Skip to main content

Home/ Classroom 2.0/ Group items matching "media-literacy" in title, tags, annotations or url

Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or url

Sort By: Relevance | Date Filter: All | Bookmarks | Topics Simple Middle
1More

http://www.australiacouncil.gov.au/writersguide/newwritinguniverse - 0 views

  •  
    Australia Council maps out a stellar digital literacy for writers guide. Big bang! Web comics,flash fiction, graphic novels,,interactive stortytelling,videotext animated poem,electronic poetry,hyperpoem...mobisodes heaps more.
2More

How To Cite Social Media In Scholarly Writing - 13 views

  •  
    This TeachThought post sports a table of templates, apparently copyright TeachBytes 2013, for citations in both APA and MLA styles.
  •  
    Mothers day quotes .
1More

ncat » Media - 14 views

  •  
    Media Literacy Projects from St. Lawrence U. Some very cool mashups, including a green screen project.
1More

Batalugu - 0 views

  •  
    A fabulous site for creating and finding online children's books. Design your 'bestseller' by uploading images and using the bank of media to drag and drop your story to perfection. Then share with a link. http://ictmagic.wikispaces.com/English
1More

About | Digital Writing, Digital Teaching - 24 views

  •  
    "Digital Writing, Digital Teaching is a blog ... [that] explores the variety of issues related to teaching writing with new media for K-16 teachers and teacher educators" (About, ¶1, 2016.05.02).
1More

Workshop Resouces 21st Century Information Fluency - 0 views

  •  
    A special menu of workshop resources about 21st Century Information Fluency. Media rich materials for creating presentations about searching, website evaluation, and ethical use of digital materials. Online & Free
1More

JENKINS_WHITE_PAPER.PDF (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

  •  
    Media Education for the 21st Century
2More

Cyberbullying Toolkit | Common Sense Media - 47 views

  •  
    A "free toolkit to help you take ... an effective stand against cyberbullying" (deck, ¶2, retrieved 2011.09.27), beginning with focus questions and an overview, then focusing on elementary, middle, and high school levels
  •  
    A great tool. A real help for teachers( & kids) Thanks.
1More

Literature in the Digital Age | Adam Hammond - 0 views

  •  
    A great resource by an English Prof whose doing a lot of thinking and publishing around the implications of digital media as regards literature
1More

Facilitación en Comunidades o Redes sociales online: Howard Rheingold | El ca... - 0 views

  •  
    Por si alguien aún no ha oído hablar de él, Howard Rheingold es un importante escritor y crítico sobre los aspectos económicos y socioculturales de
1More

Code of Best Practices in Fair use for Media Literacy Education - 0 views

  •  
    Finally The End To Copyright Confusion Has Arrived
8More

Kids Create -- and Critique on -- Social Networks | Edutopia - 0 views

  • "With Web 2.0, there's a strong impetus to make connections," says University of Minnesota researcher Christine Greenhow, who studies how people learn and teach with social networking. "It's not just creating content. It's creating content to share."
  • And once they share their creations, kids can access one of the richest parts of this learning cycle: the exchange that follows. "While the ability to publish and to share is powerful in and of itself, most of the learning occurs in the connections and conversation that occur after we publish," argues education blogger Will Richardson (a member of The George Lucas Educational Foundation's National Advisory Council).
  • In this online exchange, students can learn from their peers and simultaneously practice important soft skills -- namely, how to accept feedback and to usefully critique others" work.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • "I learn how to take in constructive criticism," says thirteen-year-old Tiranne
  • image quality, audio, editing, and content
  • Using tools such as the social-network-creation site Ning, teachers can easily develop their own networks, Mosea says. "It is better to create your own," he argues. "If a teacher creates his or her own network, students will post as if their teacher is watching them, and they'll tend to be more safe. "You can build social networks around the curriculum," Mosea adds, "so you can use them as a teaching resource or another tool." An online social network is another tool -- but it's a tool with an advantage: It wasn't just imposed by teachers; the students have chosen it.
  •  
    Self-Directed Learning "When students are motivated to create work that they share online, it ignites an independent learning cycle driven by their ideas and energized by responses from peers."
  •  
    "Self-Directed Learning When students are motivated to create work that they share online, it ignites an independent learning cycle driven by their ideas and energized by responses from peers."
2More

e-Learning Online: Website Investigator: See you at NECC 2009! - 0 views

  • Website Investigator: Information Forensics Goes to School
  • The purpose of this session is to provide participants with an understanding of efficient methods for evaluating online information and to demonstrate effective ways to teach these information fluency skills in classrooms.The new generation of NETS standards for students (ISTE, 2007), is based on the premise that efficacy and productivity depends on students’ abilities to conduct research and manage digital information fluently. An essential skill is the ability to evaluate information from a variety of sources and media.This session directly addresses this information fluency standard by helping participants…1. Understand the role of investigation (information forensics) in evaluating information:• Two types of searching: how investigation differs from speculation;• Determining when investigative searching is necessary and when it is not;• Effective means of finding critical information with limited clues;• Using specialized search engines and browsing techniques to track down information;• Analyzing results to determine credibility of the source and content.2. Observe effective methods for helping students exercise speculative search skills:• Off-line 'readiness' activities;• Group and individual Search Challenges;• Interactive tutorial games;• Think-aloud searches;• Evaluation reporting;• Group discussion about credibility.
1More

YouTube - Professor's Henry Jenkins on games-based learning at SxSWi 2009 - 0 views

  •  
    Jenkins himself discusses the new learning ecology for digital media literacy and collaborative and critical thinking that is behind the previous New Yok School link http://www.hastac.org/node/1959
« First ‹ Previous 41 - 60 of 66 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page