Free Technology for Teachers: 10 Teachers to Follow on Twitter - 1 views
Conversations.net - Home - 1 views
learning Standards Library - 1 views
Love For Education - A Shifting Paradigm: My Video Presentation For LeWeb08 - Robin Go... - 0 views
Top News - Ed tech central to Obama's recovery plan - 1 views
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Ed tech central to Obama's recovery plan
Related Top News - Tech trends every school leader should know - 0 views
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According to William Rust, research director for the IT research and consulting firm Gartner, there is a new digital divide occurring in schools. Whereas this divide used to refer to whether or not students had access to technology, now it concerns whether schools are using technology effectively to achieve results.
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Citing a report by Ian Jukes and Anita Dose of the InfoSavvy Group, Rust said digital native learners prefer (1) receiving information quickly and from multiple resources; (2) parallel processing and multitasking; (3) processing pictures, sounds, and video before text; (4) random access to hyperlinked multimedia information; and (5) interacting and networking simultaneously with many others
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"The biggest shift we're seeing right now is student preference shifting from print to digital resources," Rust noted. "It's all about the web."
Blog of helios: Linux - Stop holding our kids back - 0 views
KOCE Copy Right for Educators - 0 views
Constructivism. Putting the social into e-learning « M's Primary Weblog - 0 views
21 Bookmarklets To Fire Up Google Chrome [List] | Social Web Tools - 2 views
PolyVision » home - 0 views
YouTube - Networked StudentQT.mp4 - 0 views
Check Out Our Class Blog List! | The Edublogger - 0 views
Using Google Alerts to Monitor Incoming Links | The Edublogger - 0 views
edtechpost » The Pros and Cons of Loosely Coupled Teaching - 0 views
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Exercise Briefly look at 2-3 examples of courses run on "loosely coupled technologies," that is, outside of a CMS using contemporary Web 2.0/social software tools and methods.
Journalism for the 21st Century: Zotero, Diigo and Research - 3 views
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Diigo is good if you want to save websites of interest, and then access them from any computer. It does not provide the automatic bibliography of Zotero, but the user could simply save his bookmarks, return to the sites, hit the Zotero button and the problem is quickly solved. Diigo also features a highlighting tool that allows the user to select text from the site and write comments. If the user is logged in to Diigo and returns to the site, the highlights and comments remain. It it also somewhat useful if you want to find websites related to a certain topic that you are interested in. However, finding academic type articles or journal entires in a person's bookmarks is rare.
Critical Stance Workshop - 1 views
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