Thanks Jon for sharing this important message. Yes, there are many teachers and schools who embrace this method. However, there need to be more. Every great movement was started with one person who shared an idea. Others jumped on board. Education is vitally important to our students and our world. Building relationships with our students is increasingly important in today's society. I encourage all interested people to join the Flipped Learning Global Initiative to broaden this movement. Together we can and will change our educational system. Our children deserve our best efforts.
I've been seeing brazilian philosophers talk about this, too. As a brazilian psychologist who also works with education I really appreciate this talk. A very necessary topic to be discussed all over the world.
I wish more educators saw this power in this! I’ve been flipping and running a self-paced class for nearly 8 years and really think it is the best way to teach. It isn’t without it’s difficulties and does not work for all students, but it is very powerful when you are able to allow students who will benefit from it to have this type of education!
Thank you Jon. You're always inspiring educators. Thank you for including my Escuela Secundaria Rural mediada por TIC in your talk. Hope to see you soon.
Thank you for the wonderful sharing. As educators, we can do our part to make our teaching relevant and useful to students. By doing it right ourselves, we would have the credibility to share our experience and help other colleagues to adopt this active way of teaching / flipped classroom.
Thanks a lot for sharing this great and inspiring speech about Education. I truly agree with you in the way that we should move from passive to active learning and it could be made true if educators around the world changed their mindset towards their students. I have always thought that many students go to school to see their teachers work. It should be the other way round. As you say at the end of your speech: "Isn't it time for that?"
Flipped Learning is definetly the way forward, indeed as Jon mentions there is a risk of poor teachers being able to be replaced by videos, so we, as educators should be proactive and on the front foot in using technologies to support our students across all subjects.
Jon Bergmann has a very clear approach to transform our classrooms. But, it's not that simple. As a teacher, I'll invest every single moment to learn how to offer to my students a more pleasure experience in my classes.
I love the idea and would like to hear more about how flipping learning is achievable where students - even a few students in a given class - may not have access to the internet at home or may not own the devices needed to access the internet. I see the logic, but this question has been dogging me as an educator. Is there an 'unplugged' version of flipped learning?
redwan03able hello! Absolutely, you can do Flipped learning without the internet, with or without technology. The key is getting active learning principals into your classroom. If internet access is low, but you want to commit to video you can use USB for example.
Flipped Learning is happening economically challenged schools across the world. Many teachers have gotten very creative about how to make this happen. When I started flipping in 2007 I had 30% with no internet at home. We burned the pre-videos onto DVDs and handed them out. I have a friend in rural Argentina who has figured out a way to use audio files and pdf's for his students. Rest assured, it is working.
Thanks Jon for sharing this important message. Yes, there are many teachers and schools who embrace this method. However, there need to be more. Every great movement was started with one person who shared an idea. Others jumped on board. Education is vitally important to our students and our world. Building relationships with our students is increasingly important in today's society. I encourage all interested people to join the Flipped Learning Global Initiative to broaden this movement. Together we can and will change our educational system. Our children deserve our best efforts.
I've been seeing brazilian philosophers talk about this, too. As a brazilian psychologist who also works with education I really appreciate this talk. A very necessary topic to be discussed all over the world.
I wish more educators saw this power in this! I’ve been flipping and running a self-paced class for nearly 8 years and really think it is the best way to teach. It isn’t without it’s difficulties and does not work for all students, but it is very powerful when you are able to allow students who will benefit from it to have this type of education!
Yet in spite of the traditional school system, passionate learners have been flipping their learning for centuries.
Thank you Jon. You're always inspiring educators. Thank you for including my Escuela Secundaria Rural mediada por TIC in your talk. Hope to see you soon.
Thank you for the wonderful sharing. As educators, we can do our part to make our teaching relevant and useful to students. By doing it right ourselves, we would have the credibility to share our experience and help other colleagues to adopt this active way of teaching / flipped classroom.
Thanks a lot for sharing this great and inspiring speech about Education. I truly agree with you in the way that we should move from passive to active learning and it could be made true if educators around the world changed their mindset towards their students. I have always thought that many students go to school to see their teachers work. It should be the other way round. As you say at the end of your speech: "Isn't it time for that?"
Flipped Learning is definetly the way forward, indeed as Jon mentions there is a risk of poor teachers being able to be replaced by videos, so we, as educators should be proactive and on the front foot in using technologies to support our students across all subjects.
Jon Bergmann has a very clear approach to transform our classrooms. But, it's not that simple. As a teacher, I'll invest every single moment to learn how to offer to my students a more pleasure experience in my classes.
So true :) well done Jon Bergmann, for your contribution and inspiration to the Education system in the world.
Thank you Jon for the great talk. It is highly informative.
Thanks soy profesor de Ecuadorm y estoy realizando una tesi sobre la clase invertida o dar la vuelta a la clase es muy interesante
Don't stop, Jon.
I love the idea and would like to hear more about how flipping learning is achievable where students - even a few students in a given class - may not have access to the internet at home or may not own the devices needed to access the internet. I see the logic, but this question has been dogging me as an educator. Is there an 'unplugged' version of flipped learning?
redwan03able hello! Absolutely, you can do Flipped learning without the internet, with or without technology. The key is getting active learning principals into your classroom. If internet access is low, but you want to commit to video you can use USB for example.
Absolutely: when we started in 2007, we did it where 30% of our students didn't have internet at home. We had to get creative, but we made it work.
Flipped Learning is happening economically challenged schools across the world. Many teachers have gotten very creative about how to make this happen. When I started flipping in 2007 I had 30% with no internet at home. We burned the pre-videos onto DVDs and handed them out. I have a friend in rural Argentina who has figured out a way to use audio files and pdf's for his students. Rest assured, it is working.
Yea my school will never care enough about the students to do that
This makes me sad. But sadly, I have seen this at too many schools across the world.
Malpractice not malpratice . Thank you