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Judy Brophy

Instructional Strategies Online - Think, Pair, Share - 0 views

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    Think-Pair-Share is a strategy designed to provide students with "food for thought" on a given topics enabling them to formulate individual ideas and share these ideas with another student. It is a learning strategy developed by Lyman and associates to encourage student classroom participation. What is Think, Pair, Share? Think-Pair-Share is a strategy designed to provide students with "food for thought" on a given topics enabling them to formulate individual ideas and share these ideas with another student. It is a learning strategy developed by Lyman and associates to encourage student classroom participation. Rather than using a basic recitation method in which a teacher poses a question and one student offers a response, Think-Pair-Share encourages a high degree of pupil response and can help keep students on task. What is its purpose? * Providing "think time" increases quality of student responses. * Students become actively involved in thinking about the concepts presented in the lesson. * Research tells us that we need time to mentally "chew over" new ideas in order to store them in memory. When teachers present too much information all at once, much of that information is lost. If we give students time to "think-pair-share" throughout the lesson, more of the critical information is retained. * When students talk over new ideas, they are forced to make sense of those new ideas in terms of their prior knowledge. Their misunderstandings about the topic are often revealed (and resolved) during this discussion stage. * Students are more willing to participate since they don't feel the peer pressure involved in responding in front of the whole class. * Think-Pair-Share is easy to use on the spur of the moment. * Easy to use in large classes. How can I do it? * With students seated in teams of 4, have them number them from 1 to 4. * Announce a discussion topic or problem to solve. (Example: Which room in our school is larg
Matthew Ragan

Function list : Functions - Google Docs Help - 1 views

  • Frequency distribution
  • FREQUENCY(data, classes)
  • FILTER(sourceArray, arrayCondition_1, arrayCondition_2, ..., arrayCondition_30)
  • ...21 more annotations...
  • SORT(data, keyColumn_1, ascOrDesc_1, keyColumn_2, ascOrDesc_2, ..., keyColumn_30, ascOrDesc_30)
  • Cross-workbook referenceImportRange(spreadsheet_key, [sheet!]range)
  • Elements based on criteriaCOUNTIF(range, criteria)
  • RANDBETWEEN (bottom, top)Returns an integer random number between bottom and top (inclusive).
  • ROUND(number, count)Rounds the given number to a certain number of decimal places according to valid mathematical criteria. Count (optional) is the number of the places to which the value is to be rounded. If the count parameter is negative, only the whole number portion is rounded. It is rounded to the place indicated by the count.
  • RAND()Returns a random number between 0 and 1.
  • AVERAGE(number_1, number_2, ... number_30)Returns the average of the arguments. Number_1, number_2, ... number_30 are numerical values or ranges. Text is ignored.
  • CONFIDENCE(alpha, STDEV, size)Returns the (1-alpha) confidence interval for a normal distribution. Alpha is the level of the confidence interval. STDEV is the standard deviation for the total population. Size is the size of the total population.
  • CORREL(data_1, data_2)Returns the correlation coefficient between two data sets. Data_1 is the first data set. Data_2 is the second data set.
  • COUNT(value_1, value_2, ... value_30)Counts how many numbers are in the list of arguments. Text entries are ignored. Value_1, value_2, ... value_30 are values or ranges which are to be counted.
  • COUNTA(value_1, value_2, ... value_30)Counts how many values are in the list of arguments. Text entries are also counted, even when they contain an empty string of length 0. If an argument is an array or reference, empty cells within the array or reference are ignored. value_1, value_2, ... value_30 are up to 30 arguments representing the values to be counted.
  • MAX(number_1, number_2, ... number_30)Returns the maximum value in a list of arguments. Number_1, number_2, ... number_30 are numerical values or ranges.
  • MEDIAN(number_1, number_2, ... number_30)Returns the median of a set of numbers. Number_1, number_2, ... number_30 are values or ranges, which represent a sample. Each number can also be replaced by a reference.
  • MIN(number_1, number_2, ... number_30)Returns the minimum value in a list of arguments. Number_1, number_2, ... number_30 are numerical values or ranges.
  • MODE(number_1, number_2, ... number_30)Returns the most common value in a data set. Number_1, number_2, ... number_30 are numerical values or ranges. If several values have the same frequency, it returns the smallest value. An error occurs when a value does not appear twice.
  • PERCENTILE(data, alpha)Returns the alpha-percentile of data values in an array. Data is the array of data. Alpha is the percentage of the scale between 0 and 1.
  • QUARTILE(data, type)Returns the quartile of a data set. Data is the array of data in the sample. Type is the type of quartile. (0 = Min, 1 = 25%, 2 = 50% (Median), 3 = 75% and 4 = Max.)
  • RANK(value, data, type)Returns the rank of the given Value in a sample. Data is the array or range of data in the sample. Type (optional) is the sequence order, either ascending (0) or descending (1).
  • STDEV(number_1, number_2, ... number_30)Estimates the standard deviation based on a sample. Number_1, number_2, ... number_30 are numerical values or ranges representing a sample based on an entire population.
  • STDEVP(number_1, number_2, ... number_30) Calculates the standard deviation based on the entire population. Number_1, number_2, ... number_30 are numerical values or ranges representing a sample based on an entire population.
  • Combines text stringsCONCATENATE(text_1, text_2, ..., text_30)Combines several text strings into one string. Text_1, text_2, ... text_30 are text passages that are to be combined into one string.
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    Google Spreadsheets Formula Help
Judy Brophy

