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Dan Coleman's avatar

I love this under-point: “technology that would let teachers see student thinking in something close to its *raw* form”

Because I think when we talk about “making thinking visible,” we need to differentiate between *more or less cooked thinking.* Like Gardner argues in Disciplined Mind, what we’re really aiming at is to educate our students’ common sense, which they actually use to navigate the ordinary world (not how they answer questions in schoolworld).

Heck, I’d love an AI solution that captured my students’ raw “explain your thinking” responses, clustered them in interesting ways on-the-fly, and projected them to me/the class so we could do something brilliant with them (e.g., along the lines of Eric Mazur’s misunderstanding encounters.)

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Jeffrey Branzburg's avatar

“I tried not to be toomuch of a downer here” - please do be a downer when dealing with well meaning Ed tech peeps; as we (but not them) know, Ed tech will not solve all.

“lots of edtech companies, in spite of their renown, are not helping 95% of students.” - and they never have.

“You either bet on teachers or you bet on software” - years ago, when Ed Tech companies introduced what they called integrated learning systems, many marketed them as “teacher proof.” Enough said.

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