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John Evans

Creative 100 Days of School Project Ideas - Class Tech Tips - 3 views

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    "The 100th day of school is a special milestone that offers a fun opportunity to engage students in creative and meaningful activities. Whether you're celebrating with a classroom project, a collaborative activity, or independent student work, there are plenty of 100 days of school project ideas to choose from. You might want to have students create something over the course of a week or during a single lesson. Today on the blog, I have nine tech-friendly 100 Days of School project ideas for your consideration! They are ready for you to customize and modify to fit the needs of your group, and they connect with a wide range of subject areas. Let's take a look at these nine project ideas to celebrate the 100th day of the school year!"
John Evans

Celebrate Pi Day: Seven Classroom Resources for Pi Learning | Edutopia - 1 views

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    "Happy 3.14159265358979323846264 Day! That's right, Pi Day is coming on 3/14, and the annual celebration offers a great opportunity for students explore Pi! (And maybe enjoy some pie, as well.) Of course, there are plenty of great teaching resources online to help your class celebrate Pi Day, and we here at Edutopia thought we'd help. "
John Evans

The iPads go on a Field Trip | The Middle Pages - 0 views

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    "Last month our middle school tech class went to Lansing to attend the MACUL ATT Student Showcase. While there, I asked the students to use an iPad to somehow create a project to document what happened on the trip. I gave them a list of suggested apps, but left it open for students to make their own creative choices about the project. Several students used the wonderful Book Creator app to create epub books about the trip. Here are links to two of the books that can be directly downloaded into iBooks on your iPad, iPod, or iPhone. (Note, it will take several minutes for the books to download, then select to open in iBooks.)"
John Evans

How to Set Up Class iPad and iPod Touch Devices « The Spicy Learning Blog - 0 views

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    "Originally posted Sept 2010. Modified June 2011 (I have struckthrough ideas I've changed, and put in purple new ideas). Modified Oct 2011 for iOS 5 update (I have struckthrough ideas I've changed, and put in green new ideas). Modified (pink) May 2012 thanks to Bryan Hughes alerting me to Air Server. Modified (orange) Sept 2012 thanks to Disp Recorder's release. Finally, a way to record your iPad screen in any app! The Apple Fairy has come to your classroom and given you some iPads and/or iPod Touches to use for learning? You and your students sure are the lucky ones. I know what you're thinking though: "So what now, technically speaking?" There are many different ways to set your iDevices up. Here is how I've done mine:"
John Evans

Middle School Maker Journey: Recapping the Capstones | Edutopia - 2 views

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    "Why is it that sometimes we only see the extremes in our work? Picture your strongest lessons, activities, and projects juxtaposed against ones that just didn't work, and that's how it's been so far with our Digital Shop capstone projects. Some experiences make me want to high-five the entire class all at once. Others deserve an epic facepalm. As of this writing, we still have a month of school left. How will the remaining capstones go? What have we learned in the process? Can we "fail up" and finish strong, sending kids into summer vacation with school-year memories that will last forever? As I explained in my April post, I wanted the capstone projects to: Be genuine design thinking experiences. Allow kids to showcase the skills and dispositions they worked to acquire all year. Be based on and help people from the community and the world. The results have been mixed, as this post will illustrate."
John Evans

5 Reasons to Read for Reluctant Readers | Edutopia - 3 views

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    "Teachers may offer up a killer classroom library and carve out class time for silent reading, but these two things do not guarantee prolific reading, or even moderate reading from your students. One of my goals when I was teaching high school was this: to have students fall in love with reading while they were in my classroom (or at least like it a little more). So how do you motivate secondary students in a deeper, lifelong reader way? It's not just about helping a student find that right book, as teachers often see as the ultimate mission, but it's about giving reasons for reading -- and really good ones. Because let's face it, there's plenty of stuff we all have to read that we may not be crazy about, but we know it's good for us. The following motivators are inspired by educator Kelly Gallagher's book, Reading Reasons: Motivational Mini-Lessons for Middle and High School."
John Evans

4 Practices for Increasing Student Engagement | Edutopia - 0 views

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    "Student engagement can be tough all year, but spring fever makes it a bit worse as the weather gets warmer and students' minds wander. After 15 years of teaching, I've learned that a teacher cannot rely on any single solution to keep kids focused on learning. There are so many different ways to get students' attention because there are so many different types of students. However, here are a few ways that have really made a difference in my classes."
John Evans

Upcycling and the Low-Tech Makerspace | Edutopia - 3 views

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    "You've read about the maker movement. You've seen the posts with 3D printers, laser cutters, and three-axis mills in shiny new labs. And you want your students to start making, too. But you've got one big problem: you don't have a full lab -- or even a 3D printer -- because, like many educators, you don't have the biggest budget. Maybe you have no budget at all. But what if you could get started making tomorrow and didn't need all the fancy tools to join this movement? Making starts with a mindset, and simple materials are all that you need to get started. There are resources all around you, materials hidden in plain sight, tools just waiting to be used for a creative purpose. And with a little dose of ingenuity, you'll have your students making in no time. One perfect way start making on the cheap is through upcycling, the intentional transformation of hard-to-recycle materials into new products, thus saving them from the landfill. This type of real-world project not only teaches making skills but also helps you integrate making into your subject area. Study material science, explore industrial design, or dig into environmental education. As an added bonus, a project like this ignites your students' entrepreneurial spirit. Here's the five-step strategy that I've used to get my students making products out of hard-to-recycle materials. These steps could be done in one class period each, but if you want more time for ideas and iteration, feel free to expand the timeline as you go. Expect a beautiful mess, a bit of chaos, and a lot of fun as your students start to save the landfills -- by design."
John Evans

Computational Thinking Across the Curriculum | Edutopia - 2 views

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    "As defined by Jeannette Wing, computational thinking is "a way of solving problems, designing systems, and understanding human behavior by drawing on the concepts of computer science." To the students at my school, it's an approach to tackling challenging questions and ambiguous puzzles. We explicitly integrate computational thinking into all of our classes, allowing students to draw parallels between what they're learning and how they're approaching problems across all disciplines. Our students rely on four computational thinking skills, as well as a set of essential attitudes"
Phil Taylor

[iPad+Classrooms] Don't Take An iPad into Your Classroom - Yet! - SimpleK12 - 4 views

  • Do NOT go off and take a very generic “How To Use Your iPad” class. If you’re like I am, and you probably are because you’re a teacher, your first inclination will be to go find a class. Resist the urge to do this. This little baby is intuitive and so fun; you need to just turn it on and play. Don’t worry about getting everything right.
Phil Taylor

Five-Minute Film Festival: Flipped Classrooms | Edutopia - 3 views

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    "the "flipped class" can be a useful tool to have in your teaching tool belt, but it's not a panacea"
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