One of the best decisions our team made last summer was to pre-install Casper (5) profiles on all of our iPads. We pulled
the student IDs from our ASPEN (6) student
information system, logged each student into Casper and installed the four
profiles needed for our plan. The profiles took Safari web browser off the iPad.
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Digital Ethnography » Blog Archive » Participatory Media Literacy: Why it mat... - 1 views
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Why more schools aren't teaching web literacy-and how they can start | eSchool News - 95 views
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What We Learned: A 1:1 iPad Reflection | Edutopia - 185 views
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As we progressed through the year, we discovered that these tools took a lot of time to create something we were trying to move away from in the first place. The reason for moving away from textbooks is that they offer a myopic vision of a world that is ever-changing. Simply viewing a textbook on an iPad does not change or innovate learning, nor does it use the iPad to its full potential. If your plan is to digitize a standard textbook, save your money and renew your textbook licenses.
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This year we are incorporating K-12 digital portfolios along with revised information and digital literacy standards. Every BPS student will have a Google Apps for Education account that they will use in conjunction with the Blogger (15) application to begin creating their Life of Learning portfolio
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The students that make it into help desk are those who not only enjoy working with technology in an educational context, but have a desire to serve, support and possibly solve problems in the school on a daily basis.
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. Aside from simply troubleshooting, our students help their former teachers at the middle and elementary levels as well as create how-to scripts and videos for students, faculty and the Burlington community. Our students have not only helped within the BPS community, but have helped our Tech Team organize two major conferences in the past year:
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You can have the most precisely calculated plan in place before you launch, but if you don't have the right support in place, your launch may stumble. I regard our IT department as one of the best I have ever worked with. I say this in all sincerity because I do "work with" this team. These guys not only manage a robust infrastructure, but they take part in the educational conversation and give our staff the best tools to create dynamic, engaging classrooms.
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However, we must work to incorporate information and digital literacy standards into the K-12 curriculum as early as possible. Students in Kindergarten should understand what it means to be nice to someone and how that will translate to writing and living on the Web. As students grow up through the educational pathways, they must be exposed to new and emerging technologies as early as possible in a safe, responsible manner. By doing so, we are preparing them for a global economy that requires these skills.
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Oracy - 36 views
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David Puttnam spoke in Dublin tonight - he had some interesting ideas including ORACY - A web definition explains "oracy" as…used to describe a person's ability to efficiently communicate with others via the spoken word as well as to fully understand oral communication. Wilkinson…created the word to emphasize the need for school children to be able to fully use oral skills as an essential basis for learning and social integration. It is an analogy for the words numeracy and literacy, and aids in bringing the focus of oral skill on par with reading and writing in the classroom.
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edtechteacher - 0 views
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while informal writing is an integral part of youth culture, teenagers also overwhelmingly understand the importance of good writing: 86 percent of teens consider formal writing skills essential to future success. While today's "screenagers" may offer but cursory glances at web pages that does not mean they discount the importance of a sustained engagement with a Shakespearean drama.
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in the best-case scenarios, teachers will use these changes to demonstrate to students the power of the written word and the importance of communicating clearly, and teachers will then give students new tools and strategies to improve their command of prose and persuasion.
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Web pages and accompanying multimedia are now integral primary sources for chroniclers and historians of the 21st century.
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Annotating the Model Content Frameworks for ELA/Literacy by PARCC - 9 views
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upper grades, content-area teachers are encouraged to consider how best to implement informational reading across the disciplines
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present their analyses in writing and speaking
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all students need access to a wide range of materials on a variety of topics and genres
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students improve both their reading comprehension and their writing skills when writing in response to texts.
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notes, summaries, learning logs, writing to learn tasks, or even a response to a short text selection or an open-ended question.[9]
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hese responses can vary in length based on the questions asked and tasks performed, from answering brief questions to crafting multiparagraph responses in upper grades.
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narrative story and narrative description
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generate writing pieces in response to teacher-provided prompts and to their own prompts
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For reading and writing in each module
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Graham, S., and M. A. Hebert. 2010. Writing to Read: Evidence for How Writing Can Improve Reading. A Carnegie Corporation Time to Act Report. Washington, D.C.: Alliance for Excellent Education.
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Learning Through Listening | Abstract - 71 views
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new technologies are challenging traditional definitions of what it means to be literate
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individual learners approach the same learning task in widely varied ways, it is essential to provide multiple means for achieving success. Learners need multiple ways of recognizing important information, variety in how to strategically approach a learning task and multiple means of becoming engaged in learning
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ScratchJr - Home - 59 views
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An iPad and junior version of the well know programming platform Scratch. The app has been designed for 5+ year olds and boosts simplified versions features of the more mature version. Children still snap programming blocks together to build amazingly creative things. http://ictmagic.wikispaces.com/ICT+%26+Web+Tools
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"Coding is the new literacy! With ScratchJr, young children (ages 5-7) can program their own interactive stories and games. In the process, they learn to solve problems, design projects, and express themselves creatively on the computer."
