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Lisa Keeler

Super Teacher Tools - 0 views

  • Our Flash Jeopardy Review Game tool is by far the most popular tool on the site. With this tool you can create a custom jeopardy review game for use in classrooms, training sessions, or anywhere else a fun, team based review game is appropriate. You can even download the Jeopardy Flash Player file to use games that you have created offline without an Internet connection!
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    Good Review Tool
Isabel Fernandez

Neal-Schuman Publishers » NEW BOOK GIVES READERS THE TOOLS THEY NEED TO EVALU... - 0 views

  • Literacy in the 21st century is worlds away from past processes of defining and interpreting information. The new age of digital technology is redefining the ways we find, evaluate and process concepts. Information literacy—how we identify, locate, and evaluate information—is a crucial skill in all disciplines and levels of education.
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    Summary of a book that gives tools on how to evaluate and understand information through a digital lens
Carolina Montes

Gumnotes A Great Annotating and Note Taking Tool - 0 views

  • Gumnotes is a great note taking tool that allows its users to stick notes easily to their documents
  • You can add notes to websites in Firefox, Internet-Explorer and all other website-browsers.
  • You can also annotate your documents in Word, Excel, and images.
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  • Gumnotes is a great tool for teachers. They can use it to annotate pages and documents, add notes and share it with their students.
Lee Ann Seifert

100 Tips, Tools, and Resources for Teaching Students About Social Media | Teaching Degr... - 1 views

  • The following tips, tools, and resources can assist any teacher with the basics about social media and ways to share that information with students.
    • Lee Ann Seifert
       
      Nowadays students are very familiar with social media, finding meaningful ways to incorporate them in the classroom will make learning fun and promote more student engagement. 
Gretchen Dillon

Google Launches Redesigned Education Site | MindShift - 0 views

    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      I am wondering if anyone in ADE634 has any experience with Google Chromebooks?
  • The Teachers site leads to Google’s many apps that can be used for teaching specific subjects, as well as design and collaboration tools.
  • Google has revamped its site for educators, creating a redesigned repository for all its educational tools and resources for teachers, schools, and students.
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  • Schools and districts can find links to YouTube for Schools, which allows students to access YouTube EDU while blocking non-educational videos;
  • Last week, Google announced that three school districts in Iowa, Illinois and South Carolina are using only Google Chromebooks, the Web browser-based laptop, and that hundreds of schools across the country are deploying them in classrooms — a total of 27,000 in the hands of students.
Mariana Perez Galan

Promethean World - Learner Response Systems : ActivEngage - 0 views

  • Using Promethean’s award-winning software ActivInspire or Promethean ActivOffice, display a question on the interactive display or ask it verbally, and students will respond using the virtual device on their computers or handheld devices. Assign full quizzes of varying difficulty with ActivEngage’s Self-Paced Learning functionality to encourage students to work at their own pace and comprehension level. Gain instant insight into student comprehension and progress with an intuitive, integrated application that makes the most of existing classroom technology.
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    This can be an excellent tool for school know that we are allowing children to use their their computers and ipads. 
Gretchen Dillon

Beyond the Transcript: Digital Portfolios Paint a Complete Picture | MindShift - 0 views

  • Zinch, which is free for students, is designed like a social networking tool.
  • lines are blurring between social networking tools and digital portfolios.
  • Digital portfolios provide students a way to track what they’ve learned over time, compile their grades and scores and publish their completed projects. And they provide a sense of a student’s identity, one behind the transcript, when submitting their applications.
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  • Parents can involve their kids, even at a very young age, to help them not only pick their favorite works but also to assess and reflect on their learning. The reflection component, much more than the presentation element of digital portfolios, is where Barrett believes they reach their full power.
    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      I wonder when our student-led conferences will turn entirely digital?
Gretchen Dillon

#EdReach Chat - EdReach - 1 views

    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      Someday hope to work with SMART boards!
  • We are now in 2012, and the 21st Century is totally upon us. The 20th Century, to be honest, is not even in the rear view mirror anymore. Blogging, flipped classrooms, iPads, mobile learning- these topics dominate the airwaves of education news and technology blogs.  With the announcement of the iBooks textbook initiative by Apple, we are entering a true era of Minority Report-style media consumption.
  • Taking the time to master these tools is not something that can be done in a 30 minute prep session before school. Mastering the education tools of this century takes a commitment to breaking down the proverbial walls of what a teacher used to be. Mastering these new teacher processes takes letting go of the idea that your day will end when you leave the brick and mortar.
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    • Gretchen Dillon
       
       Great quote to remind us of the importance of integrating technology - "You either become a 21st Century educator- or you're irrelevant."
Gretchen Dillon

The future of teaching: Difference engine: Let the games begin | The Economist - 0 views

