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JOHN'S EDU-MARKET

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JOHN’S EDU MARKET stands out for its unique share of resources and information. Teachers can use these resources to support students as they include well-formulated lesson plans, carefully designed support material, and well-planned worksheets. This platform aims at bringing "Tomorrow's lessons to today's classroom, and today's lessons to a classroom now". The Teacher-Author of this platform is an English graduate, associated with Gems Education as a Subject Leader of English.

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JOHN’S EDU MARKET stands out for its unique share of resources and information. Teachers can use these resources to support students as they include well-formulated lesson plans, carefully designed support material, and well-planned worksheets. This platform aims at bringing "Tomorrow's lessons to today's classroom, and today's lessons to a classroom now". The Teacher-Author of this platform is an English graduate, associated with Gems Education as a Subject Leader of English.
WBL: WEB-BASED LEARNING
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WBL: WEB-BASED LEARNING

(0)
WBL: Web-Based Learning It is an online system that allows each learner to progress through a series of educational experiences at his or her own speed. WBL Description: Web-Based Learning is a learning that uses the World Wide Web or the Internet as a means and a method for delivery of learning and instruction. This Resource Includes: 1. WBL Synonyms 2. WBL Environments 3. WBL On-Site Examples 4. WBL Distance Learning Examples 5. WBL Advantages 6. WBL Disadvantages 7. WBL Models 8. WBL Glossary 9. WBL Resources
VBL: VALUE-BASED LEARNING
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VBL: VALUE-BASED LEARNING

(0)
Value-Based Learning is an approach to teaching that works with values. It creates a strong learning environment that enhances academic attainment and develops students' social and relationship skills that last throughout their lives. The positive learning environment is achieved through the positive values modeled by staff throughout the school. It quickly liberates teachers and students from the stress of confrontational relationships, which frees up substantial teaching and learning time. It also provides the social capacity to students, equipping them with social and relationship skills, intelligence and attitudes to succeed in school and throughout their lives. This Resource Includes: 1. Meaning of VBL 2. VBL Impact 3. What VBL is Not 4. Why VBL is Important 5. VBL Resources
ESL PRESENTATIONS: BUNDLE
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ESL PRESENTATIONS: BUNDLE

9 Resources
A Bundle of 9 ESL Presentations: Debating Skills Rubrics CAT4 Data Analysis Listening Skills New Bloom’s Taxonomy Innovative Story Telling Music in the Classroom Curriculum Mapping Differentiation
UBL: UTILITY-BASED LEARNING
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UBL: UTILITY-BASED LEARNING

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Utility-Based Learning provides a pedagogical, self-contained discussion of probability estimation methods via a coherent approach from the viewpoint of a decision maker who acts in an uncertain environment. This approach is motivated by the idea that probabilistic models are usually not learned for their own sake; rather, they are used to make decisions. This Resource Covers: 1. Meaning of UBL 2. UBL Features 3. UBL View Point 4. UBL Impact 5. UBL Process 6. UBL Resources
TBL: TASK/TEAM/TECHNOLOGY/THEME-BASED LEARNING
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TBL: TASK/TEAM/TECHNOLOGY/THEME-BASED LEARNING

(0)
This Resource Covers: 1. TBL: Task-Based Learning * Task-Based Learning Focus * Task-Based Learning Characteristics * Task-Based Learning Stages * Present Practice Produce (PPP) Paradigm * Task-Based Learning Advantages * Task-Based Learning Concerns 2. TBL: Team-Based Learning * Team-Based Learning Purpose * Team-Based Learning Procedure * Team-Based Learning Principles *Team-Based Learning Routines * Team-Based Learning Basis * Team-Based Learning Teacher Roles * Team-Based Learning Benefits 3. TBL: Technology-Based Learning * Technology-Based Learning Benefits 4. TBL: Theme-Based Learning * Theme-Based Learning Objectives * Theme-Based Learning Outcomes * Theme-Based Learning Basics * Theme-Based Learning Steps * Theme-Based Learning Advantages 5. TBL Resources
SBL: SKILLS/STUDIO-BASED LEARNING
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SBL: SKILLS/STUDIO-BASED LEARNING

