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Thomson Reuters-Scientific Global Customer Portal - 9 views

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    All currently supported versions of EndNote are 32-bit applications. EndNote when installed on x64 based systems will install by default to:"C:\Program Files (x86)\EndNote (#)" where (#) is the version of EndNote. 重新查看了endnote主页,X4可以与WIN7 64位兼容,但与64位office 2010不兼容。 LZ只能换32位 office 2010了。 Word Processor Compatibility: EndNote is compatible with the following word processing and text formats: Cite While You Write feature compatible with: Microsoft Word® 2003, 2007 & 2010 (32 bit) Note: Microsoft recommends 32-bit Office 2010 for both 32-bit and 64-bit operating systems. Office 64-bit is optimized for advanced data analysis scenarios that most users don抰 require, and existing 32-bit add-ins are not supported on Office 64-bit.
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Teach | Learn - A Student Created Content Course Book - 144 views

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    36 print optimized lessons based on the teacher / learner friendly methodology of SCC or Student Created Content. View samples here - Preface: http://bit.ly/geMws5 Lessons: http://bit.ly/gylisE Teacher's Notes: http://bit.ly/dGSj16 Certificate: http://bit.ly/hnznO4 Extra Printables: http://bit.ly/eOousU Wiki: http://teachlearnscc.pbworks.com/w/page/35979221/Teach%20%20Learn (all Lessons editable als doc-files)
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Why I Like Prezi - 0 views

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    Why I Like Prezi In my life, I have given a *lot* of presentations. In high school, they were presentations on group projects. In university, they were presentations on research projects. At Google, they're presentations on how to use our APIs. When I first started giving presentations, I used Powerpoint, like everyone else. But I kept thinking there must be a better way, and I experimented with other options - flash interfaces, interactive Javascript apps. Then I discovered Prezi, and it has become my presentation tool of choice. Prezi is an online tool for creating presentations - but it's not just a Powerpoint clone, like the Zoho or Google offering. When you first create a Prezi, you're greeted with a blank canvas and a small toolbox. You can write text, insert images, and draw arrows. You can draw frames (visible or hidden) around bits of content, and then you can define a path from one frame to the next frame. That path is your presentation. It's like being able to draw your thoughts on a whiteboard, and then instructing a camera where to go and what to zoom into. It's a simple idea, but I love it. Here's why: It forces me to "shape" my presentation. A slide deck is always linear in form, with no obvious structure of ideas inside of it. Each of my Prezis has a structure, and each structure is different. The structure is visual, but it supports a conceptual structure. One structure might be 3 main ideas, with rows of ideas for each one. Another might be 1 main idea, with a circular branching of subideas. Having a structure helps me to have more of a point to my presentations, and to realize the core ideas of them. It makes it easy to go from brainstorming stage to presentation stage, all in the same tool. I can write a bunch of thoughts, insert some images, and easily move them around, cluster them, re-order them, etc. I can figure out the structure of my presentation by looking at what I have laid out, and seeing how they fit together. Some people do this
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educational-origami - Bloom's Digital Taxonomy - 145 views

  • This is an update to Bloom's Revised Taxonomy which attempts to account for the new behaviours and actions emerging as technology advances and becomes more ubiquitous.
  • Details last edit Oct 9, 2009 12:19 am by achurches - 56 revisions - locked Tags a churches blooms blooms digital taxonomy blooms revised taxonomy digital edorigami learning a churches blooms blooms digital taxonomy blooms revised taxonomy digital edorigami learning a churches blooms blooms digital taxonomy blooms revised taxonomy digital edorigami learning Type a tag name. Press comma or enter to add another. Cancel Table of Contents Synopsis: A little Disclaimer: Introduction and Background: Bloom's Domains of learning The Cognitive Domain - Bloom's Taxonomy Bloom's Revised Taxonomy Bloom's Revised Taxonomy Sub Categories Bloom's as a learning process. Is it important where you start? Must I start with remembering? Bloom's Digital Taxonomy Bloom's Digital Taxonomy Summary Map Bloom's Digital Taxonomy and Collaboration. Resources: Web 2.0 Tutorials Acknowledgements:This is the introduction to Bloom's Digital Taxonomy. The different taxonomical levels can be viewed individually via the navigation bar or below this introduction as embedded pages. Synopsis:  This is an update to Bloom's Revised Taxonomy which attempts to account for the new behaviours and actions emerging as technology advances and becomes more ubiquitous. Bloom's Revised Taxonomy accounts for many of the traditional c
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    This is an update to Bloom's Revised Taxonomy which attempts to account for the new behaviours and actions emerging as technology advances and becomes more ubiquitous.

