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Ninja Essays

Best EdTech Tools for Teaching Essay Writing | North Jersey Teacher - 0 views

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    "When teaching their students how to write essays, educators have a great responsibility. Young learners are rarely interested in the process of writing, so the way you inspire them is of crucial importance. You cannot give plain instructions and tell your students to write an essay; you need to make the challenge more attractive and creative for them."
Jackie McAnlis

How to create type effects with InDesign | Typography | Creative Bloq - 0 views

  • flexibility, typographic treatment
  • Adobe Illustrator is the king of the bezier line to
    • Jackie McAnlis
       
      illustrator 
Ninja Essays

Can Foreign Students Reach Their Academic Potential? - 0 views

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    USA offers competency-based education and scholarship opportunities for higher education that are immensely attractive for international students. This country has some of the best universities in the world, and its educational system offers more freedom for creative expression, experimenting in different fields of study and a great choice of extracurricular activities.
chakri_seo

4 creative ways of video conferencing - 0 views

Video Conferencing Software belongs to any productive kit, and not just for meetings. It is used creatively with the combination of high quality and low bandwidth. The collaboration features can he...

conferencing products conference Web video Internet HD India

started by chakri_seo on 07 Nov 14 no follow-up yet
Syed Amjad Ali

Why E-Learning - A simple analysis - 0 views

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    E-Learning industry is witnessing tremendous growth in terms of revenue and application. It has become a synonym for many of the learning requirements in corporates, academics and government institutions. To provide most suitable learning solutions, industry experts exploring and inventing creative methods and approaches such as Custom Learning Solutions, Rapid Learning Solutions, Gamifications, Instructor Led Training programs and blend of these methods and approaches.
li li

Six cheap snapbackss, Six Colors - 1 views

Each color of the cheap snapbacks with its functions and role should be closely related. Six Thinking cheap snapbacks for sale in every cheap snapbacks has a specific color: white, red, y...

started by li li on 04 Sep 13 no follow-up yet
Christopher Pappas

The Twitter Guide for Teachers - 0 views

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    The Twitter Guide for Teachers Twitter can be an incredible tool for both teachers and students when used correctly. As a teacher, your role in the process is to be professional, understanding, and as creative as possible. In regards to Twitter, the possibilities are as endless as you make them. At the Teachers Guide to Twitter you will find: How as a teacher can you effectively utilize Twitter, a creative writing lesson plan using Twitter, 15 creative ways to use Twitter in the classroom, and 17 videos on how as a teacher can you use Twitter in classroom! http://elearningindustry.com/the-twitter-guide-for-teachers
Allison Burrell

Learn More - ThingLink - 26 views

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    ThingLink helps you create and discover rich images. Be creative! Make your images come alive with music, video, text, images, shops and more! Every image contains a story and ThingLink helps you tell your stories. Follow image channels from your favorite bands, bloggers and friends. Your ThingLink interactive images form a channel that other users can follow. Share your channel with friends on Facebook and Twitter, and follow your friends. Touch and discover.
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    Love it!!!
Christopher Pappas

Creativity as a Gift or as a Choice for the Learner? - 0 views

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    Creativity as a Gift or as a Choice for the Learner? There have been so many opinions shared related to Creativity and its role for the educator and for the one being educated. No matter the field, Creativity has become a common topic, for educators, businessmen, consultants, managers and other professionals alike. http://elearningindustry.com/Creativity-as-a-gift-or-as-a-choice-for-the-learner
Susan Oxnevad

10 Reasons to Enter the ThingLink Interactive Image Contest - 0 views

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    The ThingLink Interactive Image Contest invites students to connect audio, video, images, and text in one cohesive presentation. Students will dig deeper into content through research to present knowledge and ideas as they learn, practice and demonstrate digital literacy skills in image creation, selection, content curation, creativity, tagging and sharing.
Susan Oxnevad

Spin Xpress: Search for Creative Commons Images - 0 views

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    An embeddable search engine tool that allows users to search for media by Creative Commons licesnses.
Amy Burns

