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Science of Music
148 posts

Science of Music
@ScienceofMusic1
Online tools for making music while exploring the science of sound, NGSS aligned and ready for distance learning.
San Diego, CA Tham gia Mayıs 2020
139 Đang theo dõi73 Người theo dõi

@GregSchwanbeck @a_freeparticle @Rainmaker1973 Cool! And for the students to drive the speaker you can use listeningtowaves.com/signalgenerator
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@timgill924 Great advice if you want to spend your life becoming an expert on something three other people care about
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@MatRyanELATeach @JayWamsted What proportion do you estimate enjoys them? Any particular type of studying?
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@ScienceofMusic1 @JayWamsted Some kids may be bored by them. But students often enjoy these titles.
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They might have compassion burnout. They probably loved kids when they started, but the conditions of the job made them too unhappy to care. They are not the problem. The job conditions are.
Christopher Emdin@chrisemdin
I was in a classroom today with a teacher who CLEARLY doesn't like kids.... this is a reality everyday. Heartbreaking!!!!! @_CrystalMWatson
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I was in a classroom today with a teacher who CLEARLY doesn't like kids.... this is a reality everyday. Heartbreaking!!!!! @_CrystalMWatson
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@LoveScienceMusc The point is that he was creating with the most typical user in mind.
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@ScienceofMusic1 Nice. Yea once your ears get used to any speaker or headphone then you can make solid choices
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@SurthrivEDU Todo pa'la cruda. Amazing birria, huevos rancheros, and mexican food overall. goo.gl/maps/oiTHobBJt…
Español

@fab_maurin @DrBradJohnson Do you reeeaaally believe that? In my experience is mastery drives from interest.
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@ScienceofMusic1 @DrBradJohnson Some would say that interest derives from mastery.
Discover any topic (even though it doesn't seem appealing at first), practice, become proficient. Interest will arise.
School has a decisive role to play at step 1.
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@fab_maurin @DrBradJohnson Only if those topics generate interest. Reading Catcher in the Rye, for example, does not. Solving equations. I don't think so.
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@DrBradJohnson On creativity: agree.
On curiosity - what students do at school:
• Exploring a broad range of topics
• Being introduced to literature, history, etc.
• Learning in itself
Isn't school all about curiosity?
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@DrBradJohnson The problem is all the time allocated to meaningless tasks.
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@alfiekohn Also, high school grades do not reflect work performance in those that didn't go to college. In the academic house of mirrors, past grades are reflected as future grades.
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This study confirms that high school grades predict college grades better than tests (like the SAT or ACT) do, but the real story here is that 80-90% of the variance in college grades isn't predicted by either grades OR tests: goo.gl/w2Djpv
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@mcgregis @alfiekohn That's great! Inflating grades is a great way of making them meaningless, and is within reach of teachers.
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@alfiekohn Ontario grades are hugely inflated. Pandemic made it worse. Students expected high grades for little work.
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