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John Evans

The Craft of Common Craft | nmc - 0 views

  • In this Connect@NMC online seminar, Lee will share a bit on their development and video process for the unique style they call "Paperworks." This session is designed to be an open discussion, so please come with some questions you may want to ask Lee about his technique or some suggestions for what other topics should be explained in "Plain English."
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    In this Connect@NMC online seminar, Lee will share a bit on their development and video process for the unique style they call "Paperworks." This session is designed to be an open discussion, so please come with some questions you may want to ask Lee about his technique or some suggestions for what other topics should be explained in "Plain English." If you missed this session, you can now view the archived recording http://nmc.na3.acrobat.com/p92246187/
John Evans

TED | Talks | Johnny Lee: Creating tech marvels out of a $40 Wii Remote (video) - 0 views

  • Johnny Lee: Creating tech marvels out of a $40 Wii Remote
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    Johnny Lee: Creating tech marvels out of a $40 Wii Remote
Kristine Kellenberger

To Kill A Mockingbird - 0 views

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    Digital Story about the reasons for learning about and reading To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee. The narrator discusses how the book has been challenged for so many years for being taught in school even though Harper Lee won a Pulitzer Prize and the book has been so popular for so long. The video helps students think about the issues in the book that they should use when thinking about whether or not it is appropriate in a high school classroom. Encourages students to think for themselves.
John Evans

Angela Lee Duckworth: Grit: The power of passion and perseverance | TED Talk - 0 views

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    "Leaving a high-flying job in consulting, Angela Lee Duckworth took a job teaching math to seventh graders in a New York public school. She quickly realized that IQ wasn't the only thing separating the successful students from those who struggled. Here, she explains her theory of "grit" as a predictor of success."
John Evans

Tim Berners-Lee on the next Web | Video on TED.com - 0 views

  • 20 years ago, Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web. For his next project, he's building a web for open, linked data that could do for numbers what the Web did for words, pictures, video: unlock our data and reframe the way we use it together.
John Evans

YouTube - leelefever's Channel - 0 views

  • The Common Craft Show is a series of short explanatory videos by Lee and Sachi LeFever. Our goal is to fight complexity with simple tools and plain language. We call our format "paperworks" and publish a new video about once a month.
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    The Common Craft Show is a series of short explanatory videos by Lee and Sachi LeFever. Our goal is to fight complexity with simple tools and plain language. We call our format "paperworks" and publish a new video about once a month.
Tom Stimson

Palm Breeze Cafe - Google Docs - Forms - 0 views

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    Lee Keller and Kim Cavanaugh of Palm Breeze Cafe (a video training series for teachers) look at a cool but somewhat unknown feature of Google Docs, the forms. Available at Youtube where you can subscribe to the series.
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    Lee Keller and Kim Cavanaugh of Palm Breeze Cafe (a video training series for teachers) look at a cool but somewhat unknown feature of Google Docs, the forms. Available at Youtube
John Evans

The Web is 25 years old today - so how has it changed the way we learn? « Lea... - 2 views

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    "25 years ago today, on 12 March 1989, the British scientist Tim Berners-Lee wrote a proposal to develop a distributed information system for CERN, and in doing so lay down the foundation for what was to become the World Wide Web. In the ensuing 25 years there can be few people whose lives haven't been influenced by the Web in some way or other. But how has it changed the way we learn? "
John Evans

11 Teaching Strategies For Spotting The Blind Spots In Your Classroom - 0 views

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    "When Stanford Professor Lee Shulman was first enmeshed in the research that led to Board certification of teachers by NBPTS, I asked him - in a hotel bathroom, of all places - what interesting findings were turning up about great teachers as compared to the rest. He replied: "Well, you might not find this such a big deal, but a big indicator is the degree to which a teacher accurately describes what happens in her classroom.""
John Evans

Trendy Buzzword or Transformative Concept: How Legit is Grit? | Edudemic - 0 views

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    "Popularized by Angela Lee Duckworth's excellent TED Talk in April 2013, "Grit" has become a red-hot buzzword in education today. However, is this a legitimate concept that teachers should start integrating into their educational zeitgeist or just another passing trend? The research in favor of grit as a predictor of success is compelling, suggesting that this is a much-awaited key measuring stick that works on both students and teachers. Read on to learn more about this trending topic and decide for yourself whether grit is something that should play into your teaching techniques."
John Evans

