Most organs and systems respond to the environment and in return to their normal state as conditions change. We shiver when cold, but then stop once our body warms. Responses in the brain, however, can be much more permanent; and that is what makes them so useful to learners
Using OER: “enables learner behaviors associated with openness including sharing, collaboration, obtaining agency over the experience or ownership of the ideas and content, feasible self-direction, and the growth of the attitude or culture of openness." -Fred Baker
Schools have always been political institutions, but recent decades have found them increasingly political. This appears to be grounded in the electoral benefits that can be gained by politicians who promise to “fix education.”
"It is unclear exactly what information is being used by Google and for what purposes it is being used, thus the true costs in terms of privacy cannot be determined."
Schools are social organizations, thus inherently political; changes in how teachers interact with students can be affected by the demands or threats of those who are more powerful.
Some schools lack the structures necessary to change what happens in classrooms; schedules, departments, prescribed curriculum, and other systems are obstacles that are too great.
Human learning has aspects that are cognitive, but it also has social and emotional aspects, and deeper learning requires students connect with the curriculum in all three ways.
While learning is commonly understood as a cognitive process, humans also develop the ability to use our bodies in useful and important ways as well. While some teachers may minimize the importance of such skills, they are a real and important part of human abilities.