Skip to main content

Home/ NYSCATE/ Group items tagged tweet

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Steve Ransom

EdTechSandyK: How to Decode a Tweet - 1 views

  •  
    Great blog post to accompany the anatomy of a tweet postcard from #nyscate13
Steve Ransom

Ten Tips for Tweeting at Conferences - ProfHacker - Blogs - The Chronicle of Higher Edu... - 0 views

  •  
    Good tips, conference or not.
Steve Ransom

http://www.alfiekohn.org/f_news/fullnews.php?fn_id=8 - 1 views

  • or even call for more rigorous or competitive grading and testing.
  • The point may not have been to produce a better outcome for students at all but to make sure they don’t “get away with” something.  If you do something bad, something bad must be done to you -- regardless of the effect.
  •  
    I don't often tweet a "MUST READ", but this is one of them. Easy to read... harder to self-assess and implement.
Steve Ransom

Live-tweeting the #Gettysburg Address - Yahoo News - 0 views

  •  
    An example of how students can re-tell and make sense of ideas using new [social] media
Steve Ransom

I got in trouble for Tweeting at work... - 0 views

  •  
    Many who have not yet experienced and come to understand the power of connected learning see it as trivial and a waste of time. Much work is yet to be done in this regard.
Steve Ransom

Twitter: Best Practices For Educators #ReinventingWriting - Edudemic - 0 views

  •  
    Great list of ideas for getting more responses to your tweets.
Steve Ransom

The Twitteraholic's Ultimate Guide to tweets, hashtags, and all things Twitter - The Ed... - 1 views

  •  
    Wow... a really long, but great, guide to all things twitter.
Steve Ransom

The Twitteraholic's Ultimate Guide to tweets, hashtags, and all things Twitter | The Ed... - 0 views

  •  
    Many well-organized tips and resources here.
Steve Ransom

Should my class blog, tweet, Google App, Moodle, Desire2Learn, or Edmodo? Arrghhh!!! | ... - 0 views

  •  
    A handy little matrix to help you make decisions regarding creating an online component to your classroom.
Steve Ransom

Los Alamitos High School Teacher Tweets - YouTube - 0 views

  •  
    Hello, students!!! Social media is public. Nice approach, using humor to make a serious point
Steve Ransom

Challenging 'Internet safety' as a subject to be taught - NetFamilyNews.org |... - 0 views

  • The Internet is embedded in and encompasses virtually all of human life, positive, negative and neutral.
  • All that happens online is much more symptomatic (sometimes an early warning system) than a cause of social problems that we’ve been working on addressing since long before we had the Internet.
  • Internet safety education teaches kids to hide negative or deviant behavior rather than correct it. Do you see a problem with that? I do.
  • ...14 more annotations...
  • What needs to be taught is skills, not just information, and certainly not all the inaccurate information so much “Internet safety education” has disseminated over nearly two decades.
  • “properties” (“persistence,” “searchability,” “replicability,” and “scalability”) and “dynamics” (“invisible audiences,” “collapsed contexts,” and “the blurring of public and private”) – and now some of those, e.g., “persistence,” are changing with the arrival of “ephemeral,” or disappearing, digital media in services
  • media is both social and digital.
  • full, healthy participation in participatory media, culture and society.
  • what protects children online is what protects them offline.
  • life skills, literacies and safeguards that are both internal – respect for self and others, resilience, empathy, and a strong inner guidance system (sometimes called a moral compass) – and external, such as good modeling, parenting and teaching by caring adults, peer mentoring, instruction in digital and media literacy, social-emotional learning, protective technology used thoughtfully, family and school rules, well-designed digital environments, and well-established laws against discrimination, sexual harassment, bullying, and crime.
  • teach the skills of today’s very social digital media: digital literacy, media literacy and social literacy, which together address both media-specific risk reduction and proficiency in participatory media use.
  • ACCESS
  • ANALYZE
  • CREATE
  • REFLECT
  • “ACT:
  • These are the competencies that students need to navigate participatory media and culture.
  • providing access and opportunities to analyze, create, reflect and act as much with digital media as with older media right in core academic classes, schools are affording them the skills, community, and self-actualization that increase safety (resilience) as well as efficacy in and out of media. This is the real “Internet safety [or competency]” that needs to be taught in schools.
  •  
    We need to get this and push back against the flawed Internet Safety/Danger narrative if we are truly going to prepare students as healthy and wise citizens. "what protects children online is what protects them offline."
1 - 12 of 12
Showing 20 items per page