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Lourdes Ornelas

Online Training Software - Virtual Classroom Software | Saba Classroom - 0 views

  • What you can do with Saba Classroom Build classes quickly Improve interaction Record and reuse classes High satisfaction and retention rates Leverage existing LMS investments Open APIs for third-party integration
    • Lourdes Ornelas
       
      ASF might want to consider
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    This company has a software which allows teaching classes through the internet in real time in a virtual class environment
Lisa Stewart

Developing Visual Literacy In The Classroom - 0 views

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    short slideshare powerpoint about developing visual literacy in the classroom. 
Carolina Montes

Alternative Video Use in the Flipped Classroom - 0 views

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    This article shares different ways of using videos in the classroom. 
Ruth Santiago

Gaming in the Classroom | Visual.ly - 0 views

    • Ruth Santiago
       
      Why bring electronic games into the classroom? 
Lourdes Ornelas

visualization tools for education - Buscar con Google - 0 views

    • Lourdes Ornelas
       
      Here you'll find a very useful Power Point presentation on Visualization Tools 
  • [PPT]  Visualization Tools for the Classroomwww.geongrid.org/csig09/.../Kirk_CSIG_AM.pp...Similares - Traducir esta páginaHaz hecho público que te gusta. DeshacerFormato de archivo: Microsoft Powerpoint - Ver en versión HTMLVisualization Tools for the Classroom. Karin Kirk, Cathy Manduca, Carol Ormand. Science Education Resource Center Carleton College. SERC. the Science ...
Sarah Rachel

Google Reader (186) - 0 views

  • Students get to share their ideas in a way they can be proud of. Blogging is great for this because the posts are read not only by classmates, but also by anyone else who stumbles upon them online. Blogging promotes the development of good writing skills, so helping students take ownership of the project can help them write well. Blogging provides students with an outlet for things they may not get to share in the classroom, so giving looser guidelines on topics can bring about more interesting blog posts.
  • Gaming teaches students survival skills that they use in school and throughout their lives
  • Practical skills
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  • Teamwork
  • Goal-orientation
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    An informative guide to how to set up a student blog in the classroom.
jennifer lee byrnes

NSTA Learning Center - 0 views

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    Flipped Classroom
Lisa Stewart

Visual Literacy Across the Curriculum - YouTube - 0 views

    • Lisa Stewart
       
      really neat, and really visual! A great intro into using visual literacy in your classroom.  
jennifer lee byrnes

Infographics for the Writing Classroom: The Basics | Learnist - 0 views

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    Great Idea for using infographics in education!
Mariana Perez Galan

Life on the Screen: Visual Literacy in Education | Edutopia - 1 views

  • We need to look at the whole world of communication in a more complete way. We need to take art and music out of "the arts class" and put it into the English class. For instance, the various forms of communication form a circle. On one end of this circle is math, the least emotional of all forms of communication. It's very strict and very concise, and has a very precise way of explaining something. Then you start moving around the circle, and you get to the other end, where we have music, which primarily appeals to your emotions, not to your intellect. So, in this great circle of communication, you go from the emotional end of music and painting and art -- the visual forms of communication -- to the written communication and spoken communication. Finally, you end up at math, which is the most precise. It forms a beautiful circle of communication. But it's all part of the same circle. All these forms of communication are extremely important, and they should be treated that way. Unfortunately, we've moved away from teaching the emotional forms of communication. But if you want to get along in this world, you need to have a heightened sense of emotional intelligence, which is the equal of your intellectual intelligence. One of my concerns is that we're advancing intellectually very fast, but we're not advancing emotionally as quickly.
    • Pedro Aparicio
       
      As educators we need to have visual, written and spoken forms of communication in our classrooms. It is vital to work on emotional intelligence to find out about how our kids are feeling at the moment.
  • hey need to understand a new language of expression
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  • Our system of education is locked in a time capsule.
  • we also need to understand the importance of graphics, music, and cinema
  • What do students need to be learning that they're not
  • Knowing these things is as important as knowing what a verb and a subject are, what a period and an exclamation point mean.
  • ut there are rules for telling a story visually that are just as important as grammatical rules or math terms, and you can test people on them as well. There is grammar in film, there is grammar in graphics, there is grammar in music, just like there are rules in math that can be taught. For instance, what emotion does the color red convey? What about blue? What does a straight line mean? How about a diagonal line?
  • They need to understand a new language of expression. The way we are educating is based on nineteenth-century ideas and methods. Here we are, entering the twenty-first century, and you look at our schools and ask, 'Why are we doing things in this ancient way?' Our system of education is locked in a time capsule. You want to say to the people in charge, 'You're not using today's tools! Wake up!'
  • How do we bring these lessons into the classroom? We need to look at the
  • whole world of communication in a more complete way. We need to take art and music out of "the arts class" and put it into the English class.
  • We must accept the fact that learning how to communicate with graphics, with music, with cinema, is just as important as communicating with words. Understanding these rules is as important as learning how to make a sentence work.
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    Talks about the importance of the language of images  and visual references.
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    George Lucas advocating for visual literacy!  This is a man who knows how important it is to be sucessfull in this area! 
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    We need to keep up with constant change, technology, methods, discoveries, We need to teach our children how everything that surrounds them is a powerful tool for them to comprehend the world.
Jenna Kubricht