Going Google at TCE - 96 views

started by Greta Oppe on 17 Feb 11 no follow-up yet
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iOS Apps for Science Teachers : Teaching about Sound - 3 views

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    "Teaching about sound in the classroom used to involve lots of fiddly bits of kit such as Signal Generators and Decibel Meters that would cost a lot of money and only get wheeled out once a year. Thankfully if you have an iPhone or iPad you can replace quite a bit of that kit with a couple of handy apps which are either free or relatively inexpensive. Here's a couple to get you started:"
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(7) Twitter / Home - 5 views

shared by Debra Gottsleben on 02 Feb 10 - Cached
  • chat    The curse of Melvin Dewey. http://librarianchat.com/forum/index.php?topic=524.0
  • buffyjhamilton    researching and compiling list of American authors whose work reflects "American Dream" theme from 1950 to now.
  • Innovation Is The Enemy RT @nzbookmarks: http://bit.ly/bKhhze #entrepreneur #smb
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  • scsdmedia Kathy Kaldenberg Anatomy of a Facebook lynching. http://bit.ly/giuJgZ Followup to CookSource controversy (I didn't know about this)
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Endnote X6 problem with Office 2013 Preview x64 - Page 3 - Thomson Reuters Community - 7 views

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    B. 64-bit Machine with 64-bit Version of Word:
    Browse to this EndNote folder:

    EndNote X6: C:\Program Files (x86)\EndNote X6\Product-Support\CWYW 
    EndNote X5: C:\Program Files (x86)\EndNote X5\Product-Support\CWYW
    EndNote X4: C:\Program Files (x86)\EndNote X4\Product-Support\CWYW
    Copy these files:
    EndNote Cwyw.dot
    EndNote Cwyw.dotm
    EndNote Web Cwyw.dot
    EndNote Web Cwyw.dotm
    Browse to this destination folder:

    EndNote X6: C:\Program Files\Common Files\ResearchSoft\Cwyw\16
    EndNote X5: C:\Program Files\Common Files\ResearchSoft\Cwyw\15
    EndNote X4: C:\Program Files\Common Files\ResearchSoft\Cwyw\14
    Paste the copied files.
    Browse to this EndNote folder:

    EndNote X6: C:\Program Files (x86)\EndNote X6\Product-Support\CWYW\x64
    EndNote X5: C:\Program Files (x86)\EndNote X5\Product-Support\CWYW\x64
    EndNote X4: C:\Program Files (x86)\EndNote X4\Product-Support\CWYW\x64
    Copy these files:

    EndNote Cwyw.dll
    ManagedCode.dll
    Browse to this destination folder:

    EndNote X6: C:\Program Files\Common Files\ResearchSoft\Cwyw\16
    EndNote X5: C:\Program Files\Common Files\ResearchSoft\Cwyw\15
    EndNote X4: C:\Program Files\Common Files\ResearchSoft\Cwyw\14
    Paste the copied files.
    Follow the installation steps above.
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Creating Wonder in High Prior Attainers by @mathsmuse - 4 views

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    "High prior attainers. Gifted and talented. High Achievers. The students that are aiming for the very top grades at GCSE, that we're all determined to keep at A level for our subject. We put on trips. We run extracurricular clubs. We bring out the "Challenge Questions". We create peer mentoring. But one thing we often neglect is developing their sense of curiosity in our subject, developing that sense of wonder and awe for the best little bits, that need to actually just know how/ why/where/what is going on with this little bit of your subject."
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Research: Children see words and faces differently from adults - 11 views

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    "Young children literally see words and faces differently from adults. Where adults can most easily comprehend a word when they look at it straight on, children need to look a bit up and to the left. For faces, they need to look a bit up and to the right. What's more, those differences are accompanied by previously undetected changes in the brain circuits responsible for processing words and faces, researchers report Feb. 23 in Nature Communications."
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The Coolest Things You Can Automatically Add to Google Calendar - 148 views

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    Do you use Google Calendar? This Lifehacker bit spotlights cool things you can do with the tool - http://t.co/34YpM9LX2O
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    Do you use Google Calendar? This Lifehacker bit spotlights cool things you can do with the tool - http://t.co/34YpM9LX2O
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Struggle For Smarts? How Eastern And Western Cultures Tackle Learning : Shots - Health ... - 48 views

