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Clif Mims

QR Code Treasure Hunt Generator - 24 views

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    I am very curious as to why kids need to search for questions to answer them. Couldn't these questions be provided for by the teacher? Wouldn't it be more efficient this way?
Clif Mims

OurStory.com - Capture your stories, save them permanently. - 8 views

  • Save Stories, Photos, and Videos on a Collaborative Timeline.
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    Make your timeline about anything Collaborate with family and friends Share it with whomever you want
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    "Save Stories, Photos, and Videos on a Collaborative Timeline"
Clif Mims

LectureTools - iPad app fostering engagement in lectures - 42 views

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    "LectureTools is a student response system that also allows students to take notes linked with the slides and videos presented in class, answer instructor generated questions and pose questions to the instructor. All notes, questions and activities are instantly synchronized with the LectureTools web application."
Denis S

A Trip to the "Zui" - Videos for Children - 8 views

Clif Mims

Apple - iTunes - App Store Volume Purchase Program - 3 views

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    "The Volume Purchase Program makes it easy for educational institutions to purchase iOS apps in volume and distribute those apps to users. The Volume Purchase Program also allows app developers to offer special pricing for purchases of 20 apps or more."
Clif Mims

Giving Anonymously - 10 views

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    "A non-profit organization facilitating generosity between people."
Denis S

Simple, Social, and Snazzy Storytelling with Storybird - 12 views

Denis S

The End of Education as We Know It - 18 views

jodi tompkins

EduDemic » 41 New Ways Google Docs Makes Your Life Easier - 27 views

  • New version of Google documents
  • The new version has chat, character-by-character real time co-editing, and makes imports and exports much better
  • Over the next couple of weeks, they’re rolling out the ability to upload, store, and share any file in Google Docs
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  • Shared folders
  • Bulk upload
  • Forms: Add pages and allow navigation to a specific page within a form
  • Forms improvements
  • They’ve added a new question type (grid), support for right-to-left languages in forms, and a new color scheme for the forms summary. Also, you can now pre-populate form fields with URL parameters, and if you use Google Apps, you can create forms which require sign-in to access
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    Google Docs newest features
Brian Yearling

300home - 19 views

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    Video 101 is an online textbook of video techniques, ideas, concepts, and skills that provides a ton of ideas and samples.
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    If anyone is teaching a video productions course, this would be a great asset for you to explore.
Rick Reo

wikis4gmu / Wikis@Mason Support Wiki - 17 views

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    Mason PBworks wiki support site
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    This is a support wiki for GMU's PBworks campus license service
Barbara Lindsey