8 Creative Ways to Get Reluctant Readers to Read | Edudemic - 1 views

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    "According to a study led by Lee Rainie of the Pew Research Center, about 23% of 1005 participants (randomly called via landline and cell phone) had not read a book in the past year, including ebooks, printed books, or audiobooks. With the massive influx of information that students receive on a daily basis thanks to the Internet, it is not a surprising statistic. Not surprising, but quite alarming."
John Evans

My Languages: Why I Still Love Twitter - 0 views

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    In the past few months, Twitter has grown rapidly. According to Lee Odden's Twitter usage poll , the most popular reasons for using Twitter were: How Twitter can be used in avariety of settings in education.
John Evans

Free online web polls generator - 0 views

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    One nice feature is the ability to leave comments! via Lee Kolbert
John Evans

Educational Origami - Our Apps book is out - 10 views

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    "For the last year, Harry and I have been working on the ipad applications book for high schools. The Book is called Apps for learning, and is published as part of the 21st Century Fluency series with my Colleagues Harry Dickens, Lee Crockett and Ian Jukes. This book has been a huge amount of fun to write. I had a great excuse to by numerous applications and try these out. The book details what we consider to be the best applications for high school at the moment."
John Evans

How to Figure Out If You're Dealing With a Nutcase : The World :: American Express OPEN... - 2 views

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    This is how it works: You enter the email address of a person. (Think about it: searching by email address is much more precise than by a person's name. How many "Robert Lees" do you think there are in the world?) Spokeo then searches the public records of fifty social sites such as LinkedIn, Facebook, MySpace, Twitter, Flickr, Amazon Gifts, and the blogosphere. Then Spokeo produces a report of matches that it's found.
John Evans

App Ed Review Offers Teachers Tips on Using Apps in Class -- THE Journal - 1 views

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    "App Ed Review is a new, searchable database of app reviews that teachers can use to plan, deliver and assess classroom instruction. The free site was founded by Todd Cherner, a former 10th grade English teacher at Leesburg High School; and Corey Lee, an instructional technology professor at Coastal Carolina University. According to its founders, App Ed Review uses TPACK as its theoretical framework and is informed by the Common Core State Standards. "
John Evans

Check Out My 2-Minute Illustrated Video on the SAMR Model | Spencer Ideas - 0 views

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    "Here's a sketchy video I created for my technology pedagogy course. I have mixed feelings about SAMR, because it often implies that "lower levels" are not as good when often substitution works well. Royan Lee picked this apart well. I also think there are times when the best option involves avoiding technology. For example, there are times when sketching something by hand teaches observational skills better than using a camera. However, I still see a real benefit in the SAMR model, in terms of thinking about the transformative power of technology."
John Evans

How Listening to Podcasts Helps Students Read and Learn | MindShift | KQED News - 2 views

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    "High school English teacher Michael Godsey's favorite work by William Shakespeare is Hamlet. But a few years ago, he stopped teaching his students about the centuries-old classic in favor of a story that was unfolding in the fall of 2014: Serial, the podcast. Michael Godsey The story of Adnan Syed, Hae Min Lee and the community at Woodlawn High School captivated podcast listeners around the world, including Godsey. The story was so engaging, he made listening to Serial in real time an assignment for his students and eventually made podcasts a regular part of his English class. He also teaches with episodes of This American Life, RadioLab and Serial Season 2 that cover subjects relevant to the lives of students."
John Evans

The Tech Behind Your Favorite Comic Books | PCMag.com - 1 views

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    "Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Bill Finger, Bob Kane, Joe Simon, Steve Ditko, Jerry Siegel, Joe Shuster, and dozens of other Golden and Silver Age visionaries produced superhero, romance, western, horror, and crime comics using the craftsman's tools of their day: paper, typewriters, pencils, brushes, inks, and dyes. From the 1930s until roughly the mid-1990s, comic books were produced almost entirely in this fashion, with a few digital blips along the way. But as electronic tools became increasingly affordable and powerful, the comic book creation process shifted from an analog process to a digital one. In contemporary times, there's a good chance that no aspect of your favorite title is physical until finished pages start rolling off a printing press."
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