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Sheila Tebbano

"3 for 3" -Three Ed Tech Experts Choose Top Tools... -- THE Journal - 1 views

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    Great read as we begin a new year.
Sheila Tebbano

Portfolio - 0 views

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    I belong to a gooele group on e_portfolios. http://groups.google.com/group/k12eportfolios/topics?pli=1 This site was posted as an example of a middle school using Google for their digital portfolios. As schools become more interested in using these tools, I find it useful to have examples and templates.
anonymous

Vyew.com - Vyew - FREE Anytime Collaboration and Live Web Conferencing™ - 0 views

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    Quick and easy real-time web conferencing tool.
Sheila Tebbano

New online tool helps teachers use primary-source documents | Curriculum | eSchoolNews.com - 0 views

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    Liking DocsTeach. Teachers will need to register to get full use. Number 4 on the list of what teachers can do is particularly interesting. Enjoy checking it out.
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    Thanks for sharing, Sheila. This is a must-read, especially for those working in Social Studies classrooms.
anonymous

Using the Diigo Forum Tool (Screencast) - 3 views

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    I made this screencast to help us in terms of using the Diigo Forum tool. Take a look and let's start posting our issues, best practices, etc...
Sheila Tebbano

Top Tools for Learning : Emerging Trends - 2 views

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    Interesting blog post on learning trends. Do you think educators are burying their heads in the sand hoping web 2.0 will go away?
Angela Watson

New Google Docs Community Offers How-to Videos - 2 views

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    The community just launched today and there are already some good videos up. Richard Byrne blogged about it at "Free Technology for Teachers"--his own Google tutorials are designed especially for teachers, and are another great resource: http://www.freetech4teachers.com/p/google-tools-tutorials.html
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    Thanks for sharing this, Angela. This looks very cool.
Sheila Tebbano

Top 100 Tools 2007-2010 - 5 views

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    Interesting evolution. I'm still not getting teachers to believe in #1 on the list but I keep trying...
Sheila Tebbano

Share and mark up documents online | crocodoc - 2 views

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    I like this tool because it doesn't require a log in.
Sheila Tebbano

Teachers Shake Up Shakespeare with Digital Media | Edutopia - 0 views

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    Good description of how students are using web 2.0 tools.
anonymous

ePortfolio Sample - 2 views

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    Sample senior year ePortfolio utilizing Google Sites. Interesting to see how this student utilized the "Announcements" tool as a reflective blog.
Sheila Tebbano

Shmoop: Study Guides & Teacher Resources - 0 views

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    Shmoop is a research resource, learning guide and much more. It will engage students and provide teachers with quality material that can make learning fun.
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    This is an exciting new tool that secondary teachers will love. The creators of Shmoop have put together great information, resources, learning guides, and more. The writers have a sense of humor and the material is on target. Definitely a must share Web 2.0 tool. Check it out!!
anonymous

K12 Guide to Going Google - 6 views

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    This is the newly revamped integration model developed by Google, containing the "tools and guidelines" to jump start a Google Apps for Education roll out.
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    This is awesome. Thank you.
anonymous

EasyBib: Free Bibliography Maker - - 1 views

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    Excellent information literacy tool for making citations ( MLA, APA, Chicago citation styles) and taking notes.
wiljennings419

Educators Move Beyond the Hype Over Skype - 0 views

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    Educators are now using the videoconferencing tool to connect foreign-language students to native speakers, hold virtual field trips and host conversations with scientists and other experts
Sheila Tebbano

The Art Of Storytelling » Tell A Story - 0 views

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    Interactive storytelling site sponsored by the Delaware Art Muceum. You can listen to stories and create them. If you create, you can write or record the story. Definitely a tool we should share with teachers.
wiljennings419

Navigating the Path to Personalized Education - 0 views

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    A Vermont initiative to improve learning in middle schools is working through the challenges of using the latest digital tools and different teaching approaches
Rhys Daunic

