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Going Global Preparing Students to be Citizens of the World Lucy Gray Lucy Gray Consulting [email protected] 1

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Global preso for BrainPOP Wednesday, August 29, 2012

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Going Global Preparing Students to be Citizens of the World

Lucy Gray

Lucy Gray Consulting

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

1

Slides available athttpwwwlucygrayorg

2

Letrsquos Get in the Mood

3

Where is Matt

4

Wherersquos Matt 2012

5

Agenda

6

My Story

The Context

Vision and Mindset

Mapping This Space

The Global Education Conference amp Network

Example Projects

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

Lucy Gray

7

Consultant

Co-Founder of the Global Education Collaborative and Conference

Apple Distinguished Educator

Google Certified Teacher

Middle School Computer Science

Primary GradesImage Source httpwwwflickrcomphotosgenista6898950

Apple Distinguished EducatorsGlobal Awareness 2006

The World is Flat

A Whole New Mind

Berlin amp Prague

Rethink Global Awareness

8

Classroom 20Link

9

Global Education Collaborative amp Conference

10

Text

Mission

11

The Global Education Collaborative is a community of practice where people connect and build the professional relationships necessary for effective collaboration across borders Via this social network educators and organizations from all over the world share conversations resources projects and initiatives with a strong emphasis on promoting global awareness fostering global competency and inspiring action towards solving real-world problems Our ultimate goal is to help prepare students for a rapidly changing and complex world

Over 500000 unique visitors

12

Over 10000 members from 142 countries

13

GEC FeaturesGroups

Searchable member list

Latest activity

Discussion forums and blogs

Links to resources

Events

Project database

Videos and photos

14

Learning 2012The Education Project 2010

Apple Asia Distinguished Educator Institute 2008

Connecting Globally

15

The Context

16

the future belongs to the nation that best

educates its citizenshellip

-President Barack Obama

17

Arne Duncan

Diane Ravitch

A NEW

NATION AT

RISK

MOMENT

18

Rahm Emanuel

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 2: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Slides available athttpwwwlucygrayorg

2

Letrsquos Get in the Mood

3

Where is Matt

4

Wherersquos Matt 2012

5

Agenda

6

My Story

The Context

Vision and Mindset

Mapping This Space

The Global Education Conference amp Network

Example Projects

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

Lucy Gray

7

Consultant

Co-Founder of the Global Education Collaborative and Conference

Apple Distinguished Educator

Google Certified Teacher

Middle School Computer Science

Primary GradesImage Source httpwwwflickrcomphotosgenista6898950

Apple Distinguished EducatorsGlobal Awareness 2006

The World is Flat

A Whole New Mind

Berlin amp Prague

Rethink Global Awareness

8

Classroom 20Link

9

Global Education Collaborative amp Conference

10

Text

Mission

11

The Global Education Collaborative is a community of practice where people connect and build the professional relationships necessary for effective collaboration across borders Via this social network educators and organizations from all over the world share conversations resources projects and initiatives with a strong emphasis on promoting global awareness fostering global competency and inspiring action towards solving real-world problems Our ultimate goal is to help prepare students for a rapidly changing and complex world

Over 500000 unique visitors

12

Over 10000 members from 142 countries

13

GEC FeaturesGroups

Searchable member list

Latest activity

Discussion forums and blogs

Links to resources

Events

Project database

Videos and photos

14

Learning 2012The Education Project 2010

Apple Asia Distinguished Educator Institute 2008

Connecting Globally

15

The Context

16

the future belongs to the nation that best

educates its citizenshellip

-President Barack Obama

17

Arne Duncan

Diane Ravitch

A NEW

NATION AT

RISK

MOMENT

18

Rahm Emanuel

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 3: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Letrsquos Get in the Mood