5 Unexpected Results of Going 1:1 | Go Where You Grow - 0 views

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    " Do not just walk into this casually. " Identity Crisis- You will become a student too. Remodeling. Fear (Freedom is Scary) massive overhaul Really well-written article about how having students own technology changed everything in a K-12 history class.
Jenny Darrow

Canvas Guides | Getting Started | What training resources does Instructure provide thei... - 0 views

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    Scroll down to find the 1:38 Canvas Instructor Training Demo 1 and 2
Jenny Darrow

ELMS Evaluation - Office of Information Technology (OIT) - University of Maryland - 0 views

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    The following are archived videos from the ELMS Pilot Evaluation Webinar Series. In those webinars, ELMS pilot faculty members talk about their experiences with each of the five ELMS pilot systems: Blackboard 9.1, Desire2Learn, Canvas, Moodle, and Sakai. The ELMS pilot evaluation faculty members give an overview of each system, highlight unique features, and talk about what works and what doesn't. Most of the webinars are available to watch either in Wimba Live Classroom or on YouTube. The following are archived videos from the ELMS Pilot Evaluation Webinar Series. In those webinars, ELMS pilot faculty members talk about their experiences with each of the five ELMS pilot systems: Blackboard 9.1, Desire2Learn, Canvas, Moodle, and Sakai. The ELMS pilot evaluation faculty members give an overview of each system, highlight unique features, and talk about what works and what doesn't. Most of the webinars are available to watch either in Wimba Live Classroom or on YouTube. Introduction
Jenny Darrow

Confusing Technology Integration with Instructional Reform | Larry Cuban on School Refo... - 0 views

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    For many years the rhetoric and substance of national reports written by bands of technologists eager to see electronic devices work their wonder on children and adults in schools have puzzled me. I am especially puzzled now as I try to make sense of the mountain of data I have collected at Las Montanas, a 1:1 laptop school in northern California (see posts of August 7, 13, and 20).  In these national reports issued periodically by U.S. government sponsored agencies (e.g., Office of Technology Assessment, the National Education Technology Plan) or privately-funded groups (e.g., CEO Forum on Education and Technology), I noted two things.
Jenny Darrow

http://www.aberdeen-education.org.uk/files/Research/3%20What%20has%20the%20greatest%20i... - 0 views

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    He says 'effect sizes' are much the best way of answering the question 'what has the greatest influence on student learning'. An effect-size of 1.0 is typically associated with: * advancing learner's achievement by one year, or improving the rate of learning by 50%, * a correlation between some variable (e.g., amount of homework) and achievement of approximately .50. * average students receiving that treatment exceeding 84% of students not receiving that treatment. * A two grade leap in GCSE, e.g. from a C to an A grade. An effect size of 1.0 is clearly enormous! (It is defined as an increase of one standard deviation)
Jenny Darrow

What's New in Bb 9.1 - 1 views

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    CFCC went from 7.3 to 9.1 and created a slick 7 page PDF
Judy Brophy

YouTube Blog: 1 billion subscriptions and counting - 0 views

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    includes 1 min video  on how to subscribe to channels and what that gets you
Jenny Darrow

