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Dennis OConnor

Web 2.0 Evaluation Kit - 6 views

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    Resource kit with materials about evaluation of web 2.0 content. A building block for information fluency: knowing how to evaluate digital resources.
Karen LaBonte

Standards & Software - Tool-based Software and Florida Sunshine State Standards. - 0 views

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    Software classified by category with info on how they can be used to meet FL state standards. Some lesson plans.
Dana Huff

The Knowledge Sharing Place - LiveBinders - 13 views

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    Gathering information to share? How do you pull everything together? LiveBinders is your online 3-ring binder. Best of all, it's free! Would be great for writing portfolios.
Karen LaBonte

Internet Search Challenge - 6 views

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    Retrieving the information you need from the Internet can be challenging. Internet Search Challenges provide practice and demonstrate techniques to improve your search results and find credible information. This blog introduces new challenges, discusses the difficulties and how they may be overcome.
andrew bendelow

Online Writing Teacher - 6 views

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    the expert from Drexel, letting us know how to teach writing online--the same amount of work, but perhaps better results (more and better student writing)
Teresa Ilgunas

YouTube - Hey Jude by Lyrical Flowcharts - 19 views

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    The best how to video I've seen!
The0d0re Shatagin

100 Seriously Cool Classroom Blogs for Teaching Ideas & Inspiration | Online Classes - 27 views

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    Some ideas, examples and resources on how to use blogs
Dugg Lowe

Help with paper writing - 0 views

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    No matter how you achieved on your college life it is with relation to your papers writing.
Tom McHale

Things We Say Today And Owe To Shakespeare : The Two-Way : NPR - 11 views

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    Two websites that illustrate how Shakespeare has influenced our language.
Sara Kajder

How to Listen - NYTimes.com - 13 views

    • Sara Kajder
       
      What does Gutkind argue here that surprises you?
Mark Smith

How facts backfire - The Boston Globe - 7 views

  • Recently, a few political scientists have begun to discover a human tendency deeply discouraging to anyone with faith in the power of information. It’s this: Facts don’t necessarily have the power to change our minds. In fact, quite the opposite. In a series of studies in 2005 and 2006, researchers at the University of Michigan found that when misinformed people, particularly political partisans, were exposed to corrected facts in news stories, they rarely changed their minds. In fact, they often became even more strongly set in their beliefs. Facts, they found, were not curing misinformation. Like an underpowered antibiotic, facts could actually make misinformation even stronger.
Jeff See

"Thinkbook" Reading Journals - English Companion Ning - 21 views

  • How might Archer take advantage of his marriage?
    • Jeff See
       
      Calls for analysis of his character.
  • Without May's perception, the reader has no reason to believe May is betraying their marriage by any means.
    • Jeff See
       
      Key Point. Perspective can play a large role in our understanding of a situation.
  • because of her value to society.
    • Jeff See
       
      This seems to point to a lack of "love" on his part. Good insight.
Adam Babcock

Transcript: Obama's State Of The Union Address : NPR - 4 views

  • What we can do — what America does better than anyone — is spark the creativity and imagination of our people. We are the nation that put cars in driveways and computers in offices; the nation of Edison and the Wright brothers; of Google and Facebook. In America, innovation doesn't just change our lives. It's how we make a living.
  • This is our generation's Sputnik moment.
  • That's what Americans have done for over two hundred years: reinvented ourselves
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • asking Congress to eliminate the billions in taxpayer dollars we currently give to oil companies. I don't know if you've noticed, but they're doing just fine on their own.
  • the biggest impact on a child's success comes from the man or woman at the front of the classroom. In South Korea, teachers are known as "nation builders." Here in America, it's time we treated the people who educate our children with the same level of respect.
  • If you want to make a difference in the life of our nation; if you want to make a difference in the life of a child — become a teacher. Your country needs you.
Patrick Higgins

Reading Rockets: The Six Ts of Effective Elementary Literacy Instruction - 7 views

  • The issue is less stuff vs. reading than it is a question of what sorts of and how much of stuff. When stuff dominates instructional time, warning flags should go up.
  • In less-effective classrooms, there is a lot of stuff going on for which no reliable evidence exists to support their use (e.g., test-preparation workbooks, copying vocabulary definitions from a dictionary, completing after-reading comprehension worksheets).
  • In these classrooms, lower-achieving students spent their days with books they could successfully read.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • In other words, in too many cases the lower-achieving students receive, perhaps, an hour of appropriate instruction each day and four hours of instruction based on grade-level texts they cannot read.
  • No child who spends 80 percent of his instructional time in texts that are inappropriately difficult will make much progress academically.
  • These exemplary teachers routinely offered direct, explicit demonstrations of the cognitive strategies used by good readers when they read. In other words, they modeled the thinking that skilled readers engage while they attempt to decode a word, self-monitor for understanding, summarize while reading, or edit when composing. The "watch me" or "let me demonstrate" stance they took seems quite different from the "assign and assess" stance that dominates in less-effective classrooms (e.g., Adams, 1990; Durkin, 1978-79).
    • Patrick Higgins
       
      This makes great sense: children need to see what experts do when they read.  
  • I must also note that we observed almost no test-preparation activity in these classrooms. None of the teachers relied on the increasingly popular commercial test preparation materials (e.g., workbooks, software). Instead, these teachers believed that good instruction, rich instruction, would lead to enhanced test performances.
Mark Smith

We Can't Teach Students to Love Reading - The Chronicle Review - The Chronicle of Highe... - 14 views

  • My hyper-attentive habits were alienating me further and further from the much older and (one would have thought) more firmly established habits of deep attention. I was rapidly becoming a victim of my own mind's plasticity, until a new technology helped me to remember how to do something that for years had been instinctive, unconscious, natural.
Leslie Healey

How to Talk about Books You Haven't Read by Pierre Bayard - Powell's Books - 12 views

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    I do not know whether to laugh or cry. Author obviously is a dedicated reader but non readers will not even get the joke! 
Karen LaBonte

Comic Life in the Classroom - 4 views

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    22 ways to use Comic Life in the classroom
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