3

Where is Matt

4

Wherersquos Matt 2012

5

Agenda

6

My Story

The Context

Vision and Mindset

Mapping This Space

The Global Education Conference amp Network

Example Projects

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

Lucy Gray

7

Consultant

Co-Founder of the Global Education Collaborative and Conference

Apple Distinguished Educator

Google Certified Teacher

Middle School Computer Science

Primary GradesImage Source httpwwwflickrcomphotosgenista6898950

Apple Distinguished EducatorsGlobal Awareness 2006

The World is Flat

A Whole New Mind

Berlin amp Prague

Rethink Global Awareness

8

Classroom 20Link

9

Global Education Collaborative amp Conference

10

Text

Mission

11

The Global Education Collaborative is a community of practice where people connect and build the professional relationships necessary for effective collaboration across borders Via this social network educators and organizations from all over the world share conversations resources projects and initiatives with a strong emphasis on promoting global awareness fostering global competency and inspiring action towards solving real-world problems Our ultimate goal is to help prepare students for a rapidly changing and complex world

Over 500000 unique visitors

12

Over 10000 members from 142 countries

13

GEC FeaturesGroups

Searchable member list

Latest activity

Discussion forums and blogs

Links to resources

Events

Project database

Videos and photos

14

Learning 2012The Education Project 2010

Apple Asia Distinguished Educator Institute 2008

Connecting Globally

15

The Context

16

the future belongs to the nation that best

educates its citizenshellip

-President Barack Obama

17

Arne Duncan

Diane Ravitch

A NEW

NATION AT

RISK

MOMENT

18

Rahm Emanuel

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 4: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Where is Matt

4

Wherersquos Matt 2012

5

Agenda

6

My Story

The Context

Vision and Mindset

Mapping This Space

The Global Education Conference amp Network

Example Projects

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

Lucy Gray

7

Consultant

Co-Founder of the Global Education Collaborative and Conference

Apple Distinguished Educator

Google Certified Teacher

Middle School Computer Science

Primary GradesImage Source httpwwwflickrcomphotosgenista6898950

Apple Distinguished EducatorsGlobal Awareness 2006

The World is Flat

A Whole New Mind

Berlin amp Prague

Rethink Global Awareness

8

Classroom 20Link

9

Global Education Collaborative amp Conference

10

Text

Mission

11

The Global Education Collaborative is a community of practice where people connect and build the professional relationships necessary for effective collaboration across borders Via this social network educators and organizations from all over the world share conversations resources projects and initiatives with a strong emphasis on promoting global awareness fostering global competency and inspiring action towards solving real-world problems Our ultimate goal is to help prepare students for a rapidly changing and complex world

Over 500000 unique visitors

12

Over 10000 members from 142 countries

13

GEC FeaturesGroups

Searchable member list

Latest activity

Discussion forums and blogs

Links to resources

Events

Project database

Videos and photos

14

Learning 2012The Education Project 2010

Apple Asia Distinguished Educator Institute 2008

Connecting Globally

15

The Context

16

the future belongs to the nation that best

educates its citizenshellip

-President Barack Obama

17

Arne Duncan

Diane Ravitch

A NEW

NATION AT

RISK

MOMENT

18

Rahm Emanuel

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 5: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Wherersquos Matt 2012

5

Agenda

6

My Story

The Context

Vision and Mindset

Mapping This Space

The Global Education Conference amp Network

Example Projects

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

Lucy Gray

7

Consultant

Co-Founder of the Global Education Collaborative and Conference

Apple Distinguished Educator

Google Certified Teacher

Middle School Computer Science

Primary GradesImage Source httpwwwflickrcomphotosgenista6898950

Apple Distinguished EducatorsGlobal Awareness 2006

The World is Flat

A Whole New Mind

Berlin amp Prague

Rethink Global Awareness

8

Classroom 20Link

9

Global Education Collaborative amp Conference

10

Text

Mission

11

The Global Education Collaborative is a community of practice where people connect and build the professional relationships necessary for effective collaboration across borders Via this social network educators and organizations from all over the world share conversations resources projects and initiatives with a strong emphasis on promoting global awareness fostering global competency and inspiring action towards solving real-world problems Our ultimate goal is to help prepare students for a rapidly changing and complex world

Over 500000 unique visitors

12

Over 10000 members from 142 countries

13

GEC FeaturesGroups

Searchable member list

Latest activity

Discussion forums and blogs

Links to resources

Events

Project database

Videos and photos

14

Learning 2012The Education Project 2010

Apple Asia Distinguished Educator Institute 2008

Connecting Globally

15

The Context

16

the future belongs to the nation that best

educates its citizenshellip

-President Barack Obama

17

Arne Duncan

Diane Ravitch

A NEW

NATION AT

RISK

MOMENT

18

Rahm Emanuel

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 6: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Agenda

