Innovation Showcases

University of Valencia


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Moderator
Christian Ugwuanyi, Research Fellow, Education Foundations, University of the Free State, Free State, South Africa

Using Hypothesis to Expand Online Discussion : A New Tool for Online and Hybrid Classes View Digital Media

Innovation Showcase
Louise Krug  

Hypothesis is a tool that students can use to annotate texts and to have discussions with each other. It is a great alternative to the discussion boards that are overused in online classrooms. Learn how Hypothesis works, different ways to use it, and see how it facilitates collaboration between students in a new way. With the annotation tools, students are able to comment, react, and question the reading in real time. This is different than the discussion boards, which have more of a reflective quality. In my presentation, I will demonstrate various uses of Hypothesis and show how it can be used in different disciplines. Audience members will walk away with new ideas for their online or hybrid classrooms.

An Innovative, Student-Adaptive Pedagogy Professional Development Program View Digital Media

Innovation Showcase
Ron Tzur  

In a recent research and development project, I have led a team to create an innovative professional development (PD) program rooted in the constructivist-based, Student-Adaptive Pedagogy (AdPed). The program is innovative in that, coupled with a common focus on teachers' own mathematical knowledge for teaching (MKT), it promotes their (a) understanding and capacity to use a research-based, conceptual progression (focused on multiplicative and fractional reasoning) to assess students' available concepts and (b) adaptation of goals and activities for students' learning, so they bring forth, and transform, what students do know. We found that those latter two PD components are quite counter-intuitive for teachers, and thus set the PD to literally overhaul teachers' mathematics teaching practices. To this end, the PD program consists of three, interrelated components: (1) at least two 5-day Summer Institutes (consecutive years), (2) a job-embedded component, called "Buddy-Pair," which was adapted from the Japanese Lesson Study model, and (3) four, 2-hour workshops during the academic year, in which issues/challenges arising from the buddy-pairs' own work are reflected upon and discussed by all math teachers in their respective school. In this Innovation Showcase session, I provide a glimpse into what AdPed means, some details (examples) of each PD component, and preliminary data measuring teacher shift toward AdPed. I then discuss key challenges facing teachers, as well as their educators, when promoting such a shift in public schools.

Digital Media

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