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Carolina Montes

Web 2.0 Tools in Education: A Quick Guide - FlipSnack - 0 views

    • Carolina Montes
       
      Best guide on what diigo is, evernote, a blog etc. A must see!
Carolina Montes

You Can't Google This | innovative learning designs - 0 views

  • How can I teach in a classroom with students having a variety of their own devices?
  • Digital devices are just that, another tool that will stretch and expand learning in the student/teacher toolbox.
Michelle Munoz

The Connected Classroom - Classroom - 0 views

  • Use digital technology and communication tools to access, manage, integrate and evaluate information; Construct new knowledge; Communicate with others effectively.
Charmaine Weatherbee

Lights, Camera . . . Engagement! Three Great Tools for Classroom Video | Edutopia - 0 views

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    Ideas on how to implement the making of videos to spice up a unit.  
imelda Morales

5 Ways to Integrate Technology Into Your Child's Education - 2 views

  • Technology allows parents and teachers to provide the right amount of discipline for each student individually, and to supplement where necessary. It also allows students to learn at their own pace, which can help keep them interested and excited about the material.
    • Michelle Munoz
       
      Facilitate Self-paced Learning
  • Take learning out of and beyond the classroom. Children learn in a multimodal manner -– they want to be able to touch and hear and see things up close. Netbooks or laptops that feature tools like a camera, writing stylus and audio recording capabilities help to encourage a multimodal approach to learning. The more learning modes (auditory, visual, and experiential) that are exercised, the more likely the material they are learning is likely to stay with them long-term.
    • imelda Morales
       
      this is a  student need not an option that is still waiting for consideration from the early childhood educators
Tania Hinojosa

Information Literacy - 0 views

  • In today’s technology-rich environment, physical access to information has never been easier. Intellectual access however, can be denied to the student who does not possess the cognitive strategies for selecting, retrieving, analyzing, evaluating, synthesizing, creating, and communicating.
  • The accepted definition of literacy has evolved from being able to read and write to the expanded and more elaborate ability to address the practices and outcomes of education in the Information Age. Literacy is referred to in different terms: math literacy, reading literacy, media literacy, print literacy, visual literacy, cultural literacy, computer literacy. Each literacy prescribes a particular process by which that content area can be more easily negotiated. But there is one -- Information Literacy -- under which all the other literacies reside because it is a tool of empowerment. Students who possess information literacy have a heightened capacity for doing meaningful, relevant work. "Regardless of where information literacy skills are employed, they are applicable in any school, play, or work situation."
  • From linear to hypermedia learning - Students move back and forth between information sources in an interactive and non-sequential way. From direct instruction
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  • to construction and discovery - Instead of absorbing knowledge as it’s delivered by a teacher, the student constructs new knowledge. He learns by doing.
  • From teacher-centered to learner-centered. - Focus is on the learner, not the delivery-person. Instead of transmitting information, the teacher now creates and structures what happens in the classroom.
  • From absorbing pre-selected facts to discovering relevant information - This demands higher-order thinking skills such as analysis and synthesis. From school-based to life-based learning - A learner’s knowledge base is constantly revised through life experiences, and schools can prepare students for this eventuality. From uniform instruction to customized learning - Students find personal paths to learning. From learning as torture to learning as fun - The student is motivated to learn, and feels more responsible for his progress. From teacher as transmitter to teacher as facilitator.
  • When technology is responsibly and effectively used in the classroom, students learn faster and in more depth.
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    Learning how to use the information we find and how to apply this to education.
Kate Spilseth

Information Literacy and Lifelong Learning - 0 views

  • SHIFTS IN TEACHING AND LEARNING In an information literate environment, students engage in active, self-directed learning activities, and teachers facilitate students' engagement through a more adventurous style of instructional delivery. Students involved in information literate activities:  --seek a rich range of information sources;  --communicate an understanding of content;  --pose questions about the content being learned;  --use the environment, people, and tools for learning;  --reflect on their own learning;  --assess their own learning; and  --take responsibility for their own learning. These students feel good about themselves as learners, and they leave school feeling passionate about some content.
  • tudents and teachers make decisions about appropriate sources of information and how to access them
  • Information literacy thrives in a resource-based learning environment. In such an environment, s
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  • Information-literate citizens know how to use information to their best advantage at work and in everyday life.
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    How to use information literacy to encourage life long learning
Kate Spilseth

Learning and Teaching Information Technology Computers Skills in Context - 0 views

  • 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. 
  • Successful integrated information skills programs are designed around collaborative projects jointly planned and taught by teachers and library media professionals. Information technology skills instruction can and should be imbedded in such a curriculum. Library media specialists, computer teachers, and classroom teachers need to work together to develop units and lessons that will include both technology skills, information skills, and content-area curriculum outcomes. 
  • Students need to be able to use computers and other technologies flexibly, creatively and purposefully. All learners should be able to recognize what they need to accomplish, determine whether a computer will help them to do so, and then be able to use the computer as part of the process of accomplishing their task. Individual computer skills take on a new meaning when they are integrated within this type of information problem-solving process, and students develop true "information technology literacy" because they have genuinely applied various information technology skills as part of the learning process. 
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    How to appropriately use computer skills and integrate technology into education
Gretchen Dillon

Libraries: championing digital information on campus - 0 views

    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      the importance of librarians in supporting us in developing information literacy within our classrooms
  • Librarians have potentially numerous roles to play in this environment, but one of their key roles is in supporting and advising staff and students how to navigate, select and use digital tools, content and services to achieve a particular goal.
  • The starting point is the assertion that digital literacy is more extensive then effective use of technologies.
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  • One challenge we face is ensuring that our own staff have the capabilities to offer expertise in the digital environment and that the expertise is not limited to one or two 'experts'.
Lee Ann Seifert

AT&T Knowledge Network Explorer : Nuts and Bolts of Big6 : Using the Big6 - 0 views

  • The Big6TM is an information literacy curriculum, an information problem-solving process, and a set of skills which provide a strategy for effectively and efficiently meeting information needs
  • It can be used whenever students are in a situation, academic or personal, which requires information to solve a problem, make a decision or complete a task. Using a multi-level approach, students can develop competency in information problem-solving and decision-making that will carry forward into lifelong, useable skills.
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    Using the Big 6!!! 
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    OMG! We are teaching children so many skills, Its amazing how schools and teachers are constantly finding techniques, tools, ways to educate, that we should improve so much as humanbeings, forgeting about war and money and working on improving ourselves and how we live and we take care of the world and we care for each other!
Jenna Kubricht

First-graders use Twitter to learn typing, reading, writing - chicagotribune.com - 1 views

  • That's because Evan and others in first-grade teacher Jodi Conrad's class use Twitter to send out a weekly newsletters, update the days' activities and give parents reminders about upcoming programs.
  • e the days' ac
  • "These are tools that come standard in life right now,"
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    1st graders using Twitter! If they can do it, We can do it!!!
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