6

My Story

The Context

Vision and Mindset

Mapping This Space

The Global Education Conference amp Network

Example Projects

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

Lucy Gray

7

Consultant

Co-Founder of the Global Education Collaborative and Conference

Apple Distinguished Educator

Google Certified Teacher

Middle School Computer Science

Primary GradesImage Source httpwwwflickrcomphotosgenista6898950

Apple Distinguished EducatorsGlobal Awareness 2006

The World is Flat

A Whole New Mind

Berlin amp Prague

Rethink Global Awareness

8

Classroom 20Link

9

Global Education Collaborative amp Conference

10

Text

Mission

11

The Global Education Collaborative is a community of practice where people connect and build the professional relationships necessary for effective collaboration across borders Via this social network educators and organizations from all over the world share conversations resources projects and initiatives with a strong emphasis on promoting global awareness fostering global competency and inspiring action towards solving real-world problems Our ultimate goal is to help prepare students for a rapidly changing and complex world

Over 500000 unique visitors

12

Over 10000 members from 142 countries

13

GEC FeaturesGroups

Searchable member list

Latest activity

Discussion forums and blogs

Links to resources

Events

Project database

Videos and photos

14

Learning 2012The Education Project 2010

Apple Asia Distinguished Educator Institute 2008

Connecting Globally

15

The Context

16

the future belongs to the nation that best

educates its citizenshellip

-President Barack Obama

17

Arne Duncan

Diane Ravitch

A NEW

NATION AT

RISK

MOMENT

18

Rahm Emanuel

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 7: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Lucy Gray

7

Consultant

Co-Founder of the Global Education Collaborative and Conference

Apple Distinguished Educator

Google Certified Teacher

Middle School Computer Science

Primary GradesImage Source httpwwwflickrcomphotosgenista6898950

Apple Distinguished EducatorsGlobal Awareness 2006

The World is Flat

A Whole New Mind

Berlin amp Prague

Rethink Global Awareness

8

Classroom 20Link

9

Global Education Collaborative amp Conference

10

Text

Mission

11

The Global Education Collaborative is a community of practice where people connect and build the professional relationships necessary for effective collaboration across borders Via this social network educators and organizations from all over the world share conversations resources projects and initiatives with a strong emphasis on promoting global awareness fostering global competency and inspiring action towards solving real-world problems Our ultimate goal is to help prepare students for a rapidly changing and complex world

Over 500000 unique visitors

12

Over 10000 members from 142 countries

13

GEC FeaturesGroups

Searchable member list

Latest activity

Discussion forums and blogs

Links to resources

Events

Project database

Videos and photos

14

Learning 2012The Education Project 2010

Apple Asia Distinguished Educator Institute 2008

Connecting Globally

15

The Context

16

the future belongs to the nation that best

educates its citizenshellip

-President Barack Obama

17

Arne Duncan

Diane Ravitch

A NEW

NATION AT

RISK

MOMENT

18

Rahm Emanuel

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 8: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Apple Distinguished EducatorsGlobal Awareness 2006

The World is Flat

A Whole New Mind

Berlin amp Prague

Rethink Global Awareness

8

Classroom 20Link

9

Global Education Collaborative amp Conference

10

Text

Mission

11

The Global Education Collaborative is a community of practice where people connect and build the professional relationships necessary for effective collaboration across borders Via this social network educators and organizations from all over the world share conversations resources projects and initiatives with a strong emphasis on promoting global awareness fostering global competency and inspiring action towards solving real-world problems Our ultimate goal is to help prepare students for a rapidly changing and complex world

Over 500000 unique visitors

12

Over 10000 members from 142 countries

13

GEC FeaturesGroups

Searchable member list

Latest activity

Discussion forums and blogs

Links to resources

Events

Project database

Videos and photos

14

Learning 2012The Education Project 2010

Apple Asia Distinguished Educator Institute 2008

Connecting Globally

15

The Context

16

the future belongs to the nation that best

educates its citizenshellip

-President Barack Obama

17

Arne Duncan

Diane Ravitch

A NEW

NATION AT

RISK

MOMENT

18

Rahm Emanuel

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 9: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Classroom 20Link