My School, Meet MySpace: Social Networking at School | Edutopia - 1 views

  • Months before the newly hired teachers at Philadelphia's Science Leadership Academy (SLA) started their jobs, they began the consuming work of creating the high school of their dreams -- without meeting face to face. They articulated a vision, planned curriculum, designed assessment rubrics, debated discipline policies, and even hammered out daily schedules using the sort of networking tools -- messaging, file swapping, idea sharing, and blogging -- kids love on sites such as MySpace.
  • hen, weeks before the first day of school, the incoming students jumped onboard -- or, more precisely, onto the Science Leadership Academy Web site -- to meet, talk with their teachers, and share their hopes for their education. So began a conversation that still perks along 24/7 in SLA classrooms and cyberspace. It's a bold experiment to redefine learning spaces, the roles and relationships of teachers and students, and the mission of the modern high school.
  • When I hear people say it's our job to create the twenty-first-century workforce, it scares the hell out of me," says Chris Lehmann, SLA's founding principal. "Our job is to create twenty-first-century citizens. We need workers, yes, but we also need scholars, activists, parents -- compassionate, engaged people. We're not reinventing schools to create a new version of a trade school. We're reinventing schools to help kids be adaptable in a world that is changing at a blinding rate."
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  • It's the spirit of science rather than hardcore curriculum that permeates SLA. "In science education, inquiry-based learning is the foothold," Lehmann says. "We asked, 'What does it mean to build a school where everything is based on the core values of science: inquiry, research, collaboration, presentation, and reflection?'"
  • It means the first-year curriculum is built around essential questions: Who am I? What influences my identity? How do I interact with my world? In addition to science, math, and engineering, core courses include African American history, Spanish, English, and a basic how-to class in technology that also covers Internet safety and the ethical use of information and software. Classes focus less on facts to be memorized and more on skills and knowledge for students to master independently and incorporate into their lives. Students rarely take tests; they write reflections and do "culminating" projects. Learning doesn't merely cross disciplines -- it shatters outdated departmental divisions. Recently, for instance, kids studied atomic weights in biochemistry (itself a homegrown interdisciplinary course), did mole calculations in algebra, and created Dalton models (diagrams that illustrate molecular structures) in art.
  • This is Dewey for the digital age, old-fashioned progressive education with a technological twist.
  • computers and networking are central to learning at, and shaping the culture of, SLA. "
  • he zest to experiment -- and the determination to use technology to run a school not better, but altogether differently -- began with Lehmann and the teachers last spring when they planned SLA online. Their use of Moodle, an open source course-management system, proved so easy and inspired such productive collaboration that Lehmann adopted it as the school's platform. It's rare to see a dog-eared textbook or pad of paper at SLA; everybody works on iBooks. Students do research on the Internet, post assignments on class Moodle sites, and share information through forums, chat, bookmarks, and new software they seem to discover every day.
  • Teachers continue to use Moodle to plan, dream, and learn, to log attendance and student performance, and to talk about everything -- from the student who shows up each morning without a winter coat to cool new software for tagging research sources. There's also a schoolwide forum called SLA Talk, a combination bulletin board, assembly, PA system, and rap session.
  • Web technology, of course, can do more than get people talking with those they see every day; people can communicate with anyone anywhere. Students at SLA are learning how to use social-networking tools to forge intellectual connections.
  • In October, Lehmann noticed that students were sorting themselves by race in the lunchroom and some clubs. He felt disturbed and started a passionate thread on self-segregation.
  • "Having the conversation changed the way kids looked at themselves," he says.
  • "What I like best about this school is the sense of community," says student Hannah Feldman. "You're not just here to learn, even though you do learn a lot. It's more like a second home."
  • As part of the study of memoirs, for example, Alexa Dunn's English class read Funny in Farsi, Firoozeh Dumas's account of growing up Iranian in the United States -- yes, the students do read books -- and talked with the author in California via Skype. The students also wrote their own memoirs and uploaded them to SLA's network for the teacher and class to read and edit. Then, digital arts teacher Marcie Hull showed the students GarageBand, which they used to turn their memoirs into podcasts. These they posted on the education social-networking site EduSpaces (formerly Elgg); they also posted blogs about the memoirs.
 Lisa Durff

CJR: Outsourced Edit? - 1 views

  • it won’t be without an uproar in the journalism world.
  • Indian English is very distinct, rooted in Colonial-era English and Hindustani, yielding a distinctive "Hinglish."
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    Got this link while listening to http://www.blogtalkradio.com/ColumbiaJournalism/2008/07/28/new-media-program on BlogTalk Radio - a live webcast with a chatroom
Clif Mims

Sumo Paint - 15 views

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    Online Image Editor
angelica laurencon

Susan George: Leurs crises, nos solutions. Editions Albin Michel.Paris 2010 - 0 views

shared by angelica laurencon on 20 Apr 10 - Cached
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    Wenn Sie sich zum Affen machen wollen..." Markus Reiter beschreibt im Buch "Dumm 3.0", wie Twitter, Blogs und Social Networks "unsere Kultur bedrohen". Im Interview erzählt er, warum er nicht an das Netz glaubt. Ein Zeit-Online Streitgespräch. Interessanter Inhalt, der in die Anti-Web 2.0 Richtung geht. Ein Schirrmacher-Follower oder ein letzter Kulturkämpfer? In ZEIT Online unter Dumm 3.0 dazu mehr.
social learning

Aviary Education - Home - 0 views

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    이미지, 음원, 동영상 편집기 제공
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