The Heritage of Digital and Media Literacy | KnightComm - 0 views

  • literacy is beginning to be defined as the ability to share meaning through symbol systems in order to fully participate in society
  • “text” is beginning to be understood as any form of expression or communication in fixed and tangible form that uses symbol systems, including language, still and moving images, graphic design, sound, music and interactivity.
  • New types of texts and new types of literacies have been emerging over a period of more than 50 years.
  • ...20 more annotations...
  • information literacy, media literacy, media education, visual literacy, news literacy, health media literacy, and digital literacy, among others
  • disciplinary backgrounds of the stakeholders
  • wide scope of the knowledge and skills involved
  • These concepts must not be treated as competitors
    • Rhys Daunic
       
      yet they compete for the focus of transformational efforts of educators, and time within the curriculum.  
  • a closely-knit family
  • information literacy has typically been associated with research skills. Media literacy typically has been associated with critical analysis of news, advertising and mass media entertainment. Health media literacy has been associated with exploring media’s impact on making positive choices related to nutrition, exercise, body image, violence and substance abuse prevention. Digital literacy is associated with the ability to use computers, social media, and the Internet
    • Rhys Daunic
       
      interesting to see how they have settled in.  I have always considered media literacy to encompass all of the above.  technical skills necessary to "access... and create... in a variety of media".  info literacy to "access and synthesize" info.  the focus on critical analysis within media literacy can be applied across the curriculum -- health is one area of focus, violence another -- both subjects impacted greatly by media messages.   * quotes refer to the NAMLE.net Definition of Media Literacy.  
  • “digital and media literacy” is used to encompass the full range of cognitive, emotional and social competencies that includes the use of texts, tools and technologies; the skills of critical thinking and analysis; the practice of message composition and creativity; the ability to engage in reflection and ethical thinking; as well as active participation through teamwork and collaboration.
  • empowered to speak out on behalf of the missing voices and omitted perspectives in our communities
  • By identifying and attempting to solve problems, people use their powerful voices and their rights under the law to improve the world around them
  • spiral of empowerment
  • active participation in lifelong learning
  • both consuming and creating messages
  • consistent with constructivist education
  • Common Core State Standards Initiative (2010) points out, “To be ready for college, workforce training, and life in a technological society, students need the ability to gather, comprehend, evaluate, synthesize, report on, and create a high volume and extensive range of print and nonprint texts in media forms old and new. The need to research and to consume and produce media is embedded into every element of today’s curriculum.”
    • Rhys Daunic
       
      there it is.  we have to emphasize this statement explicitly in development of units addressing the specific standards? 
  • Essential Competencies of Digital and Media Literacy 1.    ACCESS Finding and using media and technology tools skillfully and sharing appropriate and relevant information with others 2.   ANALYZE & EVALUATE Comprehending messages and using critical thinking to analyze message quality, veracity, credibility, and point of view, while considering potential effects or consequences of messages 3.   CREATE Composing or generating content using creativity and con­fidence in self-expression, with awareness of purpose, audience, and composition techniques 4.   REFLECT Applying social responsibility and ethical principles to one’s own identity and lived experience, communication behavior and conduct 5.   ACT Working individually and collaboratively to share knowledge and solve problems in the family, the workplace and the community, and participating as a member of a community at local, regional, national and international levels
  • “Teachers understand media’s influence on culture and people’s actions and communication; as a result, teachers use a variety of approaches for teaching students how to construct meaning from media and nonprint texts and how to compose and respond to film, video, graphic, photographic, audio, and multimedia texts
  • “preservice, inservice, and staff development programs that will focus on new literacies, multimedia composition, and a broadened concept of literacy”
  • Understand how people use media in their personal and public lives Recognize the complex relationships among audiences and media content Appreciate that media content is produced within social and cultural contexts Understand the commercial nature of media Use media to communicate to specific audiences
  • But genuine educational change in K–12 and higher education does not come about simply by generating documents or developing written standards
  • What is needed now is a clear and compelling vision of the instructional practices
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    Regarding what's missing from the Core Common Standards -- new texts, new media, viewing...  Where does "complexity" of new media text get taught? How will teachers learn to parse it?  Is new media analysis and production a discipline?  Yes in my opinion.  Is it interdisciplinary? Yes.  Media related to various content areas have their own criteria.  Video, photography, blogs, social networks and the systems that deliver them are, in a way, their own languages. They are increasingly dominating how our society functions, informs and represents itself.  HOW can this still be an afterthought for educators?  Fear?  Uncertainty on how to proceed?  Because it's not tested? The text landscape is more complex than the textbook.  
Rhys Daunic

iPad as an Interactive White Board for $5 or $10 « Moving at the Speed of Cre... - 1 views

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    School leaders around the United States continue to spend HUGE amounts of money on interactive whiteboards for classrooms, despite the fact that these devices universally FAIL to empower students to become more independent, self-directed and engaged learners in the way mobile learning devices (like laptops, tablets or other personal digital learning tools) can. Please do not misunderstand me: It definitely IS a big deal for a teacher and his/her students to have access to an LCD projector connected to a computer in the classroom if previously, the "normal" technology in the room was an overhead projector.
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