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    Let students struggle a bit and focus on the effort exerted
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The Current State Of Literacy In America - Edudemic - 63 views

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    The Current State of Literacy in America [infographic] http://t.co/7ivNAH8E no_tag The Current State Of Literacy In America - Edudemic http://bit.ly/RWaRrz The Current State Of Literacy In America - Edudemic
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Reintroducing students to Research - 144 views

  • First, we think research, broadly defined, is a valuable part of an undergraduate education. Even at a rudimentary level, engaging in research implicates students in the creation of knowledge. They need to understand that knowledge isn’t an inert substance they passively receive, but is continually created, debated, and reformulated—and they have a role to play in that process.
  • we recognize that research is situated in disciplinary frameworks and needs to be addressed in terms of distinct research traditions.
  • research is a complex and recursive process involving not just finding information but framing and refining a question, perhaps gathering primary data through field or lab work, choosing and evaluating appropriate evidence, negotiating different viewpoints, and composing some kind of response, all activities that are not linear but intertwined.
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • learning to conduct inquiry is itself complex and recursive. These skills need to be developed throughout a research project and throughout a student’s education.
  • the hybrid nature of libraries today requires students to master both traditional and emerging information formats, but the skills that students need to conduct effective inquiry—for example, those mentioned in your mission statement of reading critically and reasoning analytically—are the same whether the materials they use are in print or electronic.
  • Too often, traditional research paper assignments defeat their own purpose by implying that research is not discovery, but rather a report on what someone else has already discovered. More than once I’ve had to talk students out of abandoning a paper topic because, to their dismay, they find out it’s original. If they can’t find a source that says for them exactly what they want to say—better yet, five sources—they think they’ll get in trouble.
  • In reality, students doing researched writing typically spend a huge percentage of their time mapping out the research area before they can focus their research question. This is perfectly legitimate, though they often feel they’re spinning wheels. They have to do a good bit of reading before they really know what they’re looking for.
  • she has students seek out both primary and secondary sources, make choices among them, and develop some conclusions in presentations that are far from standard literary criticism. One lab focuses on collecting and seeking relationships among assigned literary texts and other primary sources from the second half of the twentieth century to illuminate American society in that time period.
  • For this lab, groups of students must find ten primary sources that relate in some way to literary texts under discussion and then—here’s the unusual bit—write three new verses of “America the Beautiful” that use the primary sources to illuminate a vision of American society. Instead of amber waves of grain and alabaster cities, they select images that reformulate the form of the song to represent another vision of the country. At the end of the course, her final essay assignment calls upon all of the work the previous labs have done, asking students to apply the skills they’ve practiced through the semester. While students in this course don’t do a single, big research project, they practice skills that will prepare them to do more sophisticated work later.
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    What are our assumptions about how students get research done in the humanities? How do those assumptions affect our instruction, and what really is our students' approach to research?
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As spring arrives, Maine flower growers weather challenges of late-winter snow, cold - ... - 10 views

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    Here is a nice little video featuring an appealing character telling a topical story produced by Troy Bennett for the Bangor Daily News. One brief, clean interview illustrated with video stills and a bit of action. Multimedia reporting 101.
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chemicalsams: There Is No Such Thing as THE Flipped Class - 74 views

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    "The term "Flipped Classroom" is being thrown around a lot lately in both positive and negative light. I think the term is a bit ambiguous and does not fully do justice to all that is being done under the guise of the Flipped Classroom. My colleague, Jon Bergmann, and I have a book coming out soon that I hope brings clarity to what most of us mean by "The Flipped Classroom." In the mean time, I hope to shed some light on some of the confusion, critique, and hype. "
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JellyCam - Stop-motion maker - Tickly Pictures - 75 views

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    JellyCam is a bit of software for Windows and Mac computers. It creates stop-motion movies from snap shots from a webcam or loaded in pictures. You can add a mp3 soundtrack. Export as a .flv video for upload to YouTube.
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What Educators Can Learn from Uber - Reading By Example - 48 views

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    What can educators learning from Uber? Quite a bit, actually.
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Digital Is - 21 views

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    What qualifies as "text" is shifting every bit as much as our ever-changing definition of literacy. This resource expands our definition of texts, relying on John Greene's central principals that stories are: a). about communication, b). acts of empathy, c). opportunities to think critically and thoughtfully, thereby connecting us with each other, and d). springboards to learn more about others, our world around us, and ultimately, ourselves.
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