9

Global Education Collaborative amp Conference

10

Text

Mission

11

The Global Education Collaborative is a community of practice where people connect and build the professional relationships necessary for effective collaboration across borders Via this social network educators and organizations from all over the world share conversations resources projects and initiatives with a strong emphasis on promoting global awareness fostering global competency and inspiring action towards solving real-world problems Our ultimate goal is to help prepare students for a rapidly changing and complex world

Over 500000 unique visitors

12

Over 10000 members from 142 countries

13

GEC FeaturesGroups

Searchable member list

Latest activity

Discussion forums and blogs

Links to resources

Events

Project database

Videos and photos

14

Learning 2012The Education Project 2010

Apple Asia Distinguished Educator Institute 2008

Connecting Globally

15

The Context

16

the future belongs to the nation that best

educates its citizenshellip

-President Barack Obama

17

Arne Duncan

Diane Ravitch

A NEW

NATION AT

RISK

MOMENT

18

Rahm Emanuel

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 10: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Global Education Collaborative amp Conference

10

Text

Mission

11

The Global Education Collaborative is a community of practice where people connect and build the professional relationships necessary for effective collaboration across borders Via this social network educators and organizations from all over the world share conversations resources projects and initiatives with a strong emphasis on promoting global awareness fostering global competency and inspiring action towards solving real-world problems Our ultimate goal is to help prepare students for a rapidly changing and complex world

Over 500000 unique visitors

12

Over 10000 members from 142 countries

13

GEC FeaturesGroups

Searchable member list

Latest activity

Discussion forums and blogs

Links to resources

Events

Project database

Videos and photos

14

Learning 2012The Education Project 2010

Apple Asia Distinguished Educator Institute 2008

Connecting Globally

15

The Context

16

the future belongs to the nation that best

educates its citizenshellip

-President Barack Obama

17

Arne Duncan

Diane Ravitch

A NEW

NATION AT

RISK

MOMENT

18

Rahm Emanuel

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 11: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Mission

11

The Global Education Collaborative is a community of practice where people connect and build the professional relationships necessary for effective collaboration across borders Via this social network educators and organizations from all over the world share conversations resources projects and initiatives with a strong emphasis on promoting global awareness fostering global competency and inspiring action towards solving real-world problems Our ultimate goal is to help prepare students for a rapidly changing and complex world

Over 500000 unique visitors

12

Over 10000 members from 142 countries

13

GEC FeaturesGroups

Searchable member list

Latest activity

Discussion forums and blogs

Links to resources

Events

Project database

Videos and photos

14

Learning 2012The Education Project 2010

Apple Asia Distinguished Educator Institute 2008

Connecting Globally

15

The Context

16

the future belongs to the nation that best

educates its citizenshellip

-President Barack Obama

17

Arne Duncan

Diane Ravitch

A NEW

NATION AT

RISK

MOMENT

18

Rahm Emanuel

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 12: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Over 500000 unique visitors

12

Over 10000 members from 142 countries

13

GEC FeaturesGroups

Searchable member list

Latest activity

Discussion forums and blogs

Links to resources

Events

Project database

Videos and photos

14

Learning 2012The Education Project 2010

Apple Asia Distinguished Educator Institute 2008

Connecting Globally

15

The Context

16

the future belongs to the nation that best

educates its citizenshellip

-President Barack Obama

17

Arne Duncan

Diane Ravitch

A NEW

NATION AT

RISK

MOMENT

18

Rahm Emanuel

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 13: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Over 10000 members from 142 countries

13

GEC FeaturesGroups

Searchable member list

Latest activity

Discussion forums and blogs

Links to resources

Events

Project database

Videos and photos

14

Learning 2012The Education Project 2010

Apple Asia Distinguished Educator Institute 2008

Connecting Globally

15

The Context

16

the future belongs to the nation that best

educates its citizenshellip

-President Barack Obama

17

Arne Duncan

Diane Ravitch

A NEW

NATION AT

RISK

MOMENT

18

Rahm Emanuel

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 14: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

GEC FeaturesGroups

Searchable member list

Latest activity

Discussion forums and blogs

Links to resources

Events

Project database

Videos and photos

14

Learning 2012The Education Project 2010

Apple Asia Distinguished Educator Institute 2008

Connecting Globally

15

The Context

16

the future belongs to the nation that best

educates its citizenshellip

-President Barack Obama

17

Arne Duncan

Diane Ravitch

A NEW

NATION AT

RISK

MOMENT

18

Rahm Emanuel

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 15: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Learning 2012The Education Project 2010

