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natalieanelli

Cellphones in the Classroom - 3 views

Source: http://thejournal.com/articles/2012/04/10/texting-and-cell-phones-keeps-students-in-class.aspx This is a short article highlighting the popularity of a recent initative to supply stud...

multimedia education educ525 cell phones

started by natalieanelli on 21 Feb 14 no follow-up yet
Megan Krotz

panoramic views - 0 views

shared by Megan Krotz on 16 May 14 - Cached
Rose Ogunjimi

6 Scaffolding Strategies to Use with Your Students - 0 views

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    What's the opposite of scaffolding a lesson? It would be saying to students something like, "Read this nine-page science article, write a detailed essay on the topic it explores, and turn it in by Wednesday." Yikes -- no safety net, no parachute, no scaffolding -- just left blowing in the wind.
mestickney

Teaching for Conceptual Change - 0 views

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    This article was a reading assignment for the Science Teaching Methods course I'm also currently taking, and I thought that it had wonderful connections to Constructivist learning and the inquiry model, so I thought I would share. It has some good information and insight all the way to the end!
caldwell14

Wordle - 2 views

shared by caldwell14 on 20 Feb 15 - Cached
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    Wordle generates word clouds from text that students type into the program. Font/layout/color can all be adjusted. Wordle offers a valuable visual exercise in text play and multiple intelligences.
Roni Langley

Class Tools - 4 views

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    This website offers multimedia tools that can be used in various contexts. The applications are user-friendly and engaging. The site includes everything from timers to interactive graphic organizers and everything in between. Check out their Fakebook feature - too cool!
jillian merlino

Student Centered Dictionary - 1 views

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    This website also has a toolbar extension to download. It allows for idioms, multiple meanings and student centered definitions - and a fun acronym page as well!
Joe Cronan

Audacity - 1 views

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    This free software allows you to record live audio, covert old records and tapes to CDs, edit WAV and MP3 files, mix sounds together (cut, copy, splice), change the speed or pitch (change effects), and import and export sound files.
dchalmer

Hurricane Impacts on the Coastal Environment - USGS Fact Sheet - 1 views

  • Area studies reveal the immense change brought about by these storms. In Louisiana, Dr. Shea Penland and his colleagues at the LGS reported that Andrew stripped sand from 70 percent of the barrier islands leaving exposed old coastal marsh. More than 80 percent of oyster reefs behind the barrier islands were smothered by a 0.3-0.9-meter thick blanket of sediment. More than 70 kilometers of valuable dune habitat providing storm protection to estuaries, wetlands, and the coastal population were destroyed. In Hawaii, Dr. Charles Fletcher and his colleagues at the University of Hawaii cooperated with USGS scientists in a study of the effects of Hurricane Iniki, the most powerful hurricane to strike the Hawaiian Islands this century. They report that Iniki caused massive beach-face erosion and overwash of the coastline which penetrated up to 300 meters reaching elevations of nearly 9 meters. Seafloor change from the 1930's to the 1980's for the region of coastal Louisiana hardest hit by Hurricane Andrew shows historical patterns of seafloor erosion and accretion. This information was collected as part of the USGS's Louisiana Barrier Island Erosion Study, and will be used as a baseline to determine the effect of Hurricane Andrew on coastal areas already undergoing rapid change. [larger version] USGS scientists have used historical data to show that Louisiana is eroding rapidly. The Louisiana barrier island shoreline is eroding at a rate, in some places, exceeding 20 meters per year as a result of both hurricanes and normal processes. The land is subsiding because of compaction of the Mississippi delta sediments. The net effect of subsidence is that sea level is rising at a rate of about 1 centimeter per year, ten times the world rate. USGS scientists take advantage of this natural laboratory to study erosion and deposition patterns resulting from sea-level change. The Louisiana barrier islands protect productive estuarine and wetland environments that support a $10 billion per year fishing industry. Erosion of the barrier islands is so severe that their ability to function as effective buffers for the prevention of wetlands loss has been dramatically reduced. Louisiana's wetlands are disappearing at rates of 40 square kilometers per year. In a few decades the barrier islands may be gone and the wetlands will be lost even faster.
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