events – GeoGebra Blog https://blog.geogebra.org Dynamic Mathematics for Everyone Tue, 19 Sep 2017 19:25:53 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=static-html 2012 https://blog.geogebra.org/2012/12/2012/ https://blog.geogebra.org/2012/12/2012/#comments Mon, 31 Dec 2012 10:46:37 +0000 http://www.geogebra.org/blog/?p=419 ]]> 2012 was a big year. What are you going to remember about GeoGebra from 2012?

As a reminder we collected some of the events from 2012. And prepare for even more in 2013.

We are on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus, YouTube and Instagram. Connect, join, follow GeoGebra to get the news in 2013, too.

We wish you a very happy new year!


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GeoGebra Milestone CCITE 20-20 STEM Projects Internships and beyond https://blog.geogebra.org/2012/12/geogebra-milestone-ccite-20-20-stem-projects-internships-and-beyond/ Thu, 13 Dec 2012 21:24:27 +0000 http://www.geogebra.org/blog/?p=387 ]]> I had a great time at the GeoGebra and Milestone Consultancy offices in Budapest. As a result of a presentation and discussion with extremely able Milestone social and natural science students who wish to intern with the UK, we came up with the idea of GeoGebra Milestone CCITE 20-20 STEM Projects Internships. By the time I got back to the UK nine students had signed up. We were expecting maybe two…so this got us thinking that maybe this could kick off a GEOGEBRA STEM network initially with a Budapest GeoGebra/Milestone network working with the Cambridge Centre for Innovation in Technological Education (CCITE), and then going global benefitting from the GeoGebra presence in so many countries.

Background and three-stage approach
CCITE propose a set of 20 STEM (Science Technology Engineering Maths) problem solving projects per year to address the technological education teaching weaknesses in the UK (too narrow, not enough teachers, technophobia and high drop-out rate). However, this is not just a UK problem – it is in varying degrees global. And GeoGebra provides a powerful tool to help – the power of Geogebra is in both the software and its Global network and Institutes. We came up with a three-stage approach:

GeoGebra Milestone CCITE 20-20 STEM Projects Internships
Milestone students might individually and/or in small teams be short-term interns who:
* Identify or indeed develop best practice GeoGebra resource which might be used on these STEM projects.
* Work together developing their communication and teamworking skills in a multi-disciplinary manner.
* Form a start-up Budapest Milestone Geogebra network, interworking with the Global and in particular Cambridge network.
* Present their Geogebra CCITE 20-20 solutions on Geogebra site and/or ORBIT (the Cambridge University Open Resource Bank for Interactive Teaching).
* Receive a signed Cambridge attestation (certificate/letter) of their work.
* Any student who is interested would first discuss with their Milestone tutors. A lead Milestone tutor will mentor the team, and subsequently students may enter in contact with CCITE cc their tutor.

Budapest Geogebra CCITE STEM Collaboration
We might extend this initially with the Budapest educators present at our presentation and discussion. Indeed we are delighted to announce our first collaborators: Colleyeder (www.colleyeder.com) and Eötvös Loránd University (http://nipg.inf.elte.hu).

Global Geogebra CCITE STEM Collaboration
We might extend this further with our global GeoGebra friends in many countries of varying international education ratings (see OECD http://www.oecd.org/pisa/CIEB http://www.ncee.org/programs-affiliates/center-on-international-education-benchmarking/). The highest rating (Shanghai) supports our approach and we feel there is huge potential for global multi-way learning:
The Shanghai core curriculum is the same for all students, an enriched curriculum permits students to choose their own electives and an inquiry-based curriculum is implemented mainly in extra-curricular activities. Learn to solve real-world problems, on cross-disciplinary studies and on the ability to solve problems of a kind that one has not seen before. Notwithstanding Shanghai’s outstanding performance on the PISA assessments, many in Shanghai still see its education system as too rigid and its students as not sufficiently independent and creative to meet the challenges ahead.

We welcome any help we can get:-)

PS See Prezi:
PISA and GeoGebra STEM:


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