starting from the ground needs a solid source of sharing data. Google Drive, iCloud and Dropbox are all sharing services available for teachers to use as the preparation for their edtech ecosystem.

By picking and sticking to one sharing service that the entire class is associated with, both teachers and students can without much of a stretch offer and exchange data and resources. They give organizational tools that enable the class to categorize, file and share their work as individuals or as a group. This permits all students simple access to their work consistently.

Sow The Seeds of Creation
Since students have an establishment whereupon to build, they require devices and tools that will enable them to create inside their edtech environment.

Content creation tools fall into two classifications: single-use tools and open-ended tools. While single-use creation tools expect students to learn just one ability which is time efficient, they are additionally restrictive as the creative outcome is as of now controlled by the specificity of the tool. This can be something to be thankful for. When you plant seed potatoes, you hope to yield potatoes. And having a field full of potatoes ensures that nobody goes hungry. However variety is the spice of life and to make variety and development in your edtech environment, you require a considerable amount of various seeds that your students can pick and suit their own preferences.

Open-ended creation tools are the way to delivering a variety of work inside your edtech classroom. Enabling students the opportunity to curate, create and present thoughts and ideas in their own manner brings about a more lively classroom. There are many content creation applications that support a range of multimedia. From writing, editing, making visual content, for example, infographics or data presentation, video and sound, the correct tools can open up a students imagination. Evernote, Canva, Explain Everything and ThingLink are all great tools that will give students a chance to run wild with their content creation.

Association Creates Community
Interconnectivity is the backbone to many flourishing environments. Communication in an edtech ecosystem is also of extreme importance. Using edtech tools is an awesome route for students to connect with each other as well as their other groups, both in and out of the classroom. Through services such as Google Apps for Education, both teacher and student can remain connected through Classroom. This makes a space where all members of the environment can remain fully informed about the news and notifications, important data or interesting content. Students can make a virtual working space for team projects with Hangout, and the result of that work would then be able to be distributed.
Keeping your edtech ecosystem connected will imply that all members of the environment are supported and empowered, regardless of where they are. Connecting your edtech eco system with others is also an incredible way to encourage development. Your students can make and distribute content to a personal or group blog that is then available to a wider audience, they can work in conjunction with other classes or for other classes: Students can make content, for example, podcasts or infographics that can help students in lower grades. This makes a larger sense of community and purpose for your students while effectively engaging in their studies.

Keeping up your Ecosystem
It's true that making an edtech environment in your classroom moves the power from teacher to students. Students would now be able to take control of their own learning, their own development, and their own particular goals. Be that as it may, the teacher's new role is that of the gardener. Careful observation of the edtech tools used in the classroom is required to ensure that they work for you and your students.
As your students develop their thoughts and ideas, their needs may change. Light weeding might be expected to remove edtech tools that have lost their value and present new tools that will help the students to take their learning to the next level. While the students are the bustling labourers in this society, the teacher maintains harmony within the edtech ecosystem.

Tuesday, July 18, 2017

Not as tech savvy as teachers expect : Students


A love for avocado lattes and Snapchat filters are only a couple of the stereotypes following Millennials nowadays. But students are now pushing back on these generational speculations, noting that these assumptions about their attitudes, interests, and capacities are harming them academically. One of the greatest misconceptions students at previous week's New Media Consortium's Summer Conference (NMC) raised was the idea that millennials are digital natives.

Many people must have heard this scenario earlier: The eight-year-old child showing his forty-year-old father how to use some new gadget or app. In spite of being a metaphor of our times, a ton has been said off record in regards to misconceptions regarding students' technological capacities. In a meeting, Alexandra Pickett, the Director of New York State University's Center for Online Teaching Excellence, noticed that a number of her students know how to use online platforms, like Twitter and Facebook for entertainment purposes only, and have no clue how to use them for academic and professional use. It's time students echoed.

"Something you can do to prep your students for college is to set one day where you have a workshop about utilizing Google Docs to its best," recommended Alejandra Cervantes, a junior at UCLA, in response to a question about the best way to support high school students making their way to college. "Something straightforward like that can be quite instrumental in helping them succeed in classes later on."

