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Carly Guinn

Isaac's Surge Tops Levee, Floods Homes - weather.com - 0 views

  • Isaac raked the Gulf Coast with punishing winds and relentless rain, causing flooding that overtopped a levee south of New Orleans on Wednesday, the seventh anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.
    • Carly Guinn
       
      Addicted to the Weather Channel during hurricane season...
Lisa Iverson

Find Educator Tools | digitalliteracy.gov - 0 views

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    This looks like a great resource for teaching digital literacy 
Kylee Ponder

Kelly Meeker: From Legos to Raspberry Pi: The Most Creative Startups in Education Techn... - 0 views

  • The key to educational technology success will not only be solving a problem (although that's a necessary first step) -- it will be creating a tool that can be used universally, whether it's across classrooms or across devices, without special tools or special training
    • Kylee Ponder
       
      "The key to educational technology success will not only be solving a problem (although that's a necessary first step) -- it will be creating a tool that can be used universally, whether it's across classrooms or across devices, without special tools or special training."
Denise Lenihan

Educational technology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Educational technology is the study and ethical practice of facilitating learning and improving performance by creating, using and managing appropriate technological processes and resources."[1] The term educational technology is often associated with, and encompasses, instructional theory and learning theory. While instructional technology is "the theory and practice of design, development, utilization, management, and evaluation of processes and resources for learning," according to the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT) Definitions and Terminology Committee,[2] educational technology includes other systems used in the process of developing human capability. Educational technology includes, but is not limited to, software, hardware, as well as Internet applications, such as wiki's and blogs, and activities. But there is still debate on what these terms mean.[3]
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    Trying out this whole bookmark thing 
Karrissa Harbour

Dave's ESL Cafe - 0 views

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    Postings for ESL jobs all over the world.
Moni Del Toral

Custom Ex Libris Monkey Bookplate Stamp by AsspocketProductions - 0 views

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    label your personal library books!
Stephanie McGuire

Second grade - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • International education
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    International equivalents
Kristine Kellenberger

International Comparisons in Digital Literacy: What Can We Learn? | Edutopia - 0 views

  • While using a computer at home is related to digital reading performance in all participating countries and economies, computer use at school is not always. The report suggests this means that that "students are developing digital reading literacy mainly by using computers at home to pursue their interests."
Kasey Hutson

Educational Technology Guy - 0 views

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    I came across this great blog this morning. Hopefully others will find some useful ideas in here, too :). He's also got a twitter account, @daveandcori.
Kasey Hutson

No Facebook or Twitter in Class? Try These Teaching Work-Arounds | EdTech Magazine - 0 views

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    Ways to use Facebook & Twitter in the classroom - even if you have to make up your own Facebook wall because the school district blocks social media!
Denise Lenihan

14 Smart Tips for Using iPads in Class | MindShift - 0 views

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    very useful tips for Ipads in class that should seem obvious but could be over looked! 
Emily Wampler

Innovation Design In Education - ASIDE: Century of the Child: Moving Forward - 0 views

    • Emily Wampler
       
      I don't think Play is a magic fix for all the problems in US education, but I think it's a step in the right direction.  
    • Emily Wampler
       
      Couldn't agree with this more.  Assessment and standards for Pre-K?!?  Get real, America.  Let the kids play.  
  • The "children's garden" was to be a place that valued a child’s enjoyment, creative process, and intuitive investigation of materials. This is not what many kindergartens look like today. Too often they are worksheet driven in preparation for testing.
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  • For more than a decade, NCLB has pushed education into mediocrity, opting for a homogenized system to pass tests. We’ve taken the play out of learning, and as a result, children have disengaged in a flawed process to the tune of over a 35% dropout rate.
  • Today, free play to learn how to socialize, invent, and imagine is rare; instead, child's play is organized. Add in diminished recess, limited physical education, and worksheet-driven classrooms and we have a recipe for unimaginative kids who lack a passion for learning. It is no wonder that we have trouble getting kids to think creatively. If they can’t play, they can’t learn and certainly not innovate.
  • We need to promote play, passion and purpose for it and break free of fixed silos of learning. Creating innovators is not part of mainstream, conventional education that is too focused on measuring assessments through one-right answer tests.
Emily Wampler