Kerpoof Studio - 19 views

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    a great new site by disney for creating all types of items.
Dennis OConnor

projeqt \ how great stories are told - 24 views

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    From Mark Rounds: Web-Ed Tools Paper.li: "The art of online storytelling is all about presentation. As a non-linear storytelling engine, Projeqt gives creatives the ability to weave together stories dripping with style and personality from Flickr photos, RSS feeds, tweets, YouTube or Vimeo videos, and any media stored on their own computers.Users can craft "projeqts," whatever their purpose may be, by adding content in the form of slides. Create a slide, name it, add tags, and fill the slide with a photo, text, video or feed. Slides are published to create the web story and be can reordered via drag and drop. Users can also create a projeqt within a projeqt to serve as a story inside a story.In private beta right now... It took me a week to get my invite."
Dennis OConnor

Education Week Teacher: High-Tech Teaching in a Low-Tech Classroom - 20 views

  • How can we best use limited resources to support learning and familiarize students with technology?
  • get creative with lesson structure
  • Take advantage of any time that your students have access to a computer lab with multiple computers.
  • ...10 more annotations...
  • Relieve yourself from the pressure of knowing all the ins and outs of every tool. Instead, empower your students by challenging them to become experts who teach one another (and you!) how to use new programs.
  • "Pass it On" Buddy Method
  • Students assist one another in creating digital products that represent or reflect their new learning. It’s a great way to spread technological skills in a one-computer classroom.
  • Group Consensus Method
  • Small groups of students engage in dialogue on a particular topic, then a member uses a digital tool to report on the group's consensus.
  • Rotating Scribe Method
  • Each day, one student uses technology to record the lesson for other students.
  • Whole Class Method
  • Teachers in one-computer classrooms often invite large groups of students to gather around the computer. Here are a few suggestions for making the most of these activities
  • When we are faced with limited resources, it is tempting to throw up our hands and say, "I just don't have what I need to do this!" However, do not underestimate your ability to make it work.
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    Might help create a blended classroom, even when you have to share the blender.  Common sense advise for the real world of underequipped classrooms and stretched thin teachers.
Kay Cunningham

Innovation Management - Turn ideas into action | Intuit Brainstorm® - 15 views

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    'Brainstorm unleashes your employees' untapped creativity. Give them the easy-to-use tools they need to move their ideas forward.'
Sarah Eeee

The Magic of Higher Education - Old School, New School - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

  • When we view faculty as labor and students as customers, we do not see magic; we see expenses and revenue on a profit-and-loss sheet. We would be better off selling tickets to a magic show.
  • When we present the university as a corporation, the faculty as labor, and the students as customers, we lose sight of our core mission of teaching and learning. Just as the corporate analogy distracts, the customer analogy detracts. Presenting the student as a customer rather than as a partner in learning is condescending at best. It is a short-run view that focuses on interactions with students as a series of financial transactions rather than a network of human relationships. When we view education as consumption, administrators are forced to side either with faculty at the expense of the students or with students at the expense of the faculty. When our focus is on learning as a form of development, we can spend our energy on finding ways to support the creativity and growth of both partners in this relationship.
  • But the reality is that those of us who labor in academe range from part-time work-study students to outsourced janitors and food-service workers, to campus police, librarians, doctors, legal counsel, and a myriad of student counselors, among others. Many of the working conditions that affect professors also affect the rest of us. Much more is to be gained by seeing the conditions we have in common than by painting a picture of faculty as uniquely oppressed. Building bridges between faculty and administration is a necessary step in creating a campus culture that values teaching and learning and that is oriented toward the success of both students and faculty.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Professors seem to have a strange sort of tunnel vision when it comes to defining labor on campus. Apart from their fellow faculty members, their view rarely includes those outside of the line on the organizational chart that links themselves to their presidents. They seem to look through their chairs, deans, and provosts to their most senior leaders.
  • Academic discussions of the corporatization of higher education frame the institution as a corporation and the faculty as the labor oppressed by this structure. But academics need to realize that the corporate model dehumanizes everyone on campus, not just the faculty.
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    How can we be inspirational teachers at a distance? How do we achieve this 'magical' element, rather than just replicate the base demands of the corporate university?
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