Editor’s Similarity checker in Microsoft Word – helping writers with originality and attribution
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Writers today, both students and working professionals, have an incredible array of reference material available.
Educators are preparing for the upcoming academic year following a spring in which remote learning became the norm.
As I write this, class may be in session—most likely online—for many schools and universities around the world. Over the past several months, how we teach and how we learn has been flipped upside down.
We are delighted to share the new paper, “Reimagining education: From remote to hybrid learning,” a collaboration between Microsoft and New Pedagogies for Deep Learning.
This moment is unlike any we’ve faced.
The knowledge, skill, versatility, passion for their profession, and commitment to their students that teachers exhibit is always visible. But the incredible effort that educators around the world have made in recent months to quickly adapt to remote learning is worthy of special recognition.
From time to time, we feature stories about Changemakers, educators who are making a difference in the lives of students around the world.
With the exponential growth in schools conducting remote learning comes the demand for tools and new ways to ensure all the safety of all students.
As you settle into remote teaching and learning, we’re devoting this episode of What’s New in EDU to sharing free resources that can support you as you lead virtual lessons, foster collaboration and engagement, and focus on accessibility.
Teachers are on the frontlines of enabling the sudden shift to remote learning. Within a matter of weeks, educators have had to quickly adapt their engaging, aligned, in-person lessons into online learning for their students.
During this time of a worldwide jump into distance learning, ensuring that all students of all abilities can access tools and content is more important than ever.
For weeks now, students and teachers have been settling into the uncharted routine of distance learning. Today I want to thank all of the educators who are connecting classrooms and classmates together in the sudden shift to remote learning.