TB31162022: Making Student Thinking Visible
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Making Student Thinking Visible

“Learning is a consequence of thinking,” says Harvard Professor David N. Perkins. Given this important relationship, it is essential for us as educators to focus on how our students are thinking. We need to support them in becoming more skillful thinkers in order to help them become more effective learners. Drawing on the work of Ron Ritchhart (Harvard Project Zero), we will discuss strategies for making student thinking more valued and visible in the classroom, including working with thinking routines and other strategies for helping students to pay more attention to and improve their capacity to think well and deeply. We will also discuss strategies for documenting students’ thinking and learning in order to help those inside and outside the classroom see student growth and progress.

Registration Details

Course Code: TB31162022

Trainer: Ms Tina Blythe
Date: 31 May - 1 June 2022 (2 half-days)
Time: 8.30 am to 11.30 am Singapore Time GMT+8
Mode of delivery: via Zoom

Click Here to Register

Closing date: 8 April 2022 Friday

Workshop Fee:
S$200.00 per participant. If 2 or more participants from the same school/organization attend the same workshop, the discounted fee will be S$180.00 per participant for that particular workshop. Fees are subject to GST and include all training materials.

Other Information:
Registration is on a first-come-first-serve basis. No refunds will be made for cancellations or in the case of absentees. The Academy accepts replacements for registered participants who are unable to attend for whatever reasons.

School/Cluster-Based Webinar Registration
Please contact Joseph Loy by email This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or tel: 6363 0330 on the cost of conducting the workshop

 

 


About the Trainer – Ms Tina Blythe

Tina Blythe-colorTina Blythe is the Project Director for Project Zero's online learning collaboration with the Independent Schools of Victoria. She is part of Project Zero's online learning development team, developing, facilitating, and assessing Project Zero online professional development courses. She is also the Education Chair of Project Zero's summer institute, "The Project Zero Classroom," and Lecturer on Education at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.

Central to her research and teaching are how to create and sustain learning environments—for students, teachers, and administrators, in both face-to-face and online contexts—that support deep learning, thinking, and understanding. Collaborative inquiry and the collaborative assessment of student and teacher work are key focuses of her work.

 In addition to her work at Project Zero, Tina serves as education advisor for the Silkroad, an organization founded by cellist Yo-Yo Ma to promote innovation, learning, and cross-cultural understanding through the arts. For twelve years, she was a faculty member and the Director of Faculty Development at the Boston Architectural College. She began her career more than three decades ago as a middle and high school teacher in urban public schools.

A researcher at Project Zero since 1988, Tina has participated in more than a dozen research grants, including: Teaching for Understanding; Practical Intelligence for School; ATLAS Communities (a collaboration with the Coalition of Essential Schools, the School Development Program, and the Educational Development Center); the Massachusetts Schools Network (a collaboration with the Massachusetts Department of Education); The Evidence Project; WIDE World Online Learning; Project-based Learning in Afterschools (a collaboration with the New York City Afterschool Program Network); The Creative Classroom (a collaboration with the Disney Development Corporation); Making Learning Visible; and the Storywork Project (a collaboration with the International Storytelling Institute).

Tina is the co-author of a number of articles and books including Facilitating for Learning: A Guide for Teacher Groups of All Kinds (Teachers College Press, 2015); Looking Together at Student Work, 3rd Ed. (Teachers College Press, 2015); The Facilitator's Book of Questions (Teachers College Press, 2004); Teaching as Inquiry (Teachers College Press, 2004); and The Teaching for Understanding Guide (Jossey-Bass, 1998; translated into Spanish, Chinese, Swedish, and Georgian).