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Kris Cody

Narrative Magazine - 53 views

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    Short stories, poetry, photographs.
Meg Fitzpatrick

First 5 Days of School for Educators - 90 views

    • Meg Fitzpatrick
       
      Blah blah blah
Andrew McCluskey

Werner Herzog Tackles Texting and Driving in Devastating Documentary 'From One Second t... - 82 views

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    Famous director, Werner Herzog, commissioned by AT&T films an emotional and striking documentary about texting and driving.
anonymous

Common Sense Media - outstanding Digital Citizenship lessons! - 79 views

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    A school's use of Common Sense Media is described here.
Nigel Coutts

What questions shall we ask? - 11 views

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    A posting inspired by Patrick Rothfuss - 'It's the questions we can't answer that teach us the most. They teach us how to think. If you give a man an answer all he gains is a little fact but give him a question and he'll look for his own answers. That way, when he finds the answers they'll be precious to him, the harder the question, the harder we hunt, the harder we hunt the more we learn, an impossible question . . .'
anonymous

Common Core & Ed Tech: Key Tech Terms in the CCSS - 112 views

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    Number of occurrences of some key 'tech' or 21st c. learning terms in the ELA and Math CCSS
Stacy Olson

Unmasking the Digital Truth / FrontPage - 27 views

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    Site addressing the overfiltering and blocking of web 2.0 sites in school and libraries and provide reasonable alternatives to support broader student and teacher access.
chad bennett

ThingLink Education - ThingLink - 66 views

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    interactive images. can add information, links, rich media to images. might be a good tool to use with my classes.
Robert Hochberg

Dr. Helen Barrett's Electronic Portfolios - 106 views

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    "electronicportfolios.org"
Don Doehla

The Importance of Fluency and Automaticity for Efficient Reading - 43 views

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    The reading process involves two separate but highly interrelated areas - word identification and comprehension. It is well established that difficulties in automatic word recognition significantly affect a reader's ability to effectively comprehend what they are reading (Lyon, 1995; Torgeson, Rashotte, and Alexander, 2001). Even mild difficulties in word identification can pull attention away from the underlying meaning, reduce the speed of reading, and create the need to reread selections to grasp the meaning. Many students who struggle to learn to read are able, with appropriate instruction, to compensate for initial reading problems by becoming accurate decoders but fail to reach a level of sufficient fluency to become fast and efficient readers. Thus, the development of techniques for improving automaticity and fluency is critical. Although the research is clear that a systematic alphabetic approach to teaching beginning readers is more effective than a whole word approach (Adams, 1990; Chall, 1996; Snow, Burns and Griffin, 1009), the most effect ways to develop fluency are less well understood.
egreene07

Twitter In 15 Minutes - Presentation Software That's Simple, Beautiful, and Fun | Haiku... - 5 views

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    Haiku Deck about getting started with Twitter
Don Doehla

SmartBlog on Education - Small changes are not small change - SmartBrief, Inc. SmartBlo... - 25 views

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    Is change hard? Is change easy? The answer to both of those questions is "yes." If you reflect upon all that is done to "change" schools, you would probably think that policymakers think change is hard - very hard. Think of all the initiatives that are launched every day to change schools: new tests, new curriculum, new evaluation systems, new laws, policies and regulations. When all of these, however, fail to change schools, the people who develop these change initiatives end up thinking that the change initiatives just have to be bigger, stronger and more tightly managed.
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    Is change hard? Is change easy? The answer to both of those questions is "yes." If you reflect upon all that is done to "change" schools, you would probably think that policymakers think change is hard - very hard. Think of all the initiatives that are launched every day to change schools: new tests, new curriculum, new evaluation systems, new laws, policies and regulations. When all of these, however, fail to change schools, the people who develop these change initiatives end up thinking that the change initiatives just have to be bigger, stronger and more tightly managed.
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