The 2010 Campus Computing Survey | The Campus Computing Project - 0 views

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    The 2010 survey data highlight the continuing transition in the higher education market for Learning Management Systems (LMS).  The proportion of survey participants reporting that their institution uses Blackboard as the campus-standard LMS has dropped from to 71.0 percent in 2006 to 57.1 percent in 2010.  Concurrently, Blackboard's major LMS competitors have all gained share during this period.  The percentage of campuses that use Desire2Learn as the campus-standard LMS is up five-fold, from 2.0 percent in 2006 to 10.1 percent in 2010.  Moodle, an Open Source LMS, also registered big gains during this period, rising from 4.2 percent in 2006 to 16.4 percent in fall 2010   The numbers for Sakai, another Open Source LMS deployed primarily in research universities, have grown from 3.0 percent in 2006 to 4.6 percent in 2010.
Judy Brophy

Free Technology for Teachers: Gmail+1 = Student Email Addresses to Register for Online ... - 0 views

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    provides a solution to a problem that a lot of teachers run into when they want their students to use a new web tool. Let's say there's a new service that I want my students to use but my students don't have email addresses that they can use to register for that service. In that case I can quickly generate Gmail addresses for my students by using the Gmail+1 hack.
Jenny Darrow

IJeP :: Current Issue :: Volume 2 - Number 1 - 2012 - 0 views

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    Volume 2 * Number 1 * 2012
Jenny Darrow

Learning Management Systems Evaluation and Transition - Academic Technologies - CSU, Chico - 2 views

  • Academic Technologies Home About ATECDepartmentsStaff DirectoryClassroom ServicesLearning Support ServicesMedia Production ServicesDesign, Print, and Copy ServicesWeb and Photography Services You are here: CSU, Chico | ATEC | Learning Management Systems Learning Management Systems Evaluation and Transition
Jenny Darrow

Blackboard Learn (Bb 9.1) is Coming - Top 10 Reasons to Get Excited! - 2 views

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    This release of Blackboard adds several exciting new features and a completely redesigned, modern Web 2.0 user interface. You'll get a "sneak peak" at some of the many reasons you might just like Bb 9.1, including: The new user interface - more customization options and fewer "clicks" to get something done! Drag 'n Drop functionality for both students and instructors Blogs, Journals, and Wikis -- Oh No (Oh Yes)! Updated (i.e. more manageable) Group tools Useful (and needed) enhancements to the existing Assignments tool and the Grade Center And many more
Judy Brophy

Blackboard 9.1 Support Pages - 0 views

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    Popular help topics with 9.1
Jenny Darrow

Division of Information Technology> Blackboard Training - 0 views

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    Blackboard, UNCP's course management system, is available to instructors who are interested in online teaching and learning, either to enhance a campus-based course or to create a course entirely online. Blackboard offers a rich variety of tools for posting materials online and facilitating interaction with and among students. We believe you will be pleased with Blackboard 9.1. On-demand Learning Center - Interactive Videos  
Judy Brophy

Bug: Blackboard 9.1 instructor discussion board attachments (and workaround) - CEITL @ ... - 0 views

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    There is a bug in the Blackboard 9.1 discussion board in which students are not able to access files instructors attach using the Browse My Computer button located below the Visual Text Box Editor (VTBE). The workaround for instructors who need to attach files to a discussion board post is to attach the file using the attachment button inside the VTBE itself (see attached picture). This will put a link to the file in the discussion board post itself. Students do not have this problem; they can attach files by clicking the Browse My Computer button below the VTBE.
Jenny Darrow

Image search for teaching | Compfight | A Flickr™ Search Tool - 0 views

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    Flickr search tool
Jenny Darrow

Hinds Community College - Canvas - Faculty - 0 views

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    "In Summer 2013, Hinds Community College (as well as the other 14 community colleges in Mississippi) will move to the Canvas platform by Instructure as the new learning management system for the college.  Blackboard will no longer be available after June 1, 2013 to students or faculty.  This website will serve as the communication tool regarding the migration to Canvas.  Please check back often for additional information regarding best practices, timeline for implementation, and training materials. PLEASE BOOKMARK THIS PAGE AND CHECK BACK OFTEN.  Frequent emails will also be sent out regarding updates. "
Jenny Darrow

http://peeragogy.net/peeragogy-handbook-v1-1.pdf - 0 views

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    Contributions from many including: Bryan Alexander Howard Rheingold is book, and accompanying website, is a resource for selforganizing self-learners. With YouTube, Wikipedia, search engines, free chatrooms, blogs, wikis, and video communication, today's  have power never dreamed-of before. What does any group of self-learners need to know in order to self-organize learning about any topic? e Peeragogy Handbook is a volunteercreated and maintained resource for bootstrapping peer learning. 
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