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Roland O'Daniel

Set Up Multiple Twitter Accounts One Email Address | The Social Media Guide - 2 views

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    How to Setup Multiple Twitter Accounts with One Email Address
Roland O'Daniel

ISTE NETS e-Portfolio Templates - 2 views

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    National Educational Technology Standards, Electronic Portfolio Templates Some interesting things to think about collecting and organizing for an e-portfolio. 
Roland O'Daniel

How Important is Teaching Literacy in All Content Areas? | Edutopia - 2 views

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    Edutopia is just confirming what we all know and believe. Why is it such a hard thing to implement well in the classroom?  We need to continue fighting for the chance for every student to have opportunities and expectations for communicating in class everyday as a regular/routine part of their learning. 
Roland O'Daniel

Arcademic Skill Builders: Online Educational Games - 2 views

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    The website says: "THE Place For Educational Games!Our research-based and standards-aligned free educational math games and language arts games will engage, motivate, and help teach students. Click a button below to play our free multi-player and single-player games! In the future we'll add features enabling you to save records, tailor content for differentiated instruction, and pinpoint student problem areas." I think using the games in conjunction with a holistic approach to developing skills would make for a great way of getting students to practices some skills. Let students play, set goals, monitor those goals, reflect on their progress, and apply strategies/heuristics to specific problems they struggle with would create an environment in the classroom where learning was fun, self-monitored, and successful. 
Roland O'Daniel

Reading is a Problem-Solving Process. Why Not Try the Thumb Method? « Co-Crea... - 2 views

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    Reading is a Problem-Solving Process. Why Not Try the Thumb Method? New blog post by Denise Finley about supporting students while they learn to read scientifically!
Roland O'Daniel

PBL Academy - 2 views

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    Problem Based Learning Academy is a well designed wiki with lots of interesting links/resources if you are interested in learning more about problem based learning. 
Roland O'Daniel

Scientific American: 60-Second Science - 2 views

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    Great weekly 60 second podcast that can be used as an incredible starter. I just listened to three podcasts that involved solar power, Mars, laughter and morality, and regressions to liars. If you can't start a conversation or class with those topics you aren't very imaginative!
Roland O'Daniel

wchsread [licensed for non-commercial use only] / WCHS READS - 2 views

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    Washington County Library/reading wiki. Lisa Burkhead has done a fantastic job of integrating the wiki into her literature course and her library work. There is lots of student voice and apparently a lot of reading going on at Washington County High School!
Roland O'Daniel

plus.maths.org - 2 views

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    Plus is an internet magazine which aims to introduce readers to the beauty and the practical applications of mathematics.  Interesting topics and free for now. Take advantage of the short topics to have students reading in mathematics and even some science topics!
Roland O'Daniel

Technology Resource Teachers - 2 views

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    Great resource site from the Frederick County School System. This is a model that more systems need to adopt!
Roland O'Daniel

10 Awesome Free Tools To Make Infographics - 2 views

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    Information graphics, visual representations of data known as infographics, keep the web going these days. Web users, with their diminishing attention spans, are inexorably drawn to these shiny, brightly coloured messages with small, relevant, clearly-displayed nuggets of information. They're straight to the point, usually factually interesting and often give you a wake-up call as to what those statistics really mean.
Roland O'Daniel

Visualization Lab - 2 views

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    As usual the NY  Times gets it right! Great tool for creating visualizations of data. The data is from the Times articles so it's a wonderful opportunity to have students read and then create compelling visualizations of data. 
Roland O'Daniel

iLearn Technology » Blog Archive » 31 of My Favorite Digital Storytelling Sites - 2 views

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    Digital storytelling continues to evolve and grow, yet another post on some really interesting tools that you can use to create digital stories. 
Roland O'Daniel

Kidblog.org - Blogs for Teachers and Students - 2 views

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    Kidblog.org is designed for elementary and middle school teachers who want to provide each student their own, unique blog. It's SAFE, simple, and free (at least at this time). You can set up your students without student email addresses!
Roland O'Daniel

Reading Aloud - With a few Twists | Remote Access - 2 views

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    Great post by Clarence Fisher about reading a novel with another class via Skype and how he is using technology to build the conversation. Instead of being afraid of letting students chat online, he is developing their skills. Rather than hiding some of the less rigorous comments, he's sharing with everyone, so he can learn along with us. 
Roland O'Daniel

Welcome to Virtual Urchin! - 2 views

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    Interesting interactive site with virtual explorations of fertilization, microscopes, anatomy, and acid ocean (I haven't looked at it yet). 
Roland O'Daniel

Search Cloudlet - 2 views

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    free Firefox extension that helps you google the internet faster using tag cloud
Roland O'Daniel

Beyond Google - 15+ Tools and Strategies for Better Web Search Results - 2 views

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    Great set of resources for research starting points beyond Google for younger students.
Roland O'Daniel

Strategies for online reading comprehension - 2 views

  • Colorado State University offers a useful guide to reading on the web. While it is aimed at college students, much of the information is pertinent to readers of all ages and could easily be part of lessons in the classroom. The following list includes some of the CSU strategies to strengthen reading comprehension, along with my thoughts on how to incorporate them into classroom instruction: Synthesize online reading into meaningful chunks of information. In my classroom, we spend a lot of time talking about how to summarize a text by finding pertinent points and casting them in one’s own words. The same strategy can also work when synthesizing information from a web page. Use a reader’s ability to effectively scan a page, as opposed to reading every word. We often give short shrift to the ability to scan, but it is a valuable skill on may levels. Using one’s eye to sift through key words and phrases allows a reader to focus on what is important. Avoid distractions as much as necessary. Readbility is one tool that can make this possible. Advertising-blocking tools are another effective way to reduce unnecessary, and unwanted, content from a web page. At our school, we use Ad-Block Plus as a Firefox add-on to block ads. Understand the value of a hyperlink before you click the link. This means reading the destination of the link itself. It is easier if the creator of the page puts the hyperlink into context, but if that is not the case, then the reader has to make a judgment about the value, safety, and validity of the link. One important issue to bring into this discussion is the importance of analyzing top-level domains. A URL that ends in .gov, for example, was created by a government entity in the U.S. Ask students what it means for a URL to end in .edu. What about .org? .com? Is a .edu or .org domain necessarily trustworthy? Navigate a path from one page in a way that is clear and logical. This is easier said than done, since few of us create physical paths of our navigation. However, a lesson in the classroom might do just that: draw a map of the path a reader goes on an assignment that uses the web. That visualization of the tangled path might be a valuable insight for young readers.
    • Roland O'Daniel
       
      Works great with diigo. Have students highlight the pertinent information and add a sticky note to share with their research group.
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    We traditionally think of reading in terms of sounding out words, understanding the meaning of those words, and putting those words into some contextual understanding. f the kind of text our students are encountering in these online travels is embedded with so many links and media, and if those texts are connected to other associated pages (with even more links and media), hosted by who-knows-whom, the act of reading online quickly becomes an act of hunting for treasure, with red herrings all over the place that can easily divert one's attention. As educators, we need to take a closer look at what online reading is all about and think about how we can help our students not only navigate with comprehension but also understand the underlying structure of this world.
Roland O'Daniel

Content Literacy: Transitioning to the Common Core Standards for Literacy in the Conten... - 2 views

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    "Reading and writing in the content fields (content literacy) represents one of the major changes in the recently adopted Common Core Standards. In only a few short years, content teachers will be held accountable for supporting literacy standards in their content instruction. "
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