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bloggerent

How to Improve Your English by Reading Newspaper? - 0 views

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    Are you in the process of learning English and do you like reading the newspaper daily, Do you read the newspaper which is in your native language or English, However, you can improve your English skills through daily reading English newspaper as you can simultaneously develop many skills.
puzznbuzzus

Is English Language So Popular because of the USA? - 0 views

Americans might tend to inflate the influence of the United States in the history of the spread of English. Before the World Wars, particularly WWII, the US was a bit player on the world stage. The...

english quiz online

started by puzznbuzzus on 17 Feb 17 no follow-up yet
bloggerent

What is the Importance of Reading and Learning a Language? - 0 views

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    When you actually read the English content then you not just only read but you understand the matter and you tend to start thinking in English. When you develop the habit of thinking in English that is actually when you can speak English fluently and also share your thoughts effectively. Hence, if
bbrany201

FREE Webinar - 0 views

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    How to create an online business from scratch without spending thousands of euros, would you be interested in learning more? Go to the Webinar 100% FREE This not fake go and join after decide #AustrianGP,#Norris,#Ramos #millionare Click to visit link is below https://www.marcobulzoni.com/leverage-funnel-english
technokids india

Integration of Technology into classroom,Franchise computer education,Education franchi... - 2 views

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    http://www.technokidsindia.com digital resources make it easy for Integration of Technology into classroom ideal for multiple sitting like classroom, computer lab, extended day programming or at home. http://www.technokidsindia.com/integrationoftechnologyintoclassroom Engaging Students: Our digital resources make it easy to integrate technology into the classroom ideal for multiple sitting. Use Technokids in classroom, computer lab, extended day program or even at home strengthening home and school learning. Features: 1) Techno Manage is Web-delivered so no downloads. 2) Continuously update its curriculum to reflect ongoing changes in technology. 3) Recent additions include Robotics, programming units to support logic and innovation, digital citizenship, financial literacy and collaboration skills. 4) Guided Instructions 5) Online quiz and evaluation. 6) Students can do lessons any time anywhere. 7) Online assignments can be assigned by teachers 8) Students can upload their assignments 21st century skills: Teachers don't have to stop or change what they plan to teach to integrate technology and 21st century skills. TechnoKids provides comprehensive, step by step instructions that incorporate 21st century skills and technology skills into the curriculum. Students acquire essential skill through the use of popular application software while its been integrated with English, math, science in early grades. As the students grow up integration goes beyond teaching technology skills and gives students the opportunity to explore real-world challenges in the classroom, preparing them for college and career, promoting critical and creative thinking! For more details please visit our website http://www.technokidsindia.com or call us at +91-40-65247872. Regards, Business owner Technokidsindia http://www.technokidsindia.com
Kenzie David

70-412 Windows Server 2012.pdf - 0 views

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    Take this exam and get a free Second Shot to pass. Sign in to see if you are already eligible. Exam 70-412 Windows Server Published: September 17, 2012 Languages: English, Chinese (Simplified), French, German, Japanese, Portuguese (Brazil) Audiences: IT professionals Technology: Windows Server 2012 R2 Credit toward certification: MCP, MCSA, MCSE Configuring Advanced Windows Server 2012 Services $150.00 USD* Not in United States? To redeem your free retake, or to see if you are eligible, please sign in. Review Second Shot terms and conditions. Schedule exam This exam may be available in your country for online proctored delivery. Learn more. Convince your boss Connect with us on @MSLearning * Secondary and higher education students are eligible for special academic pricing. See Exam policies and FAQ for details. Pricing does not reflect any promotional offers or reduced pricing for Microsoft IT Academy program members, Microsoft Certified Trainers, and Microsoft Partner Network program members. Pricing is subject to change without notice. Pricing does not include applicable taxes. Please confirm exact pricing with the exam provider before registering to take an exam. Skills measured This exam measures your ability to accomplish the technical tasks listed below. The percentages indicate the relative weight of each major topic area on the exam. The higher the percentage, the more questions you are likely to see on that content area on the exam. View video tutorials about the variety of question types on Microsoft exams. Please note that the questions may test on, but will not be limited to, the topics described in the bulleted text. Do you have feedback about the relevance of the skills measured on this exam? Please send Microsoft your comments. All feedback will be reviewed and incorporated as appropriate while still maintaining the validity and reliability of
Graham Perrin

Why can you add a simple feature as ratings your bookmark url ? - 422 views

Without re-kindling this topic (there's plenty going in other topics): In Nabble support area at the moment, discussions include: Ratings http://n2.nabble.com/Ratings-tp2230797p2261384.html La...

bookmark rate suggestion

andybendyman

digital digs: the positive confluence of academia and the web - 5 views

  • Clearly one of the challenges academia faces is to figure out a productive use of networks in terms of research practices. Usually I write more about the teaching aspects of the university and clearly there are many ways universities will employ networks. But I want to think specifically about the use of the web for research with a few goals in mind: to enhance collaboration between academics to publish and share research to share knowledge with a broader audience (students, governments, industries, non-profits, the general public, and so on) One might say that these have been answered, but the real challenge is that as the web continues to evolve and now converge with other networks, the practices we have established need to change as well. That is, from the inception of the web, one could find the appearance of academic journals: genuine, rigorously reviewed, academic scholarship available freely online. There were (and are) listservs that might facilitate collaboration. Similarly individual faculty and faculty organizations built websites where they offered information, policy statements, and so on (NCTE or MLA for example in English Studies). But how are we moving forward?
  • Conventional academic discourse lies with journals and conferences. For all the advantages of these modes, neither offers an ongoing, dynamic interchange. Listservs offer that, but, in my experience anyway, they don't really create a productive, collaborative space. Sometimes there are debates on listservs; sometimes there is sharing of information (e.g. does anyone know a good article about x"?). But there isn't a sustained building of knowledge there. I suppose there could be, but there isn't, probably b/c we all go off to write our individually authored articles and conference presentations. In any case, the listserv is too large a community for collaborative work. Yes, tens of thousands contribute to Wikipedia, but they don't all work on the same article, right? So I don't know what the magic number is, but let's say I was looking for a dozen scholars in who were interested in the same things I'm interested in: mobile networks virtual worlds audio/video production public, collaborative learning It's unlikely that we would all work on the same research project at once, but there would be a handful of project undertaken by individuals or small groups. There would be a public face to the group and a private project management site, like Basecamp. The public face would offer a steady stream of information as we shared what we were doing, what was going on in our teaching, what we were reading and writing. We'd be assembling streams of information from our blogs, twitters, flickr, YouTube, and so on--wherever we were post information. The result is a collection of information that is hopefully useful groundwork for more formal investigation and also a mechanism for fruitful collaboration between our classes.
  • Meanwhile, in a more private space we might be orchestrating collaborative classroom projects and sharing research, drafts, and other media: constructing our scholarly work. When it's complete, we publish it in traditional venues and republish it on our public site as well.
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