Apple Asia Distinguished Educator Institute 2008

Connecting Globally

15

The Context

16

the future belongs to the nation that best

educates its citizenshellip

-President Barack Obama

17

Arne Duncan

Diane Ravitch

A NEW

NATION AT

RISK

MOMENT

18

Rahm Emanuel

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 16: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

The Context

16

the future belongs to the nation that best

educates its citizenshellip

-President Barack Obama

17

Arne Duncan

Diane Ravitch

A NEW

NATION AT

RISK

MOMENT

18

Rahm Emanuel

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 17: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

the future belongs to the nation that best

educates its citizenshellip

-President Barack Obama

17

Arne Duncan

Diane Ravitch

A NEW

NATION AT

RISK

MOMENT

18

Rahm Emanuel

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 18: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Arne Duncan

Diane Ravitch

A NEW

NATION AT

RISK

MOMENT

18

Rahm Emanuel

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 19: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

19

Factory Model = ComplianceLearning By Doing Model = Communication Creativity and Collaboration

Where do you stand

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 20: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

A world class education system should call for globally connected schools

20

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 21: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

oline73 Can you distill why globally

connected classrooms are vital

in 2010

Photo source

21

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 22: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

We have urgent problems that need to be addressed and in order to prepare our students to work on these problems we must connect them globally

We must teach them how networked learning leads to networked problem solving

22

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 23: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

The influence of new mediaThe push for 21st century skillsThe ldquohighly connected teacherrdquoThe urgency presented by

complex global problems

Factors Within This Context

23

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 24: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

21st Century Students amp Teachers

New Connections

Connected Individuals

New Communities

Virtual Communities

New Content

Collaborative Communities

Connected in innovative and new ways

24

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 25: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Millennials Want to Learnhellip

With technology

With one another

Online

In their time

In their place

Doing things that matter

25

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 26: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

ldquoThe Highly Connected Teacherrdquo

26

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 27: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

27

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 28: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

Emerging technologies

Adoption horizons

1 year or less

2 to 3 years

4 to 5 years

28

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 29: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

The New Media Consortium

The K12 Horizon Report

1 year or lessMobile Devices and Apps

Tablet Computing

2 to 3 yearsGame-based learning

Personal Learning Environments

4 to 5 yearsAugmented Realities

Natural User Interfaces

29

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 30: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

The Global Achievement Gap21st Century Skills

Critical Thinking and Problem-Solving

Collaboration Across Networks and Leading by Influence

Agility and Adaptability

Initiative and Entrepreneurialism

Effective Oral and Written Communication

Accessing and Analyzing Information

Curiosity and Imagination

30

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 31: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Creating Innovators

31

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 32: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

32

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 33: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

CCSSO and Asia Societyrsquos Partnership for Global Learning

Comprehensive resource addressing global competence

Download a copy here

Attend the PGL conference

33

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 34: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

From Educating for Global Competence Preparing our Youth to Engage the World

34

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 35: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

High Noon

Issues involving the global commons

Issues requiring a global commitment

Issues needing a global regulatory approach

35

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 36: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Flat Classroom Projectreg amp Book

Julie Lindsay amp Vicki Davis

Steps to Flattening Your Classroom

Project Development

PD Toolkit

36

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 37: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Additional Resources

37

Esther Wojcicki and Michael LevineTeaching for a Shared Future American Educators Need to Think Globally

EdWeek Global Learning blog by Tony Jackson

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 38: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Vision amp Mindset

38

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 39: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Edutopia FebruaryMarch 2008

httpwwwedutopiaorgsage-advice-world-citizens

39

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 40: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

First you help them define the term ldquocitizen of the worldrdquo Then you help them learn what being a good citizen means -- to themselves to loved ones and family to the school community to the surrounding community Onersquos actions can be directly linked to onersquos values (beliefs feelings and actions that are important to us) so starting with a basic understanding of onersquos values is essential to any meaningful discussions on citizenship The global context is meaningless unless students are good citizens of their own nation

