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Clif Mims

Story Starters | Scholastic.com - 0 views

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    Story Starters - daily writing activities.
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    "Hundreds of creative combinations that take the writer's block out of creative writing. Set young writers loose with prompts that focus on character (who the story is about), plot (what happens in the story), and setting (where or when the story happens)." You can also pick the story format (notebook, letter, newspaper or postcard).
Ben Rimes

Storynory Free Audio Stories For Kids - 13 views

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    Free audio stories of public domain literature, poetry, and stories. Grouped by categories, and able to be listened to directly on the website, no download needed. Also includes iTunes link to iOS friendly versions of the audio stories. Useful website for creating your own digital literacy center at the elementary level, or for secondary teachers to provide remediation for students.
Alicia Kelley

Storyline Online - 0 views

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    This is a story website. Your class will be able to listen to stories and complete questions and discussions that are related to the story
Jennifer Lamkins

Red Gold | PBS - 4 views

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    Red Gold: The Epic Story of Blood Developed as a companion to the PBS series Red Gold: The Epic Story of Blood, this site is rich in content and interest, providing information about such topics as blood composition, circulation, typing, donations, and more. Visitors can take a multimedia journey that follows a pint of blood through the transfusion process, learn the basics about blood, and trace the history of blood through an interactive timeline. Middle- and high-school teachers also will find lesson plans and a 12-page discussion guide.
Dean Mantz

ALA | AASL Best Web sites for Teaching and Learning Top 25 Award - 0 views

  • Diigo  Need help in organizing your favorite websites? Diigo is a social bookmarking site that allows users to save websites, as well as tag them, add sticky notes and annotations, and share them with other users in various groups. Tip: Sticky notes are an effective way to start a virtual conversation among teams of students on the merits of a website.
  • Our Story  Create your story! Our Story permits users to develop and save collaborative timelines that can be personalized with annotations, photos, and videos. Stories (timelines) can be printed in book format, archived on DVD, or even sent as postcards. Tip: Teach your students to develop content-specific timelines that are linked to the teaching of research and information literacy skills.
  • Primary Access  Capture your students' imagination with movie narratives based on primary sources. Primary Access is an online tool that allows students and teachers to combine text, visual, and sound elements, which are then combined to convey information about their chosen historical event or time frame. A library of Primary Access movies is available through a catalog by historical time period. Tip: Encourage active learning: have students choose a historical event or time frame to research and synthesize their information through a Primary Access movie.
Clif Mims

OurStory.com - Capture your stories, save them permanently. - 12 views

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    "Save Stories, Photos, and Videos on a Collaborative Timeline"
Tamlyn Sampson

StoryJumper: #1 rated site for creating story books - 0 views

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    Creating story books for education.
Jennifer Lamkins

The New Heroes . Engage | PBS - 5 views

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    Becoming a social entrepreneur takes both a vision for revolutionary change and the gumption to do something about it. Students can try the games and activities on The New Heroes website to learn about the characteristics of a successful social entrepreneur and find out if they might have what it takes to transform a vision into reality. They can play a game that requires them to tackle the challenges of building a business with a social conscience. They can determine how they can make a difference by taking a quiz to find out which issues and problems most inspire them. And if they have an inspirational story or great idea for changing the world, they can share it with others on the site.
Ben Rimes

Digg, Wikipedia, and the myth of Web 2.0 democracy. - By Chris Wilson - Slate Magazine - 4 views

  • The same undemocratic underpinnings of Web 2.0 are on display at Digg.com. Digg is a social-bookmarking hub where people submit stories and rate others' submissions; the most popular links gravitate to the site's front page.
    • Ben Rimes
       
      Interesting that the word "undemocratic" be used for the discription of the Web 2.0 underbelly. While true, the whiz-bang magic of scripts, bots, and other technological "gatekeepers" are constantly altering what flesh and blood individuals have contributed, the programs meant to serve as custodians are themselves written by humans. The tools that we choose to employ do not make the process of web 2.0 any more undemocratic, rather just that much easier to engage and maintain as relevant. The term democracy itself is difficult to define narrowly (http://www.democracy-building.info/definition-democracy.html). There is no clear determination of how a democracy should be run, but rather a system of democratic beliefs, values, and fundamental rights. Provided that any system meets the needs of a democratic group's values and freedoms (liberties), then one could argue that it is indeed a full fledged democracy. There is more importance on the groups' rules and processes possessing a quality of fluidity and malleability in order to meet a changing environment.
  • at Digg.com. Digg is a social-bookmarking hub where people submit stories and rate others' submissions; the most popular links gravitate to the site's front page.
  • While both sites effectively function as oligarchies, they are still democratic in one important sense. Digg and Wikipedia's elite users aren't chosen by a corporate board of directors or by divine right. They're the people who participate the most. Despite the fairy tales about the participatory culture of Web 2.0, direct democracy isn't feasible at the scale on which these sites operate. Still, it's curious to note that these sites seem to have the hierarchical structure of the old-guard institutions they've sought to supplant.
    • Ben Rimes
       
      Perhaps the problem of disenfranchised and disengaged youth that exists in Europe and the U.S. today isn't that they aren't participating in a healthy way within our democracies, but rather they've found more engaging democracies to participate in online.
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    Observing and comparing the "democratic" practices that constitute major web 2.0 sites.
Roland O'Daniel

Sketchfu - 15 views

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    New tool for drawing. The drawing can be 'replayed' allowing students/teachers to tell a story or to make connections between parts of the drawing. Great visual imagery tool! Great for modeling multiple representations in mathematics.
Clif Mims

20 Free Literary Podcasts Worth Listening To - 2 views

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    Literary podcasts are a great way to hear about new stories and explore all of your old favorites. This list details where you can find some of the most popular literary podcasts, including podcasts based around classic literature, poetry and contemporary works.
Matt Clausen

DoodleBuzz:Typographic News Explorer - 0 views

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    DoodleBuzz is a new way to read the news through an experimental interface that allows you to create typographic maps of current news stories.
Dean Mantz

Tikatok - 0 views

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    Turn your imagination into a story. Then publish the stories.
Dean Mantz

OurStory.com - Capture your stories, save them permanently. - 0 views

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    Use stories, photos, and videos to create a collaborative interactive timeline.
Dean Mantz

MapSkip - Places Have Stories! - 0 views

  • Join the MapSkip community in exploring the world through shared stories and pictures about all the places in our lives.
Matt Clausen

http://www.GoogleLitTrips.com - 0 views

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    This site is an experiment in teaching great literature in a very different way. Using Google Earth, students discover where in the world the greatest road trip stories of all time took place... and so much more!
drew polly

The 1001 Flat World Tales - 0 views

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    Selected stories from the never-ending, worldwide 1001 Flat World Tales wiki writing workshop.
Mitch Weisburgh

About Scratch - Scratch Wiki - 0 views

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    animation and programming language from MIT for kids to create interactive stories, animations, games,
Clif Mims

Capzles - 0 views

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    Combine your videos, photos, blogs and mp3s into rich, multimedia storylines. Capture your memories. Tell your stories. Travel through time.
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