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Visual Ranking, Seeing Reason: Two in a Growing Suite of Resources What goes on in classrooms where students exercise their higher-order thinking skills? Plenty. These are active learning places where students engage in robust discussions, pursue investigations, analyze complex information, and solve problems. Teachers play a critical role, of course, facilitating learning activities and posing questions that take students' thinking to deeper levels. To help teachers and students make the most of active learning experiences, Intel® Innovation in Education is developing a suite of online tools, available at no charge and accessible from any computer connected to the Internet. With two tools now available and more in development, these online resources help teachers design, set up, and manage classroom projects across a wide range of grade levels and subject areas. "Our tools are based on cognitive research that shows how kids think," explains Dr. Jim Pollard, Intel's lead researcher for developing online education tools. The first two tools available online are Seeing Reason, which prompts students to think about cause-and-effect relationships in complex systems, and Visual Ranking, which involves making and comparing ordered lists. Both tools also offer teachers valuable insights into student understanding.
The newest online resource, Visual Ranking, offers an interactive workspace for ranking and comparing lists. Visual Ranking includes an easy-to-use tool that allows students to arrange factors in an ordered list, explain their reasoning through use of comment boxes, and compare their results with lists made by others. What do students learn from making ordered lists? The process involves a wide range of cognitive skills, including analysis, evaluation, and decision making. For example, a social studies teacher might ask students to order a list of U.S. presidents according to relative "greatness." As students arrange names in their lists, they weigh what they know about the presidents against their own criteria for assessing greatness. Visual Ranking includes a correlation feature that enables students to compare their results with their classmates' lists. Whether a class project involves ranking the elements of a good mystery story or listing the steps involved in cell meiosis, the Visual Ranking tool helps students set priorities, debate differences, make correlations, reach consensus, and organize ideas. Visual Ranking was introduced this fall after nearly a year of behind-the-scenes development and field-testing with classroom teachers. The resource includes the online tool and teacher workspace, along with examples of projects from a variety of subject areas and grade levels. Related resources highlight strategies for using the tool in the classroom and recap research from the field of cognitive science. Creating Tools for Learning Working with researchers and teachers to develop and adapt tools for online delivery that meet his criteria for "powerful, interactive, cognitive tools," Pollard looks for resources that meet the following key goals:
The online learning environment also makes it possible for students to connect with resources beyond the classroom. Learning teams can be organized across distant locations, allowing students to exchange ideas with learners in other communities. Using the Visual Ranking tool, for example, students might compare their lists with those created by various audiencesstudents in the same class, students at other locations, or parents or other adults who are experts in a particular topic. For more information about these tools, visit:
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