Skip to main content

Home/ Literacy with ICT/ Group items matching "his" in title, tags, annotations or url

Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or url

Sort By: Relevance | Date Filter: All | Bookmarks | Topics Simple Middle
John Evans

BLOOM'S TAXONOMY - 0 views

  •  
    Reivsed Bloom's Taxonomy of Cognitive Levels
Phil Taylor

jason ohler : Home - 8 views

  •  
    Listened to an ISTE webinar by Jason this afternoon. Excellent session. He is in the process of updating his site. Look forward to changes in the digital citizenship area soon.
John Evans

The Innovative Educator: The Three Important Lessons Banning Cell Phones Teaches Kids - 3 views

  • In his post “I lost something very important to me” Will Richardson shares three important lessons that banning cells teaches kids. They are: 1-It teaches them that they don’t deserve to be empowered with technology the same way adults are.2-Tools that adults use all the time in their everyday lives to communicate are not relevant to their own communication needs.3-They can’t be trusted (or taught, for that matter) to use phones appropriately in school.I recently had a cell phone enriched lesson plan shared with me (stay tuned, will be posted shortly) by a secondary teacher who is empowering students to harness the power of cell phones in their learning. And guess what happened when he did? They came up with their own list of appropriate use.
John Evans

The Role of "Transfer" in Assessment « Synthesizing Education - 11 views

  • his is one of the keys to judging student learning of the future because if individuals, like Daniel Pink, are correct and the future belongs to pattern-seekers, it is imperative that students are capable of seeing these connections across all disciplines.
  • This is one of the keys to judging student learning of the future because if individuals, like Daniel Pink, are correct and the future belongs to pattern-seekers, it is imperative that students are capable of seeing these connections across all disciplines.
  • Beyond these activities it is important that students ask themselves the following questions: What are the foundational elements of this topic? What caused people to begin exploring this topic? How has this topic been altered over the course of time? How will this topic change over the course of the next fifty years? What other ideas from the outside can be integrated into this topic in the future to make it better? Using the answers to the questions above, what qualities can I take from this topic to prompt deeper thinking about other areas of life that interest me? Instead of collecting the “assessment”, what would happen if you collected student answers to these questions instead?
Phil Taylor

A Change Is Gonna Come -- Campus Technology - 1 views

  • Mobile technology is going to be an unstoppable change agent in education.
  • Practically every one of our students--rich and poor, wise and less wise--is walking around with a powerful computing device in his or her hand. These students are changing the nature of their education using those devices, whether they realize it or not--and whether we help them or not.
Phil Taylor

For Computer Chip Builders, Only One Way to Go: Up| The Committed Sardine - 0 views

  • race to build a faster computer chip, there is literally nowhere to go but up
  • It opens the way for faster smartphones, lighter laptops and a new generation of supercomputers
  • Gordon Moore made his famous prediction in 1965 that computers should double in power every two years.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • the transistor three "gates" to control the flow of electric current, instead of just one
John Evans

Museum 2.0: Educational Uses of Back Channels for Conferences, Museums, and Informal Learning Spaces - 0 views

  • The back channel isn’t just a social space. I noted three distinct, valuable uses of back channels at WebWise:To communicate socially in an environment that does not permit open dialogue. This is the "note passing" or flirting use case.To share your onsite experience with a network of people who are not co-located with you. Where the first use case serves co-located people, this use case focuses on broadcasting the highlights of your experience to friends elsewhere.To investigate a content experience more deeply using a different set of tools than those used to convey the content. For example, you may listen to a speaker and check out related links from his work as he talks.
  •  
    Many museums are experimenting with "back channel" platforms that allow visitors and staff to chat and share content while onsite at the museum
John Evans

Shai Agassi's bold plan for electric cars | Video on TED.com - 0 views

  • Forget about the hybrid auto -- Shai Agassi says it's electric cars or bust if we want to impact emissions. His company, Better Place, has a radical plan to take entire countries oil-free by 2020.
John Evans

The Digital Melting Pot: bridging the Digital Native-Immigrant Divide - 0 views

  • But not all students are part of these learning networks and the content coverage is not always comprehensive. Therefore, educators must work to ensure that students gain these skills (Jenkins, et al., 2008). Rheingold (n.d.), who as he puts it “fell into the computer realm from the typewriter dimension,” is also working to change the belief that all students are tech–savvy by bringing emerging technologies — blogs, wikis, videos — into the college classroom (Rheingold, 2008; Young, 2008). His project is called the “Social Media Virtual Classroom” and is designed to expose students to “participatory media” in order to promote civic engagement.
« First ‹ Previous 441 - 460 of 476 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page