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Stephanie McGuire

BrainPOP Spotlight: Digital Citizenship. Movies, quizzes, activities, teacher resources... - 0 views

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    Neat site that offers digital citizenship quizzes for students and resources for teachers. It appears that teacher resources require a free account but student resources do not.
Jennifer Massengill

Essential Web Resources - Home - 0 views

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    This site has some great resources. Wish I'd found it earlier in the semester.
Alexander Hendrix

USII Resources - 0 views

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    Resources for each of the US standards for history for each grade level. 
Alexander Hendrix

The American Civil War Center at Historic Tredegar - 0 views

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    Excellent resource for teachers that provides a myriad of different mediums of sources for to grab student interest and make projects and resource more fun if not less difficult or bland for your classroom.
Alexander Hendrix

Teachers' Page - 0 views

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    A seemingly inexhaustible resource for science instructors needing ideas, inspirations, or resources for not just collaborative, but also many other topes of activities for students of all levels
Lauren Tappan

FREE -- Teaching Resources and Lesson Plans from the Federal Government - 1 views

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    free resources with every subject area
Megan Cleary

Useful WebQuest Resources - 1 views

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    So many WebQuest resources!
Shally Ackerman

Digital Literacy in the primary classroom | Steps in Teaching and Learning - 0 views

  • 8 elements of Digital Literacy
  • Cultural [Cu] Cognitive [Cg] Constructive [Cn] Communication [Co] Confidence [Cf] Creative [Cr] Critical [Ct] Civic [Ci]
  • he following is my interpretation of how they might be used for teaching and learning in a primary classroom
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  • definition in its publication Digital Literacy
  • To be digitally literate is to have access to a broad range of practices and cultural resources that you are able to apply to digital tools. It is the ability to make and share meaning in different modes and formats; to create, collaborate and communicate effectively and to understand how and when digital technologies can best be used to support these processes.
  • The challenge is how we as teachers can foster digital literacy in all areas of the school curriculum
  • it is our responsibility to ensure children are not only confident users but can also make informed decisions about the use of such digital technologies to help them in their learning
  • How can we ensure that our learners are digitally literate?
  • We can help children understand their role in the wider community and how they will have an effect on it. What they say becomes incredibly important when you begin to use digital tools to publish their content online for the world to see
  • Don’t envisage this as how your learners will use digital tools but how they will use their own cognitive tools to do so
  • In today’s digital world children have a multitude of ways to communicate that are more or less digital variations of those tools 30 years previously.
  • developing links and strengthening those bonds by fostering projects and interaction is the next step
  • Go with what the learners suggest, follow up their questions even if it isn’t in your panning
  • Learners today need to know which tools are the best to communicate the message they want to say, they need to make deliberate and informed choices that recognise what these digital communication tools can do and how best to utilise them.
  • You want a class of learners that will know which tools will get the job done effectively and which tools will only hold them back
  • Never before has a learner been presented with so much choice to draw a picture – from pencil and paper to digital pens and paper on a tablet device
  • owever the creative potential is being held back by teachers who are either not prepared to use these tools in their class due to other ill conceived curriculum pressures or they just don’t know how.
  • How do we know it is written by the author claiming it to be so? We need to develop critical awareness and thinking
  • Children cannot go on accepting the first result they receive from a search
  • Digital Literacy must be developed across every part of the curriculum and not just ICT and our learners must be given the freedom to do so in schools today
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    This article breaks down some of the concepts that go into digital literacy.
Kasey Hutson

Bill Goodwyn: Technology Doesn't Teach, Teachers Teach - 0 views

  • Technology doesn't teach. Teachers teach.
  • All of us involved in education received the same mandate this past winter from President Obama and Secretary of Education Arne Duncan: to replace traditional, static textbooks with dynamic, interactive digital textbooks within the next five years. Several organizations have accepted this challenge enthusiastically and are partnering with districts every day to help transform classrooms into the digital learning environments our leaders envision. But the process is complicated.
  • We have seen the power of new technology in practice, especially when used by effectively trained teachers. In an initiative to replace traditional social studies textbooks, those students using digital tools in the Indianapolis Public Schools system, in which 85 percent of students are enrolled in subsidized lunch programs, had a 27 percent higher passing rate on statewide progress tests than students in classrooms that were not plugged in. Students in Miami-Dade County Public Schools who used digital resources achieved a 7 percent increase in their science FCAT (Florida's Comprehensive Assessment Test) exams. And students of the Mooresville Graded School District in North Carolina increased their performance on state exams by 13 percent over three short years, thanks to digital content and passionate, technology literate teachers
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  • North Carolina's Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools (CMS) perfectly illustrates both the power of effective teacher training and technology. Since 2008, CMS has provided digital science resources to Title I schools -- schools with a high concentration of students living in poverty. Along with digital content, the district provided teachers with ongoing professional development designed to show them how to build engaging lessons, enhance their current curriculum and inspire students by integrating digital media, hardware and software. The professional development, however, was not mandatory. The results could not have been clearer: The students of teachers who opted into the professional development not only closed the achievement gap between themselves and students from Title I schools that did not have the same technology, they also outperformed the non-Title I schools, amassing a 57 percent passing rate on the state's end-of-year standardized science tests, compared to the 43 percent passing rate of those from wealthier schools. These are some of the most disadvantaged students in the state, remember, and yet they caught up to -- and surpassed -- students from more affluent schools.
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    One of the coolest points - Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools provided technology resources to Title I schools, and made professional development to integrate technology into the classroom optional. Those teachers who participated in the professional development not only closed the achievement gap, but also outperformed non-Title I schools in the area.
Carly Guinn

Elementary Math for Classrooms or Home at Internet 4 Classrooms - 1 views

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    Compilation of online math resources:  directs you to various links that provide lessons, quizzes, geometry resources, and more
Benjamin Hindman

Beginning Reading Help: Phonological Awareness Is an Often Overlooked Reading Skill - 1 views

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    This site looks like it has some pretty good resources for teaching reading.  The site also provides links to other reading resource sites.
Kylee Ponder

Welcome to the Teachers Resources for Instructional Planning Website :: Second Grade Sc... - 0 views

    • Kylee Ponder
       
      Awesome website for resources for Science - has different interactive resources for planning!
Lyndsay Kilberg

Smarty Pants Teaching Resources - 1 views

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    introducing web resources to kids
Alexander Hendrix

General Teacher Resources - 0 views

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    General teacher resources based on virginia standards from harrisonburg public schools website.
Lyndsay Kilberg

WritingFix: prompts, lessons, and resources for writing classrooms - 0 views

shared by Lyndsay Kilberg on 04 Dec 12 - Cached
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    good writing resource, courtesy of our reading teacher
Lauren Tappan

Mrs. Shehan's Full Day Kindergarten - Printables - 1 views

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    word work resources
Carly Guinn

Matoaka Elementary School - Resources - 1 views

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    Lots of online instructional resources from my Elem. school website
Karrissa Harbour

TeachersPayTeachers.com - An Open Marketplace for Original Lesson Plans and Other Teach... - 0 views

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    Marketplace for teachers to buy and sell resources from other teachers.  Also has lots of free stuff too!
Emily Wampler

Create A Graph - 1 views

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    Whoa!  Online resource for kids (or teachers!) to enter data and create graphs.  Cool!
Jennifer Massengill

62 Kindergarten Websites That Tie into Classroom Lessons « Jacqui Murray - 1 views

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    A fun resource for primary teachers.
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