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Patrick Seamars

12 Effective Ways To Use Google Drive In Education - Edudemic - 4 views

  • The Android and iOS apps let students (and teachers) do this from virtually anywhere. In fact, you can literally do it anywhere considering there is an ‘offline mode’ for Google Drive so you don’t even need a web connection to keep your online collaboration document or project humming along.
    • Patrick Seamars
       
      Many of our students may not have a computer at home, but they do have a smartphone...
  • The other big way I’d recommend trying out Google Drive would be for mind maps.
    • Patrick Seamars
       
      There are a ton of add-ons for Drive that can create really cool looking mind maps:  https://chrome.google.com/webstore/search/mind%20maps I've used Lucid Chart (http://bit.ly/1oa2drr) and Coggle (http://bit.ly/SvoMYO). Really. Cool. Stuff.
Noah Geisel

Learn It In 5 - Diigo Groups - 0 views

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    Video tutorial on creating and using groups within Diigo
allancutler

Beyond Knowing Facts, How Do We Get to a Deeper Level of Learning? | MindShift - 0 views

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    Look! learning isn't just the facts.
Noah Geisel

Year-long projects inspire independent learning | Brilliant or Insane - 1 views

  • help fan students’ intrinsic motivation, leading them to embrace learning rather than grades
  • A year-long project is one in which students set a long-term goal and work backwards, creating checkpoints that the teacher can set.
  • goal of 2,500 books read by June. This averages to roughly 25 per student. Of course, some will read 50 while a few will read 15. Along the way, we learn genre, book structure, literary elements and the fundamentals of writing.
Patrick Seamars

New Minecraft Mod Teaches You Code as You Play | Enterprise | WIRED - 0 views

  • MinecraftEDU
  • TeacherGaming
  • In fact, Levin says TeacherGaming is working on its own mod building education program called ComputerCraftEdu, which will eventually be offered both online and in-person. And there are already a few other classes that teach students to create mods, such as MakersFactory’s class in Santa Cruz and YouthDigital’s online class. But most of these other classes require students to write code in a programming language called Java. And Java can be cumbersome.
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    Look into this stuff
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