40

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 41: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Right before our eyes all that the education sector has controlled dismissed manipulated validated embellished fictionalized and ranked within an aura of tradition and ritual may be accessed by point-and-click We need to stop chasing exponentially expanding content Inquiry problem recognition and solution creativity knowing onersquos strengths and weaknesses communication and relationships are what students must be prepared for

41

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 42: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Becoming a world citizen requires knowledge and experience of other cultures US schools do not provide knowledge or experience Rather they provide a cursory glimpse of others in order to exemplify how not to be American ldquoDiversity Dayrdquo does not create world citizens it patronizes cultural difference and touts xenophobia and always winds up pandering American culture as Eurocentrically defined Only travel and immersion in other cultures creates world citizens

42

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 43: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Prepare students to be citizens of the world by being one yourself Teach from a global perspective

43

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 44: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Mapping This Space

45

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 45: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Take This Survey

46

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurvey

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 46: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

View Results Here

47

httptinyurlcom21stcenturyskillssurveyresults

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 47: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Connect All Schools

48

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 48: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

The Global EducationConference amp Network

49

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 49: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Global Education Conferencehttpglobaleducationconferencecom

50

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 50: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Steve Hargadon

51

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 51: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Closing Session

52

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 52: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

2010 - Brian Mannix

53

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 53: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

2010 - Polar Bears International

54

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 54: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

2010 - Catlin Gabel School

55

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 55: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

2011 - Pam Allyn - LitWorld

56

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 56: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

2011 - Greg Jacobs - Louder Than a Bomb

57

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 57: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

2011 - The Shoah Foundation

58

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 58: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Example Projects

59

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 59: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Earth Day Groceries Project Mark Ahlness

60

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 60: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Projects By Jen

61

Jen Wagner

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 61: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Around the World with 80 Schools

Silvia Tolisano

62

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 62: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

63

Rob Sbaglia The Writerrsquos Club

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 63: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Google Lit TripsJerome Burg

64

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 64: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Sample VideoValerie Becker

65

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 65: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

WikiValerie Becker

66

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 66: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

A Whole New MindKarl Fisch

67

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 67: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

The iEARN Project Book

68

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 68: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Avoiding Three Cups of Controversy

Greg Mortenson

Central Asia Institute

Pennies for Peace

Three Cups of Tea

What Mortenson Got Wrong

American Institute of Philanthropy

Better Business Bureau

Charity Navigator

Great NonProfits

GuideStar

69

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 69: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

The Classroom Teacherrsquos Toolkit

70

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 70: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Apple IncTools of the Trade

Photobooth (photos video greenscreening)

iChat AV (videoconferencing desktop sharing recording)

Garageband (recording podcasting)

iPod iPod Touch iPad - apps

71

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 71: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Global Collaboration Exploration amp Innovation on iTunes U

72

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 72: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Generic ToolkitStill or video camera - Kodak cameras

Web cam - Logitech

Chat client - Skype (free)

Digital recording device or web site

Collaborative workspace - Thinkcom (Thinkquest) Google Sites Wikispaces

Networks - Twitter iEARN ePals TakingITGlobal Global Ed ning

Web 20 Tools - VoiceThread Voki Google Docs (Forms) Google Maps amp Earth

73

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 73: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Starting Points

ePals

Buck Institute for Education

iEARN-USA

International Baccalaureate

Facing the Future

Flat Classroom Project

Global Nomads

One World Education

Primary Source

Rock Our World

Roots amp Shoots

TakingITGlobal

Voices Education Project

World Savvy

74

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 74: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Recommendations

Learn to network network to learn

Keep it authentic

Start small and design very structured projects

Join an existing group project

Develop a customized vision of 21st century learning for your classroom school and district

75

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 75: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Where the h is Matt 2

76

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 76: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Slides with clickable linksavailable at httpwwwlucygrayorg

77

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 77: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

78

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 78: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Join our BrainPOP group within the Global Education Conference Network

httptinyurlcomBrainPOPGlobal

79

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious

Page 79: BrainPOP Webinar - Going Global

Lucyrsquos Contact Info

80

lucylucygrayconsultingcom

httplucygrayconsultingcom

httpglobaleducationningcom

Username elemenousOn Skype Twitter YouTube Diigo Flickr Delicious