Raamish Saeed, a senior from Saint Louis University, told the group, "We are not exceptionally tech savvy coming into college. Other than playing games and using basic Microsoft office, there are numerous things we don't have a clue about."

"I didn't know how to use headers, footers or page number in Microsoft Word, so I got five points off each assignment for a whole semester," clarified Alyssa Foley, a student at Houston Community College, in the meeting. "I didn't have Microsoft Word at home since I did not want to pay for it. I had some free office program, so even if I tried attempting it, all the formatting would go haywire."

Foley is a first generation student, and her family is viewed as low-income. She eventually figured out how to use Word and PowerPoint through her sister's friend, and when inquired as to why she didn't reach out for assistance from the school, she said she was deeply embarrassed about not being able to satisfy "tech-native" criteria.

A 2015 report led by the Pew Research Center shows students like Foley and Saeed are not the only one. The report found that in around five million homes (17.5%) with school-age children did not have access to the Internet. Out of those with access, many homes did not have laptops or PCs as students usually used cell phones for Internet associations. For classrooms that expect students to team up online and write long articles, not having these resources puts them at an academic disadvantage.

Students say that in order to better learn from high schools and universities, it is important to challenge the assumption that students are digital natives. This begins with instructing teachers about the technological diversity in their classrooms and providing students with workshops and interesting videos to enable them to learn without shame. Foley recommends schools offer free access to common software programs, noting that software costs are high and numerous students don't have the funds to procure them.

"Simply having the access to programs like Adobe Suite would help us to be able to take in the innovation," says Foley. "Those are programs I will use in my field, so I have to know it."

Tuesday, July 11, 2017

A teacher's guide to Choice, Literacy and Embracing the Internet

With proper direction, teachers can give students a chance to wander the web unrestricted.

Choice is the heart of teaching, but who could have anticipated exactly what amount of choices we'd have? As the Internet keeps on spreading further and further into our professional lives, often the alternatives appear to be agonizingly endless.

For a profession pre-definitely known for inciting weariness every day, the choice exhaustion and ego depletion along, brought on by the Internet has numerous teachers addressing whether the juice is truly worth the altruistic squeeze.

Creating a Thoughtful and Realistic Approach to Web Usage
While there are without a doubt a couple of crafty teachers grasping the computerized age with all its choice producing glory, a portion of the teachers I know make up the rather noteworthy larger part — those resisting and unwilling to completely give up control and intentionally unleash the Internet upon their students.

While a more measured and vital technique to dealing with adapting to the modern information inundation is justifiable, it simply doesn't fit the reality of most students in 2017. Our students are accustomed to having access to the infinite. They love discovering freedom in the unconstrained digital spaces that have been constantly molding their reality until now.
As teachers, it's our obligation to learn and respect that reality, regardless of how foreign it might appear. In doing so, I think we could very well wind up molding the very citizens we had hoped to.

Giving Honest Digital Leadership
The Internet can possibly open doors for improving education, self-revelation, and empowerment like nothing before. As educators, we simply should be open and reasonable about the darkness that accompanies that potential and work to make sure we manage the students toward their interests and far from the terrible.

That doesn't mean we deny the dark truth and cynicism we know exists on the Internet. It simply implies we recognize the web's monstrosity, humankind's variety, and bring a transparent awareness to those we teach.

Students need support, direction, and acceptance as they explore their lives and the web. Surprisingly, an innovation exists that gives them the opportunity to infer genuine personal power through introspective investigation more than ever.

Encouraging the Power of Educational Choice

When students are given limitless choices (i.e., the Internet), they normally move in directions that intrigue them. Enable them to arrive on their own decisions, and they'll find delight in reading and learning on the web.

By embracing the web, and being honest about the unlimited substance that accompanies it, we can develop an era of amazingly proficient and very self-governing citizens who after considering everything, find themselves, through the power of choice.

Talking about decisions, literacy and the web, here's a short rundown of relevant tools that can help instructors with making students' learning more significant:
Stackup.net – A free Chrome expansion that gives the accountability expected to gauge progress while giving students the opportunity to read what they want.

Hypothes.is – Another layer of the web that enables you to annotate content with anybody, anyplace.