    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      the case for interactive textbooks
  • Done properly, interactive textbooks offer not only video tutorials, more personalised instruction, just-in-time hints and homework help, but also instant access to assessment tools, teaching resources and the ability to network socially with students elsewhere.
  • Using tools for highlighting and annotating virtual flash-cards, students can select information within the text and store it for later revision. Searching public databases, direct from within the textbook, is also possible. At school, students can sync with their teachers’ computers, to hand in their quiz results and homework for marking.
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  • if software is to be used as a teaching aid (called “blended learning” in pedagogical circles), then it should seek to balance the need for correct answers with the freedom to take risks and break rules. “If you’re not prepared to be wrong,” Dr Robinson preaches, “you’ll never come up with anything original.”
Alejandra Salazar

Could digital humanities to undergraduates could boost information literacy? | Inside H... - 0 views

  • it is incumbent on humanities instructors to teach undergraduates how to read websites and digital discovery tools with the same critical vigilance with which they are taught to read textual arguments
  • research has shown that most members of the “born digital” generation do not know how those tools work
  • the point is to spur students to “think critically and differently” about digital gateways and to “encourage new forms of close reading, knowledge production and interpretation” in the context of the modern information landscape
Tania Hinojosa

Creating a Classroom Newspaper - ReadWriteThink - 0 views

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    FEATURED RESOURCES Printing Press: In this online interactive tool, your students can choose the "newspaper" option to help them complete their newspaper section. Newspaper Story Format: Your students will find completing their newspaper article a snap by first filling out this useful handout that helps them identify each key element of an authentic newspaper article.
Mariana Perez Galan

Scholastic Phonics Inventory | A Breakthrough Computer-based Reading Assessment Tool to... - 0 views

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    WE NEED THIS AT ASF!!!
Debora Gomez

Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest. - 0 views

  • There is clear and widespread agreement among the public and educators that all students need to be proficient computer users or "computer literate." However, while districts are spending a great deal of money on technology, there seems to be only a vague notion of what computer literacy really means. Can the student who operates a computer well enough to play a game, send e-mail or surf the Web be considered computer literate? Will a student who uses computers in school only for running tutorials or an integrated learning system have the skills necessary to survive in our society? Will the ability to do basic word processing be sufficient for students entering the workplace or post-secondary education?
  • Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest.
  • Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest.
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  • Curriculum Based on the Big6 Skills Approach
  • Approach
  • Approach
  • technology
  • Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest.
  • technology
  • Moving from teaching isolated tech
  • Moving from teaching isolated technology skills to an integrated approach
  • Moving from teaching isolated technology skills to an integrated approach
  • ERIC Identifier: ED465377 Publication Date: 2002-09-00 Author: Eisenberg, Michael B. - Johnson, Doug Source: ERIC Clearinghouse on Information and Technology Syracuse NY. Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest. There is clear and widespread agreement among the public and educators that all students need to be proficient computer users or "computer literate." However, while districts are spending a great deal of money on technology, there seems to be only a vague notion of what computer literacy really means. Can the student who operates a computer well enough to play a game, send e-mail or surf the Web be considered computer literate? Will a student who uses computers in school only for running tutorials or an integrated learning system have the skills necessary to survive in our society? Will the ability to do basic word processing be sufficient for students entering the workplace or post-secondary education? Clearly not. In too many schools, teachers and students still use computers only as the equivalent of expensive flash cards, electronic worksheets, or as little more than a typewriter. The productivity side of computer use in the general content area curriculum is neglected or grossly underdeveloped (Moursund, 1995). Recent publications by educational associations are advocating for a more meaningful use of technology in schools (ISTE, 2000). Educational technologists are clearly describing what students should know and be able to do with technology. They are advocating integrating computer skills into the content areas, proclaiming that computer skills should not be taught in isolation and that separate "computer classes" do not really help students learn to apply computer skills in meaningful ways. There is increasing recognition that the end result of computer literacy is not knowing how to operate computers, but to use technology as a tool for organization, communication, research, and problem solving. This is an important shift in approach and emphasis. Moving f
  • ERIC Identifier: ED465377 Publication Date: 2002-09-00 Author: Eisenberg, Michael B. - Johnson, Doug Source: ERIC Clearinghouse on Information and Technology Syracuse NY. Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest. There is clear and widespread agreement among the public and educators that all students need to be proficient computer users or "computer literate." However, while districts are spending a great deal of money on technology, there seems to be only a vague notion of what computer literacy really means. Can the student who operates a computer well enough to play a game, send e-mail or surf the Web be considered computer literate? Will a student who uses computers in school only for running tutorials or an integrated learning system have the skills necessary to survive in our society? Will the ability to do basic word processing be sufficient for students entering the workplace or post-secondary education? Clearly not. In too many schools, teachers and students still use computers only as the equivalent of expensive flash cards, electronic worksheets, or as little more than a typewriter. The productivity side of computer use in the general content area curriculum is neglected or grossly underdeveloped (Moursund, 1995). Recent publications by educational associations are advocating for a more meaningful use of technology in schools (ISTE, 2000). Educational technologists are clearly describing what students should know and be able to do with technology. They are advocating integrating computer skills into the content areas, proclaiming that computer skills should not be taught in isolation and that separate "computer classes" do not really help students learn to apply computer skills in meaningful ways. There is increasing recognition that the end result of computer literacy is not knowing how to operate computers, but to use technology as a tool for organization, communication, research, and problem solving. This is an important shift in approach and emphasis. Moving f
  • Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest.
  • Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest.
  • Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest.
  • Learning and Teaching Information Technology--Computer Skills in Context. ERIC Digest.
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    Introduction to infolit & basis of Big 6
Michelle Munoz

