Five-Minute Film Festival: 8 Interactive Video Tools for Engaging Learners | Edutopia - 3 views
How to Set Up Gmail for School iPads and iPods - Learning in Hand - 2 views
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One challenge for teachers with students using devices like iPad and iPod touch is collecting student work. Unfortunately, there is not one consistent way for apps to export what a user creates. Some apps connect to Dropbox, some share through iTunes, some export to a website, some share through an IP address, but most apps email content as an attachment.
Educational Videos for the Flipped Classroom from HippoCampus - 3 views
iPad Apps and Resources for Teachers - 0 views
New Milford H.S. Students Explore New Ways Of Learning With Library's 'Makers... - 0 views
Assistive Technology - Chrome Toolbox - 0 views
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"This collaborative space was created to celebrate the many Apps and Extensions made by developers which serve the accessibility needs of individuals with disabilities. Although Google already highlights accessibility features built into the Chrome browser or through add-ons, we have collected numerous other free tools that we feel further contribute to that mission. To this end, we have developed this searchable resource to locate tools that serve the particular challenges anyone might face while working in Chrome. On the right, you will find more information about this site, including definitions of terms and more information about the Chrome browser and assistive technology. "
ON 2014 Autocrat and Schedule - 1 views
Google Scripts - New Visions CloudLab - 1 views
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"Until March 11th, 2014 (the launch of Add-ons) Apps Scripts for Google Sheets were distributed in the "Script Gallery." The tools below will remain useful for some time to come, as many of them perform functionality still not available - most specifically TRIGGERED EVENTS like form submit or time-based events. Until the Add-ons framework supports triggers, we encourage users to choose when and where to use the OLD Google Sheets so they can continue to access the script gallery and use our legacy tools. Use this link to launch yourself a copy of an "old" Google Sheet, where you will be able to access the script gallery. "
Comics in Education: Interview with Dr. Glen Downey - 0 views
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"Comics began to take a foothold in the classroom about a decade ago when educators realized that visual narrative could be used to engage reluctant and struggling readers. Because comics and graphic novels marry the textual with the visual, they help those who find reading challenging by allowing them to see what the vocabulary they are reading looks like. As well, comics and graphic novels break language up into far more manageable units than a traditional text-based novel. At the same time, visual narratives can be just as complex and engaging, so the student gets the benefit of seeing the story unfold, having the text divided into more manageable units, and making connections between new vocabulary words and the images that represent them."
Modifying the Flipped Classroom: The "In-Class" Version | Edutopia - 1 views
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Flipped Classroom: The "In-Class" Version
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An In-Class Flip works like this. Just like with a traditional flip, the teacher pre-records direct instruction, say, in a video lecture. But instead of having students view the content at home, that video becomes a station in class that small groups rotate through.
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As with a traditional flip, the direct instruction runs on its own, which frees the teacher for more one-on-one time with students.
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Technology and Teaching: Finding a Balance | Edutopia - 1 views
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Opportunities, Not Apps
Change the Subject: Making the Case for Project-Based Learning | Edutopia - 0 views
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What should students learn in the 21st century? At first glance, this question divides into two: what should students know, and what should they be able to do? But there's more at issue than knowledge and skills.
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For the innovation economy, dispositions come into play: readiness to collaborate, attention to multiple perspectives, initiative, persistence, and curiosity. While the content of any learning experience is important, the particular content is irrelevant. What really matters is how students react to it, shape it, or apply it. The purpose of learning in this century is not simply to recite inert knowledge, but, rather, to transform it.1 It is time to change the subject.
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Expanding the "Big Four" Why not study anthropology, zoology, or environmental science? Why not integrate art with calculus, or chemistry with history? Why not pick up skills and understandings in all of these areas by uncovering and addressing real problems and sharing findings with authentic audiences? Why not invent a useful product that uses electricity, or devise solutions to community problems, all the while engaging in systematic observation, collaborative design, and public exhibitions of learning?
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Are You Checking Work Email in Bed? At the Dinner Table? On Vacation? | Mother Jones - 2 views
Do You have the Personality To Be an Inquiry-Based Teacher? | MindShift - 3 views
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Are you optimistic? Viewing the world as damaged or the future as bleak shuts down the brain by transmitting fear. Maintaining an optimistic attitude is an expression of love, inspiring curiosity and hope, and fostering emotional and physical health. Optimism is essential to teaching: Without hope, the reason to learn disappears. Are you open? The world is being refreshed and powered by divergent thinking. Outcomes are unclear, even dangerous. But faith in the flexible thinking of the human mind can support young people as they sort out their new world and have the freedom to discover solutions not yet visible. An open attitude activates the frontal lobes, the place of flow and creativity. Are you appreciative? Deep appreciation gives permission for failure, rather than penalizing for the “wrong” answer. It honors the stops and starts of human development. It conveys the ultimate message of a communal world: We are in this together. Are you flexible? In inquiry, the journey matters as much as the destination. Constant reflection is a necessity to improving thinking and doing. Metacognition encourages wisdom, the ultimate goal of any worthy education system. Flexibility tells the brain and heart to keep working, keep going—you’re getting there. Are you purposeful? Purpose binds teacher and student into the high-minded pursuit of solutions that matter. It is the reason that “authentic” education works and inauthentic education struggles. It tightens the connection between the learner and the teacher in ways that spur the natural creative impulse to change and improve the world.
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