Grammarly.com – A free writing application and grammar checker that ensures your messages, records and online networking posts are clear, botch free.

Newsela.com – A paid administration that levels non fiction in any subject, offering news articles at multiple reading levels, which enables you to teach reading the way you've always wanted to.

Thursday, July 6, 2017

Things I wish I knew before becoming as Entrepreneur

Knowledge of the past is constantly superior to premonition. When you think back, there is continually something you wish you knew in advance, especially before turning into a business person.

Somewhat more than 2 years back, I joined a decent companion and a couple of different folks in the first place phases of their startup.
                                                         
  1. Individuals instruct you to flop quick and learn immediately when you're a business person. In any case, for reasons unknown, they generally forget any handy strides that could really help you.
  2. Everything takes twice as long as you think it will.
  3. Everything costs twice as much as you think it will.
  4. Not everyone that says they are going to do something will actually do it.
  5. The people who actually do what they say they will do usually do it wrong.
  6. Time is the only thing you can’t get back and it goes very quickly.

Tuesday, July 4, 2017

Why Asia is a Great Prospect for EdTech Companies and Accelerators


Asia is quickly developing as 'The World's EdTech Industry.'

Each edtech organization is looking to Asia for its beginning, particularly China and Singapore. Asia will be charging the next leg of development in EdTech.

Here's the reason why right now is the best time in history to be in EdTech in Asia:
The education systems are tending to particular market disappointments with their own particular arrangements that offer deeper setting context, UI, and lower cost structures that can be met through e-learning.

Asia is the quickest developing e-learning market in the world with altogether leadership in various sectors including game-based learning and web social based learning.

Asia is an incredible fit for courses offered through the Internet. Now a fact, Asia is the quickest developing landmass and with China having the world's biggest population makes it the biggest captive place for K-12 audience; the measure of planned students alone is amazing and that is China alone. As a whole, Asia is the market for instructive innovation.

As indicated by the University World News, the development in the Asian EdTech industry is over 30 percent. There is also government support across Asia; nations are chipping away at incentives such as high-speed systems, and a bigger push for putting the educational module on the web.
As indicated by Fresco Capital in 2013, just 10% of the total capital put into EdTech went to organizations working in China. In 2014, that number expanded to 24%. Given the market size and opportunity set, this number is required to develop continuously.

Asian startups are driving the route in the Edtech platforms being utilized. KnowRe, Brainly, mana.bo, Taamkru and numerous more Asia based edtech startups have been making a mark in the industry and are now picking up appreciation from around the world. There are significantly more startups from Asia that are helping the instruction area do ponders like PaGamO, Delta Viet, kungfu Math, Zenius and ClasDos.

Immense commercial space is the reason why top funding firms are putting resources into Asian EdTech. Best VC firms are showing enthusiasm for EdTech and that demonstrates the potential it holds.

Different acceleration projects have been set to secure the growth of this industry. One such case is of Japans Education and Human Resource Companies that have launched an EdTech acceleration program under which Villing Venture Partners, (The Investment Arm of Japanese Educational Business Company) Villing Holdings and HR Company Slogan has worked together as Slogan Villing Ventures for their venture The Bridge.

Villing Holding CEO, Shuhei Morofuji clarified the thought behind this joint effort:
"We are developing a few ways to improve Japanese education system, including developing our own kindergartens or schools and creating educational products. Through this advancement process, we learned that numerous players want to change this industry using IT. We need to support them to have greater effects on the market."

Other noteworthy accelerations in EdTech segment that are pushing the Asian EdTech market are Scholas, Learn Launch, Imagine K-12, Mind CET, Boom Startup etc.

Imagine k-12: The Biggest startup accelerator is centered around education technology. The incubator began in 2011 and so far has helped various EdTech startups to mark a place in the market. It is centered around serving the k-12 education.

BYJU Classes from India, turning into the new approach to tech and learn, have raised a generous measure of USD 75000000 in March 2016. Tracking the ventures being made in Edtech also demonstrates the inclination of financial investors, and the market reflects Asia to be the next big thing for every one of those managing in the industry of Edtech.

The situation is clear and we can witness that as the investment into the Edtech segment rises and reception rates react to the inherent student demand; this is the market to watch.