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F-Shaped Pattern For Reading Web Content (Jakob Nielsen's Alertbox) - 99 views
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Should teachers be approaching reading literacy differently because of these findings?
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Absolutely not. This is based on reading on websites and if you look at the "heatmaps" of eye tracking people focus on where the content is dense. Of course people read across the top of a webpage first, that is where the heading and introduction are. Then they move down the side, where the menus are in general. People even focused on the ads to the right. This is more a commentary on modern website design than anything to do with reading.
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shared by trisha_poole on 26 Jul 11
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Views: Technology and Teaching - Inside Higher Ed - 43 views
www.insidehighered.com/...ng_technology_to_teach_writing
writing pedagogy technology teaching web2.0 digital literacy literacy english
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Remix Culture : Center for Social Innovation (CSI) - 12 views
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there’s a war raging over what some now are calling a new art form in the emerging Web 2.0 culture—remix
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remix is collage, a recombination of existing, reference images or music and video clips from popular digital culture, elements of which are mashed up into something new.
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as long as the remix is significantly altered from the original—should remix be permitted by law
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“Remix is literacy in the 21st century,” Lessig said. The chief of Stanford University’s Center for Internet and Society
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failing to legally protect remixes as original forms of art and expression “will make pirates of our children...We cannot kill this form of expression;
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Johnson, author of The Invention of Air, a new book about the history of information flows in American and British society, said remix has “deep roots in the Age of Enlightenment and among America’s Founding Fathers.”
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Fairey rounded out the talk, citing remix as one of the early 21st century’s most popular forms of free political expression.
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Remix is all about making references; references are how you establish a point of view in popular culture, and they are crucial to my work as an artist.”
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shared by A Strang on 09 Mar 10
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Top 50 Web 2.0 Tools (50 Web 2.0 Tools Your Students Want You to Use) - 263 views
sites.google.com/...tech-tool-reviews
web2.0 tools web resources 2.0 collaboration communication digital design games mapping literacy music organization photo search twitter video virtual world
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Web 2.0 Literacy Tools Master List Fall - 74 views
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shared by Sarah Horrigan on 20 Jan 09
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Read The Words - 3 views
readthewords.com
accessibility web2.0 tools tool text technology speech software reading text-to-speech NTUEDU elearning audio mp3 words
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"ReadTheWords.com is a free, web based service that assists people with written material. We do this by using TTS Technology, or Text To Speech Technology. Users of our service can generate a clear sounding audio file from almost any written material. We generate a voice that reads the words out loud, that you request us to read."
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A great resource, particularly for kids who struggle with literacy. Thankyou for posting.
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Response: Advice From The "Book Whisperer," Ed Week Readers & Me About Teaching Reading... - 1 views
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Other ways I encourage these kinds of discussions includes having students choose their own groupings and books for independent book "clubs" and using the Web as a vehicle to create audio and/or video "book trailers."
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One facet of our reading instruction that cannot be overlooked is the importance of teacher readers in building a classroom reading community. According to Morrison, Jacobs, and Swinyard (1999), "perhaps the most influential teacher behavior to influence students' literacy development is personal reading, both in and out of school."
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Share your reading life with your students. Show your students what reading adds to your life. If you are reading a nonfiction book at the moment, tell them what you are learning. Pass the children's books you are reading to them when you are done. Describe the funny, sad, or interesting moments in the books you read. When you read something challenging, talk with your students about how you work through difficult text. It will surprise them that you find reading hard at times, too, but choose to read, anyway.
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Many students in today's world do not read books outside of school. When they do read, it is text-messages, web pages or homework assignments. For students who did not grow up in homes with books, with adults who read and who read to them, this time to read in school is both necessary and pleasurable. Many of my students need catch-up time when it comes to "hours-in" reading. The 10 minutes at the beginning of each period that I allow my juniors each day equals hours of reading across the months of the school year. My most dedicated readers begin books in the classroom, finish them at home, and return to the classroom/school library to check out new books.
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This is an important distinction in that I believe (and research indicates) that our kids ARE reading more than ever before. But it comes in non-traditional forms. We must acknowledge that web based reading is still reading, but it differs. Research also indicates that when kids read digitally, they read in a different pattern. In traditional reading, they read in a z pattern down a page. Digital reading is more of an F pattern,indicating skim and scan.
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shared by onepulledthread on 10 Apr 13
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Who Are You Online? Considering Issues of Web Identity - NYTimes.com - 90 views
learning.blogs.nytimes.com/...idering-issues-of-web-identity
digital citizenship identity digital footprint digitalcitizenship
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"NY Times writers collaborated with the Common Sense Media writer Kelly Schryver to focus on the increasingly important and nuanced question "Who Are You Online?" Times and Learning Network content as well as offerings from Common Sense Media's K-12 Digital Literacy and Citizenship curriculum for teaching and learning about this complex issue." Lots of avenues to take this material in working with students.
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Kelly Schryver presents a variety of links related to this topic, in collaboration with Common Sense Media. Could be useful for student consideration.