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Ann Baum (Johnston)

ABEL study: Web 2.0 - 0 views

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    Using Web 2.0 Tools in the Secondary School Classroom: Unexpected Student Learning, Evolving Teacher Identity, and Emerging Pedagogical Issues
Kathe Santillo

Awesome Library - Social Studies - 0 views

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    This site organizes 14,000 resources. Find lesson plans, field trips, photos, maps, and online video. A really good and well-organized site.
anonymous

Mediated Cultures: Digital Ethnography at Kansas State University - 0 views

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    This is Michael Wesch's public Netvibes page. Check out how he has it organized and the kinds of widgets he is using. Think about the POWER of this kind of learning in the Social Studies classes that you see.
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    This is Michael Wesch's public Netvibes page. Check out how he has it organized and the kinds of widgets he is using.
Kathe Santillo

Using Context Clues to Learn Word Meaning - 0 views

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    A printable help sheet from HowToStudy.com.
Michelle Krill

Test Today, Privatize Tomorrow - 0 views

  • But the word reform is particularly slippery and tendentious.
  • But the word reform is particularly slippery and tendentious.
  • But the word reform is particularly slippery and tendentious.
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • But the word reform is particularly slippery and tendentious.
  • The clarity of language be damned: They come to bury a given institution rather than to improve it, but they describe their mission as “reform.”
  • It’s a very clever gambit, you have to admit. Either you’re in favor of privatization or else you are inexplicably satisfied with mediocrity.
  • there’s plenty of room for dissatisfaction with the current state of our schools. An awful lot is wrong with them: the way conformity is valued over curiosity and enforced with rewards and punishments, the way children are compelled to compete against one another, the way curriculum so often privileges skills over meaning, the way students are prevented from designing their own learning, the way instruction and assessment are increasingly standardized, the way different avenues of study are rarely integrated, the way educators are systematically deskilled .
  • To that extent, even if privatization worked exactly the way it was supposed to, we shouldn’t expect any of the defects I’ve just listed to be corrected.
  • Making schools resemble businesses often results in a kind of pedagogy that’s not merely conservative but reactionary, turning back the clock on the few changes that have managed to infiltrate and improve classrooms.
  • ut an attack on schooling as we know it is generally grounded in politics rather than pedagogy, and is most energetically advanced by those who despise not just public schools but all public institutions.
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    Using Accountability to "Reform" Public Schools to Death
Virginia Glatzer

Element Educators: A Web 2.0 Book Study - PETE&C - 9 views

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    We have asked these presenters to do a webinar for CFF Coaches.
anonymous

OpenStudy - How It Works - 5 views

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    When your students are at home and trying to collaborate on your project, this site may be very useful to help facilitate the work.
anonymous

VT Math Emporium - 5 views

shared by anonymous on 17 Feb 10 - Cached
  • The Math Emporium is a learning center for the study of mathematics
anonymous

Study: Children Who Blog Or Use Facebook Have Higher Literacy Levels - 8 views

  • 57 per cent of those who used text-based web applications such as blogs, said they generally enjoyed writing compared to 40 per cent who did not.
  • Pupils who write online are more likely to write short stories, letters, song lyrics or a diary, the research revealed.
  • Even social websites such as Facebook, Twitter and Bebo are causing alarming changes in the brains of young users too, claimed neuroscientist Susan Greenfield. “My fear is that these technologies are infantilising the brain into the state of small children who are attracted by buzzing noises and bright lights, who have a small attention span and who live for the moment.
    • anonymous
       
      Interesting, too, is the fact that the author is just 15 yrs old.
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    "A research by The National Literacy Trust on 3,001 children from England and Scotland showed that schoolchildren who blog or own social networking profiles on Facebook have higher literacy levels and greater confidence in writing."
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    "A research by The National Literacy Trust on 3,001 children from England and Scotland showed that schoolchildren who blog or own social networking profiles on Facebook have higher literacy levels and greater confidence in writing."
Michelle Krill

New Study Shows that Online Creativity and E-learning Popular with Kids - 2 views

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    "What the NSBA data shows - see the report for the full details - is that US teens and tweens are not "passive couch potatoes online", as the report put it. This generation is very participative and creative online. Or at least growing more creative as time goes on and the Internet becomes more pervasive."
anonymous

Google Fast Flip - 4 views

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    very interesting. Flip through papers from around the world, arranged by topics
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    Show this to your Social Studies teachers.
Darcy Goshorn

