EPISODE · Oct 30, 2017 · 57 MIN
Teaching with Hyperdocs - PPD017
from PodcastPD
The use of HyperDocs is on the rise in 1:1 classrooms across the country. as they allow for increased student engagement and student-directed work. Join us as we ease confusion between a HyperDoc and a Doc with Links.Featured ContentWhat is a hyperdoc?The term HyperDocs was coined by Lisa Highfill, Kelly Hilton, and Sarah Landis.Cult of Pedagogy episode 70 – Jennifer Gonzalez interviewed Lisa Highfill, Kelly Hilton, and Sarah Landis – https://www.cultofpedagogy.com/hyperdocsA HyperDoc is a digital document—such as a Google Doc—where all the parts of a lesson or multiple lessons have been pulled together into one main location. Within this single document, students are provided with hyperlinks to all of the resources they need to complete a variety of tasks and engage themselves in the learning.HyperDocs vs A Doc with LinksHow to Build a HyperDoc Lesson – Parts of a HyperDocMany HyperDocs follow this basic template that takes students through six steps of a lesson:Engage: Hook your students, get them engaged, and activate prior knowledge. You might use a fun video, interactive website, or audio recording.Explore: Link resources, such as videos or articles, for students to explore more information.Explain: Clarify the learning objective for your students. This is where you could teach a whole group lesson with direct instruction, or add additional resources for students to explore.Apply: What do you want students to create to demonstrate their learning? Give instructions for the assignment.Share: Provide a way for students to share their work and receive feedback.Reflect: Pause for reflection (whole class, think-pair-share, etc.) or link them to a digital way to share their thoughts.Extend: This portion is great for early finishers. Provide extra activities, additional online resources, or challenge them with an extension assignment to extend their thinking.Links and ResourcesThe HyperDoc Handbook: Digital Lesson Design Using Google AppsLisa Highfill, Kelly Hilton, and Sarah LandisCult of Pedagogy episode 70 – Jennifer Gonzalez interviewed Lisa Highfill, Kelly Hilton, Sarah LandisFB communityhyerdocs.coEnglish/ ELA Hyperdoc Power! via Tracy EnosSafeShare.tvPodcastPD Episode 11-where Stacey mentions “The Answers” for the first timePodcastPD Episode 12 with Rich CzyzPodcastPD Episode 16 with Adam SchoenbartWhat Are We Listening ToStacey: I’m getting back into my running. In preparation for an upcoming half marathon, I am listening and learning a lot with Let’s Run Disney-October 2017, Another Mother Runner-ep 282Chris: Fall TV is in full swing. ArrowSquad, Central City Underground, Maid of Steel, Tomorrow’s Legends, Gotham Undercover – Consider checking out a podcast about the TV shows you watch!AJ: While looking into podcasts for a friend who is embarking on a principalship, and from a recommendation for Nesi – I found Episode 51 of Principal Matters w/ William D. Parker. The episode, title, The Shocking Truth About your Decision Making, was an excellent listen.What We’re LearningStacey: Learning how to run againChris: Lessons we can learn from the 2017 New York Yankees. What Educators Can Learn From Yankees OF Aaron JudgeAJ: Things are hard! Balancing all aspects of life is proving to be a challenge. I need to focus.
What this episode covers
The use of HyperDocs is on the rise in 1:1 classrooms across the country. as they allow for increased student engagement and student-directed work. Join us as we ease confusion between a HyperDoc and a Doc with Links.Featured ContentWhat is a hyperdoc?The term HyperDocs was coined by Lisa Highfill, Kelly Hilton, and Sarah Landis.Cult of Pedagogy episode 70 – Jennifer Gonzalez interviewed Lisa Highfill, Kelly Hilton, and Sarah Landis – https://www.cultofpedagogy.com/hyperdocsA HyperDoc is a digital document—such as a Google Doc—where all the parts of a lesson or multiple lessons have been pulled together into one main location. Within this single document, students are provided with hyperlinks to all of the resources they need to complete a variety of tasks and engage themselves in the learning.HyperDocs vs A Doc with LinksHow to Build a HyperDoc Lesson – Parts of a HyperDocMany HyperDocs follow this basic template that takes students through six steps of a lesson:Engage: Hook your students, get them engaged, and activate prior knowledge. You might use a fun video, interactive website, or audio recording.Explore: Link resources, such as videos or articles, for students to explore more information.Explain: Clarify the learning objective for your students. This is where you could teach a whole group lesson with direct instruction, or add additional resources for students to explore.Apply: What do you want students to create to demonstrate their learning? Give instructions for the assignment.Share: Provide a way for students to share their work and receive feedback.Reflect: Pause for reflection (whole class, think-pair-share, etc.) or link them to a digital way to share their thoughts.Extend: This portion is great for early finishers. Provide extra activities, additional online resources, or challenge them with an extension assignment to extend their thinking.Links and ResourcesThe HyperDoc Handbook: Digital Lesson Design Using Google AppsLisa Highfill, Kelly Hilton, and Sarah LandisCult of Pedagogy episode 70 – Jennifer Gonzalez interviewed Lisa Highfill, Kelly Hilton, Sarah LandisFB communityhyerdocs.coEnglish/ ELA Hyperdoc Power! via Tracy EnosSafeShare.tvPodcastPD Episode 11-where Stacey mentions “The Answers” for the first timePodcastPD Episode 12 with Rich CzyzPodcastPD Episode 16 with Adam SchoenbartWhat Are We Listening ToStacey: I’m getting back into my running. In preparation for an upcoming half marathon, I am listening and learning a lot with Let’s Run Disney-October 2017, Another Mother Runner-ep 282Chris: Fall TV is in full swing. ArrowSquad, Central City Underground, Maid of Steel, Tomorrow’s Legends, Gotham Undercover – Consider checking out a podcast about the TV shows you watch!AJ: While looking into podcasts for a friend who is embarking on a principalship, and from a recommendation for Nesi – I found Episode 51 of Principal Matters w/ William D. Parker. The episode, title, The Shocking Truth About your Decision Making, was an excellent listen.What We’re LearningStacey: Learning how to run againChris: Lessons we can learn from the 2017 New York Yankees. What Educators Can Learn From Yankees OF Aaron JudgeAJ: Things are hard! Balancing all aspects of life is proving to be a challenge. I need to focus.
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Teaching with Hyperdocs - PPD017
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