I've actually used in my primary age classroom. I saved links and shared them with my students account (ued the Education features to create a group). Then the kids used the links to do research on a simple research project.
Patrick
Rachel Peters wrote: > If you've used Diigo successfully in your intermediate elementary class (ages 9-12) please share what you've done.
And creating a Diigo Education account is free for teachers. You just have to apply for it, using your school email. IT gives you more control over your student accounts, and what you share with them.
Patrick
amy musone wrote: > I really like the idea of setting up a group of links for my students! I have a group started for colleagues, but didn't think about doing the same for the students. Thanks for the idea! > Patrick Black wrote: > > I've actually used in my primary age classroom. I saved links and shared them with my students account (ued the Education features to create a group). Then the kids used the links to do research on a simple research project. > > > > Patrick > > > > Rachel Peters wrote: > > > If you've used Diigo successfully in your intermediate elementary class (ages 9-12) please share what you've done.
Patrick
Rachel Peters wrote:
> If you've used Diigo successfully in your intermediate elementary class (ages 9-12) please share what you've done.
Patrick
amy musone wrote:
> I really like the idea of setting up a group of links for my students! I have a group started for colleagues, but didn't think about doing the same for the students. Thanks for the idea!
> Patrick Black wrote:
> > I've actually used in my primary age classroom. I saved links and shared them with my students account (ued the Education features to create a group). Then the kids used the links to do research on a simple research project.
> >
> > Patrick
> >
> > Rachel Peters wrote:
> > > If you've used Diigo successfully in your intermediate elementary class (ages 9-12) please share what you've done.