Reading, Math, Science, Social Studies, Music, Art and PE Interactive Sites - 8 views

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    Global classroom portal of interactive resources
Jimbo Lamb

Preceden - The Easiest Way to Make a Timeline - 16 views

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    A great timeline creator, including layers for comparison/contrasting
Vicki Barr

picturing the thirties - 12 views

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    is a new educational web site created by the Smithsonian American Art Museum in collaboration with the University of VA that allows teachers and students to explore the 1930s through paintings, artist memorabilia, historical documents, newsreels, period photographs, music, and video. It even allows students to create their own videos.
anonymous

10 Technology Enhanced Alternatives to Book Reports - TheApple.com - 2 views

  • Let students create a cartoon version of the book they have just finished.
    • anonymous
       
      Two questions. 1) What grade level are we talking about here. 2) What is the highest level of Blooms that is likely to be reached with this assignment?
  • summarizing the book they just read.
  • Students can create an interview type show where they interview characters in the book, create a short movie trailer for the book, or actually have characters act out portions of the book.
    • anonymous
       
      Besides the mention of xtranormal :-) what about this one? Interview characters in the book. A movie trailer? Act out a portion of the book? Again, what grade level? What is the Essential Question for the unit? What's the highest level of Bloom's
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  • Students should include the title and author of the book, key characters, use pictures that support the story line, and create a tag line that will make others want to read the book.
    • anonymous
       
      What grade level? What SUBJECT? Is this appropriate for English class or a Media class that is studying posters, etc? What level of understanding about the book do you really need in order to do this? Is this worthy of an 18 yr old?
  • Encourage students to create their own virtual bookshelves with Shelfari http://shelfari.com.
    • anonymous
       
      I like this one. Wanna guess why? Of course, I'm assuming that it's directed to grades no higher than 8th.
  • they can log onto their Book Adventure account and take a 10 question multiple choice quiz based on the book they read.
    • anonymous
       
      Before we can judge this one we'd have to see the questions here, wouldn't we.
anonymous

Download details: Microsoft Mathematics 4.0 - 4 views

  • Microsoft Mathematics provides a graphing calculator that plots in 2D and 3D, step-by-step equation solving, and useful tools to help students with math and science studies.
Karey Killian

Map Jigsaw Puzzles - National Geographic - 13 views

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    Display the puzzle atlas at the end of class/beginning of class on IWB to challenge students to put the country/continent back together...incentive for students who finish early or arrive to class early....or as students answer a question correctly they get to come to the board and place a piece of the puzzle to where they think it should go
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    Display the puzzle atlas at the end of class/beginning of class on IWB to challenge students to put the country/continent back together...incentive for students who finish early or arrive to class early
anonymous

A Visual History of the American Presidency | timeplots.com - 9 views

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    BUY THIS POSTER!
anonymous

Will the Real Digital Native Please Stand Up? -- Campus Technology - 0 views

  • Nevertheless, Hargittai's study concluded that socioeconomic status is one of the most important predictors of how effectively people incorporate the web into their everyday lives.
    • anonymous
       
      No surprise here, is it?
  • They're digital dependent and digital stimulated. They know how to text messages and upload a video to YouTube, but in general they don't possess the deeper critical thinking skills they need to be truly digitally literate."
    • anonymous
       
      I like the terms digital dependent and digital stimulated. What do you think?
anonymous

State's graduation exam passes latest test - 4 views

  • The regulation calls for the state to provide 10 end-of-course exams, beginning with English literature, Algebra 1 and biology in 2010-11, with other English, math, science and social studies subjects being phased in through 2016-17.
  • School districts would be required to count the exams for at least one-third of a student's final grade or districts could use other options, including validated local assessments or Advanced Placement exams instead. Districts also could set up a project for students who failed exams.
  • Opponents of the exams told the regulatory commission that the testing program would cost too much to administer and be unfair to otherwise good students who perform poorly on standardized tests.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • We understand the system now,
  • Some have said that the exams would discourage students who have a hard time taking tests and would prompt them to drop out.
    • anonymous
       
      What do you think of that concern?
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    This is HUGE. There will eventually be ten end-of-course exams, each counting for one third of a student's final grade. Some will argue that this means that there will be no time for "21st Century T&L" concerns. Others will argue that those concerns are exactly what are needed to ensure true mastery of the subject. Where do YOU fall in that debate?
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