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This Resource Covers: SBL: Skills-based learning centers on developing and applying specific skills that can then be used to obtain the required knowledge. The classroom environment will encourage independence, as well as combining active-learning and collaboration to help the children retain the knowledge. This process allows the pupils to access, process and then express the knowledge they have learnt rather than simply writing it down. 1. Meaning of Skills-Based Learning 2. Skills-Based Learning Focus 3. Skills-Based Learning Process SBL: Students ‘learning to be something’ (Studio) rather than ‘learning about something’ (Lab). 1. Principles of Studio-Based Learning 2. Studio-Based Learning Advantages 3. Studio-Based Learning Characteristics 4. SBL Resources
RBL: RESOURCE-BASED LEARNING
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RBL: RESOURCE-BASED LEARNING

(0)
Resource-based learning actively involves students, teachers, and teacher-librarians in the effective use of a wide range of print, non-print, and human resources. Resource-based learning fosters the development of individual students by accommodating their varied interests, experiences, learning styles, needs and ability levels. Students who use a wide range of resources in various mediums for learning have the opportunity to approach a theme, issue or topic of study in ways which allow for a range of learning styles and access to the theme or topic via cognitive or effective appeals. This Resource Covers: 1. Meaning of RBL 2. What is RBL? 3. RBL Objectives 4. RBL Outcomes 5. RBL concerned with 6. RBL Approaches 7. Digital and Social Resources 8. RBL Issues 9, RBL Implementation 10. RBL Roles 11. RBL Benefits 12. RBL Resources
QBL: QUEST-BASED LEARNING
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QBL: QUEST-BASED LEARNING

(0)
Quest-based learning — QBL — is an instructional theory that relies on elements of game design in learning communities to support student choice within the context of a standards-based curriculum. This Resource Covers: 1. Meaning of QBL 2. QBL Focus 3. QBL Key Insights 4. QBL Resources
OBL: OUTCOME-BASED LEARNING
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OBL: OUTCOME-BASED LEARNING

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Outcome-Based Learning is a process that involves the restructuring of curriculum, assessment and reporting practices in education to reflect the achievement of high order learning and mastery rather than the accumulation of course credits. This Resource Covers: 1. Meaning of OBL 2. Definition of Outcome 3. OBL Definitions 4. OBL Prerequisites 5. OBL Features 6. OBL Principles 7. OBL Essence 8. OBL Benefits 9. OBL Concerns 10. OBL Rubrics 11. Using New Bloom's Taxonomy 12. OBL Resources
NBL: NEED-BASED LEARNING
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NBL: NEED-BASED LEARNING

(1)
In the mid-1950s, humanistic psychologist Abraham Maslow created a theory of basic, psychological and self-fulfillment needs that motivate individuals to move consciously or subconsciously through levels or tiers based on our inner and outer satisfaction of those met or unmet needs. This Resource Covers: 1. Maslow's Theory of Classroom Needs 2. Need Types 3. Needs Related to Learning 4. Students with Exceptional Needs 5. Students with Mislabeled Needs 6. Segregating Students with Special Needs 7. Applying Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs in Our Classrooms 8. NBL Resources
MBL: MEMORY-BASED LEARNING
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MBL: MEMORY-BASED LEARNING

(1)
A memory-based learning system is an extended memory management system that decomposes the input space either statically or dynamically into subregions for the purpose of storing and retrieving functional information. Memory-Based Learning (MBL) is a simple function approximation method whose roots go back at least to 1910. Training a memory based learner is an almost trivial operation: just store each data point in memory (or a database). Making a prediction about the output that will result from some input attributes based on the data is done by looking for similar points in memory, fitting a local model to those points, and then making a prediction based on the model. This Resource Covers: 1. Meaning of MBL 2. Memory Types 3. MBL Synonyms 4. MBL Components 5. MBL Systems 6. MBL Process 7. MBL Advantages 8. MBL Resources
LBL: LIFE-BASED LEARNING
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LBL: LIFE-BASED LEARNING