Digital Kindergarten: 1:1 iPad use in Full Day Kindergarten - 1 views

  • The iPad is far superior to the workbooks- instant, self correcting, gives immediate feedback, kids progress at own levels and can be working at differentiated levels.
    • Michelle Munoz
       
      "Bookless" classrooms
    • imelda Morales
       
      I love this post! thanks Michelle! I do believe that technology has to be part of the early years classrooms..but it has to be brought in in a way that it is not a treat. Kids need to see them as learning and exploration tool just like they see legos, blocks and books.
  • Other curriculum areas we use the iPad in are science (as a journal to record our observations) to check the weather, Social Studies- we tweet other kindergarten classrooms and find them on maps and the globe and learn about their lives; comparing similarities and discussing differences and even collaborating on play projects.
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    Wow! Super aplicada Miss Michelle, you are finding amazing things for us in the ECC! I do believe that ads are a wonderful tool althought, will they or could they replace workbooks, puzzles, boardgames, books, manual activities???
Michelle Munoz

Learning with 'e's: Child friendly technologies - 0 views

    • Michelle Munoz
       
      We need to use technology with a purpose. 
  • Teachers often use technology to support their own teaching, but may often fail to see the relevance of child-friendly tools as a means to support children’s learning.
  • we contend that child-friendly technologies should be considered as serious learning tools in the formal learning environment of the primary classroom.
Mariana Perez Galan

A Tech-Happy Professor Reboots After Hearing His Teaching Advice Isn't Working - Techno... - 0 views

  • Mr. Wesch is not swearing off technology—he still believes you can teach well with YouTube and Twitter. But at a time when using more interactive tools to replace the lecture appears to be gaining widespread acceptance, he has a new message. It doesn't matter what method you use if you do not first focus on one intangible factor: the bond between professor and student.
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    Its very important to always remember that we are the teachers, our job is to guide children to use technology in a positive way. We have to learn how find advantages as well as disadvantages of using internet and technology in our classrooms this way we can plan ahead when something goes bad.  
Pedro Aparicio

Educational Technology Guy: 10 Important Skills Students need for the Future - 2 views

    • Pedro Aparicio
       
      Some of the future work skills for the year 2020. I think I'm trying to deal with two of these skills right now: new-media literacy and virtual collaboration.
  • Here are the skills:Sense-making. The ability to determine the deeper meaning or significance of what is being expressedSocial intelligence. The ability to connect to others in a deep and direct way, to sense and stimulate reactions and desired interactionsNovel and adaptive thinking. Proficiency at thinking and coming up with solutions and responses beyond that which is rote or rule-basedCross-cultural competency. The ability to operate in different cultural settingsComputational thinking. The ability to translate vast amounts of data into abstract concepts and to understand data-based reasoningNew-media literacy. The ability to critically assess and develop content that uses new media forms and to leverage these media for persuasive communicationTransdisciplinarity. Literacy in and ability to understand concepts across multiple disciplinesDesign mind-set. Ability to represent and develop tasks and work processes for desired outcomesCognitive load management. The ability to discriminate and filter information for importance and to understand how to maximize cognitive functioning using a variety of tools and techniquesVirtual collaboration. The ability to work productively, drive engagement and demonstrate presence as a member of a virtual team
anonymous

Preparing Students to Learn Without Us - 4 views

    • anonymous
       
      Useful for 21stC skills & concepts and BYOD
    • veronica occelli
       
      I don't know if blogging is part of our students lives, but I certainly want to find out
    • Lisa Keeler
       
      Blogging is a fantastic tool for students who are creating a record of a project, particularly the Personal Project. Easy to share with supervisors, teachers and friends, easy to record ideas on the go - and best of all, no paper!
  • personalizing learning means allowing students to choose their own paths through the curriculum
  • t means connecting our expectations to students' passions and interests as learner
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  • most schools and teachers have been slow to discover its potential through the use of the social web, interactive games, and mobile devices.
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    Great to use for 21st Century Skills & Concepts and the BYOD initiative
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    I don't think blogging is part of their social lives, but academically they like it. I've used it several times for projects, to share ideas, to recommend websites and they really know how to use it and take advantage of it.
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    I just read this article and the whole personalized education makes a lot of sense.. it goes beyond diferentiation
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