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in title, tags, annotations or urlZAP Reader - 0 views
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ZAP Reader is a web based speed reading program that will change the way you read on your computer. Current beta testers report reading twice as much in half the time-that's a 300% increase in reading speed, without any loss in comprehension! There is nothing to install, it works with most popular browsers, and it's totally free!
Literacy with ICT | School Leaders - 0 views
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Role of School Leaders in Supporting Literacy with ICT Across the Curriculum
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School Factors
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Resources and timely access to ICT:
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Teachers for the 21st Century: making the difference - 0 views
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Teachers for the 21st Century: making the difference This report aims to improve teacher quality and increase the effectiveness of Australian schools. Issues include professional development, school leadership and management and recognition.
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Australian Government Quality Teacher Initiative
How to Figure Out If You're Dealing With a Nutcase : The World :: American Express OPEN Forum - 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.
Twitter CHATTER - Winnipeg Free Press - 2 views
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Best of all, many of these links connect to legitimate media websites, where reporters still adhere to the quaint, time-tested practices of checking facts, attributing quotes to sources and engaging in first-hand reporting, all of which generally involves talking to human beings.
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more to prove the value of conventional journalism than any innovation by the mainstream media itself.
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Facebook is like living in a mall. Twitter is like living in the street.
Nielsen: Social Media Report - 3 views
What students really think about technology in the classroom | Hechinger Report - 2 views
Presentation Zen: Change & the Art of Small Victories - 4 views
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"John F. Kennedy is often reported to have said "The only reason to give a speech is to change the world." Over the years this has been paraphrased by many speaking and training professionals. Not surprisingly, people occasionally mock this kind of statement as being just so much hubris or pomposity. "Surely," they proclaim, "not every presentation or speech is important enough to even make the slightest difference." However, when we say "change the world," we do not mean necessarily to change the world in a monumental, earth-altering, life-changing way. The operative word in that phrase is change. Affecting a change is a necessary condition of an effective speech. "A presentation that doesn't seek to make change is a waste of time and energy," says business guru Seth Godin. "
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