Connecting the Digital Dots: Literacy of the 21st Century (EDUCAUSE Quarterly) | EDUCAU... - 0 views

    • Emily Wampler
       
      And wonder where they get the idea that "funds are plentiful" in education?  Hmm...
  • The greatest challenge is moving beyond the glitz and pizzazz of the flashy technology to teach true literacy in this new milieu. Using the same skills used for centuries—analysis, synthesis, and evaluation—we must look at digital literacy as another realm within which to apply elements of critical thinking.
    • Emily Wampler
       
      This is really true; just because students may be "digitally savvy" doesn't mean they are competent/scholarly users of these digital technologies.  
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  • Digital literacy represents a person’s ability to perform tasks effectively in a digital environment, with “digital” meaning information represented in numeric form and primarily for use by a computer. Literacy includes the ability to read and interpret media (text, sound, images), to reproduce data and images through digital manipulation, and to evaluate and apply new knowledge gained from digital environments. According to Gilster,5 the most critical of these is the ability to make educated judgments about what we find online.
    • Emily Wampler
       
      It's interesting how they emphasize the higher orders of thinking here-analyze, judge, apply, evaluate, etc.  There's probably lots of room for creative thinking within digital literacy, too.  
  • Visual literacy, referred to at times as visual competencies, emerges from seeing and integrating sensory experiences. Focused on sorting and interpreting—sometimes simultaneously—visible actions and symbols, a visually literate person can communicate information in a variety of forms and appreciate the masterworks of visual communication.6 Visually literate individuals have a sense of design—the imaginative ability to create, amend, and reproduce images, digital or not, in a mutable way. Their imaginations seek to reshape the world in which we live, at times creating new realities. According to Bamford,7 “Manipulating images serve[s] to re-code culture.”
    • Emily Wampler
       
      Ah ha!  There's the bit about creative thinking.  They just give it a different name: visual literacy.  
  • Competency begins with understanding
  • The idea that the world we shape in turn shapes us is a constant.
  • In the end, it seems far better to have the skills and competencies to comprehend and discriminate within a common language than to be left out, unable to understand
    • Emily Wampler
       
      I think this definitely is true, and is a good reason why we need to incorporate digital literacy in the classroom. 
  • the concept of literacy has assumed new meanings.
  • Children learn these skills as part of their lives, like language, which they learn without realizing they are learning it.3
  • A common scenario today is a classroom filled with digitally literate students being led by linear-thinking, technologically stymied instructors.
  • Although funds may be plentiful
Emily Wampler

Digital Citizenship Program Lesson Plans - 0 views

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    Great resource page full of different lesson plans (for both elementary and secondary) from a Canadian Digital Citizenship program.  Scroll down the page to see loads of individual lessons on all topics of D.C., including privacy, copyright laws, internet safety, online etiquette, cyberbullying, and so much more.  Good stuff.  
Lyndsay Kilberg

Education World: Tools to Motivate Your Students - 0 views

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    interesting article on the use of extrinsic rewards in the classroom
Lauren Tappan

Twittering, Not Frittering: Professional Development in 140 Characters | Edutopia - 0 views

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    for everyone who is unsure about twitter
Lauren Tappan

How to Use Twitter to Grow Your PLN | Edutopia - 0 views

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    here is a list of educational chat times and days on twitter
smsanders

Teachers take to Twitter to improve craft and commiserate - The Washington Post - 0 views

    • smsanders
       
      I wonder if this still happens?
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.
Allie

Infinite Learning Lab - 0 views

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    A resource for kids, parents, and teachers about internet saftey.
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