(3)
Life-based learning proposes that learning for work is not restricted to learning at work. The premise underpinning life-based learning is that all learning is interrelated, so it is not easy to separate learning at work from the other types of learning that adults do. This Resource Covers: 1. Meaning of LBL 2. LBL Highlights 3. LBL Includes 4. LBL Synonyms 5. LBL Characteristics 6. LBL Features 7. LBL Benefits 8. LBL Approaches 9. LBL Resources
KBL: KNOWLEDGE-BASED LEARNING
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KBL: KNOWLEDGE-BASED LEARNING

(2)
Knowledge-based learning is learning that revolves around both the knowledge that the student already has, and the understanding that they are going to achieve by doing work. When learning is based on the knowledge that students already have, and knowledge they are going to be achieving, the learning is better connected to real life. This Resource Covers: 1. Meaning of KBL 2. Knowledge Kinds 3. KBL Process 4. KBL Includes 5. KBL Strategy 6. KBL Approaches 7. KBL Benefits 8. How to Create a Knowledge Base 9. KBL Resources
FBL: FEEDBACK-BASED LEARNING
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FBL: FEEDBACK-BASED LEARNING

(1)
Feedback is vital in just about all learning contexts. How children learn from positive and negative performance feedback lies at the foundation of successful learning and is therefore of great importance for educational practice. This Resource Includes: 1. Meaning of FBL 2. Feedback in Student Learning 3. Feedback Kinds 4. Feedback Attributes 5. Feedback Forms 6. Resources to Implement FBL
EBL: EVIDENCE-BASED LEARNING
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EBL: EVIDENCE-BASED LEARNING

(1)
Evidence-based education is an approach to all aspects of education—from policy-making to classroom practice—where the methods used are based on significant and reliable evidence derived from experiments. This Resource Covers: 1. Meaning of EBL 2. How EBL Works 3. EBL Impact 4. An Evidence-Based Approach to Learning 5. EBL Concerns 6. EBL Critical Points 7. Resources to Implement EBL
DBL: DATA-BASED LEARNING
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DBL: DATA-BASED LEARNING

(1)
Data based decision making or data-driven decision making refers to educator’s ongoing process of collecting and analyzing different types of data, including demographic, student achievement test, satisfaction, and process data to guide decisions towards an improvement of an educational process. This Resource Includes: 1. Meaning of Data-Based Learning 2. Using Data to Guide Instruction and Improve Student Learning 3. Types of Data used in Education 4. Sources of Data 5. 5 Innovative Tools for Data-Based Teaching 6. Data-Based Learning: Right Opportunities for the Desired Outcome 7. Resources to Implement DBL
CBL: COMPETENCY/CONNECTIONS-BASED LEARNING
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CBL: COMPETENCY/CONNECTIONS-BASED LEARNING

(2)
Competency-Based learning refers to systems of instruction, assessment, grading, and academic reporting that are based on students demonstrating that they have learned the knowledge and skills they are expected to learn as they progress through their education. Connections-based Learning focuses on students making meaningful connections with teachers, experts, organizations, community and each other. The development of this approach has been birthed out of a desire to create learning experiences in a connected world with connected students. This resource includes: 1. Meaning of Competency-Based Learning 2. Meaning of Connections-Based Learning 3. How Competencies Support Learning 4. Advantages Competency-Based Learning 5. Parts of Connections-Based Learning 6. Characteristics of Connected Students 7. Ideas for Connecting your Students 8. Resources to Implement CBL
BBL: BRAIN-BASED LEARNING
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BBL: BRAIN-BASED LEARNING

(1)
Brain-based learning refers to teaching methods, lesson designs, and school programs that are based on the latest scientific research about how the brain learns, including such factors as cognitive development—how students learn differently as they age, grow, and mature socially, emotionally, and cognitively. This is a new paradigm which establishes connections between brain function and educational practice. In a nutshell, brain-based education says, “Everything we do uses our brain.” This resource includes: 1. Definition of Brain Based Learning 2. BBL Basics, Principles, and Strategies 3. Practical School Applications 4. Resources for Implementation