School of Education at Johns Hopkins University-Visual Literacy and the Classroom - 0 views

  • reading and writing will most likely remain at the heart of standard literacy education, educators should reconsider what it means to be literate in the technological age
  • students benefit from learning in ways that allow them to participate fully in public, community, and economic life.
  • Anyone who has suffered through an 8pt text-jammed PowerPoint presentation can recognize the delicate balance between verbal and visual
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  • implementing visual and sound elements into texts.
  • Some students displayed high level graphics manipulation using skills they taught themselves, an indicator of high motivation.
  • teachers empower their students with the necessary tools to thrive in increasingly media-varied environments.
  • Advertisers understand how to reach youngsters (and really, just about anyone) far better than educators.
  • Just as the visual language of point and click and scroll has become transparent and embedded into modern culture, so have the messages to buy Coke and shop at the Gap.
  • What am I looking at? What does this image mean to me? What is the relationship between the image and the displayed text message? How is this message effective?
  • Moreover, visual literacy instruction will better prepare students for the dynamic and constantly changing online world they will inevitably be communicating through.
David Rueb

Free Technology for Teachers: A Great Guide to Twitter in the Classroom - 0 views

    • David Rueb
       
      Great little powerpoint explanation below
Ellie Molyneux

The "Eyes" Have It | Picture This! Visual Literacy in the Classroom - 0 views

    • Ellie Molyneux
       
      This website is very helpful to me for a number of reasons! The author is a teacher who has posted consistently about her own experiences with visual literacy in the classroom, and she also links to a ton of helpful readings and supplementary lesson plans. This is a good model for how to blog effectively and it also provides a good platform to explore visual literacy topics, especially in primary grades.
Ellie Molyneux

Technology Does Not Make a Classroom Succesful, the Teacher Does « Cooperativ... - 0 views

    • Ellie Molyneux
       
      It is always interesting to read both sides of the story, and while this is certainly not a well-researched piece like Lemke's, the conclusion does summarize a few points about how schools can support teachers in making the most of technology.
Carolina Montes

Alternative Video Use in the Flipped Classroom - 0 views

    • Carolina Montes
       
      When to use a video: 1. VIDEO INTRODUCES TOPIC and CLASS TIME EXPANDS ON IT
    • Carolina Montes
       
      2. A video as an interlude to introduce a challenge
    • Carolina Montes
       
      3. To show H.W.
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    • Carolina Montes
       
      4. As video prompts reflections. 
Luis Leon

Google Reader (198) - 0 views

  • But the obvious thing to do was to evolve the potential of this very stable listserv in a number of social media ways. While I am not sure which of these will be the favourites, the idea looks something like this: share a link on the listserv and store it for easy retrieval any time in the Diigo group! share your library images in Flickr, because we need to collect the ideas from around Australia Like us on Facebook – and include us in your News Feed. Share things you find, and get into the conversation. Perhaps 140 characters on Twitter will be just the thing for you – just another way to stay in touch and build the teacher librarian community.
  • Most K-12 classrooms in the United States today don’t use interactive blogs. By “interactive,” I mean a blog website which permits posts from students as well as the teacher, and comments from blog visitors as well as class members. As I explained in my post earlier this week on the iThemes education blog,
  • The past two months, I’ve had opportunities to ask different groups of educators the same question via an interactive SMS poll powered by PollEverywhere. The question I’ve asked has been: How many different assignments last year did you invite students to share on your interactive, classroom blog? The graph below summarizes responses in early June in Fort Bend ISD, which is in Houston, Texas. Of 156 respondents, 78% answered “zero.”
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  • Ypix.me is a simple service that you can use to share images with others. To use the service just upload a picture and Ypix.me generates a link that you can share via email or your favorite social network. If you're using Chrome or the latest version of Firefox you can simply drag images from your desktop to Ypix.me to share them.
  • Applications for Education If your students are capturing images to use in multimedia projects and they need to share those images with others, Ypix.me could be a handy little tool for that purpose. No registration is required in order to use Ypix.me.
Charmaine Weatherbee

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

  • Literacy today depends on understanding the multiple media that make up our high-tech reality and developing the skills to use them effectively
  • the concept of literacy has assumed new meanings
  • Digital and visual literacies are the next wave of communication specialization
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  • Children learn these skills as part of their lives, like language, which they learn without realizing they are learning it.
  • ommon scenario today is a classroom filled with digitally literate students being led by linear-thinking, technologically stymied instructors
  • The greatest challenge is moving beyond the glitz and pizzazz of the flashy technology to teach true literacy in this new milieu
  • 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.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.”
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