Day 30. 3 Things I Learned Writing Online Every Day For 30 Days In A Row.
Today is the last day of writing and publishing online content for 30 days. I completed the challenge. Some things I learned along the way.
Today is the last day of writing and publishing online content for 30 days. I completed the challenge. Some things I learned along the way.
Training material builds it using all the techniques we discussed over the last 28 days.
I love to learn about R and data science, and these newsletters are a great way to keep up with the latest news and trends.
Generative AI was spat out into the world, and as teachers, we have to deal with the consequences.
How I found my passion for computers and teaching.
Teaching for everyone, make ‘accessible’ your usual perspective.
Use Authentic Tasks as teaching strategies to enter the world of computing.
Shared note-taking and exercise problem-solving. Two ways to engage students online.
Your teaching will improve with feedback from your students, colleagues, and yourself. Learn how to get and give helpful feedback.
The best way to improve your class is to solicit feedback. The best way to enhance your students' engagement is to solicit their feedback.
Real cases of what can go wrong during online classes and how you can solve it.
I have been working as an educator for 30 years. These are the 6 simple (but effective) learning strategies I’d share with anyone who wants to learn better.
My notes about brain plasticity and how that impacts teaching and learning.
Two apps I can’t live without when it comes to writing content in English.
Why Learning Styles, Learning Pyramid, Geek Gene, and Good at math = Good programmer are misconceptions?
Today, we talk about one of the biggest fears of teachers using Participatory Live Coding: Making mistakes. Spoiler Alert: not only is it okay to make mistakes, but they are also an excellent opportunity for teaching. We also discuss another way to engage students when teaching with Participatory Live Coding.
Today, we have two more tips about this teaching technique for programming. We will focus on our lesson plan, when and how we can improvise to avoid losing track, and how to use diagrams.
Teaching with participatory live coding can make it difficult to know whether people are following along or unable to code due to ongoing issues that haven’t been fixed. One way to check with your learners is to give different ways to indicate their status, so our today’s tip is Get real-time feedback and provide immediate help.
It is essential that all learners can see the code and the output of the screen because they have to copy exactly what you have typed. Today, we will look at how to use the screen(s) wisely.
Mirror your learner’s environment and Avoid distraction. Two tips for a useful and friendly implementation of Participatory Live Coding for you and your students.
Second tip to use Participatory Live Coding when teaching programing: Go slowly, and don’t teach alone. Ideas for in person and online classes.
First tip from a series of 10 tips for educator to implement participatory live coding in their classroom. How to use it in-person and online
What is Live coding and what pedagogical practices support this technique? How can we apply them in our classroom?
Today, I share 4 communities of practice that help me boost my carrer in teaching, data and coding skills.
Today, I share a book, a video and a podcast episode to learn how to teach.
Today, I will explain a few simple facts about memory and share how to avoid overloading the learner by managing their cognitive load when teaching to code.
Here are 5 exercises you can use as formative assessments when teaching coding skills, that will allow you to support your student at the moment when the learning is happening.
Use analogies, concept maps and notional machines to build your learners mental models.
Novice, Competent and Expert, and why is important to know to who are you teaching before you start to build a lesson
I will write about teaching and learning techniques applied to programming and data science during the next 30 days