Skip to main content

Home/ Engaging Digital Natives/ Group items tagged explorer

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Jennifer Dorman

Music Explorer - 0 views

  •  
    Music Explorer is powered and updated by the real iDing activities of over 20 million users and provides you with a diversity of tracks or artists you might be interested in, based on the starting point of your journey. Explorer gives you this as a 'map' of related artists, tracks or users based on how many other members have tagged these as well as your original track or artist.
Rhondda Powling

Kids' Vid: Teaching Kids'vid - 0 views

  •  
    "This section is for teachers. It is a resource that will provide practical suggestions on how to integrate video production into the curriculum. This section will also explore the world of media literacy."
Rhondda Powling

Samorost 2 - 0 views

  •  
    is a beautiful browser based flash puzzle game. The animation, illustration. sound and character development is amazing. A stand out in the genre of online games and puzzles. The basic level is also FREE, loads fast and invites exploration! It is so visually rich that it can easily be used to create a digital story or narrative well outside the computer screen. The art is engaging and contemporary in young children's animation right now
Jennifer Dorman

Bugscope: Home - 0 views

  • The Bugscope project provides free interactive access to a scanning electron microscope (SEM) so that students anywhere in the world can explore the microscopic world of insects. This educational outreach program from the Beckman Institute's Imaging Technology Group at the University of Illinois supports K-16 classrooms worldwide.
  • Bugscope allows teachers everywhere to provide students with the opportunity to become microscopists
Jeff Johnson

Teach Digital: Curriculum by Wes Fryer wiki / cellphones - 0 views

  • iPhones in the classroom? Are you kidding? No I'm not! Cell phones are often banned in the classroom or banned entirely from schools. Most cell phones today have more computing power than those available to NASA during the Apollo space program, however. In this session we'll explore ways cell phones, including the iPhone but not JUST the iPhone, can be used to help learners access web-based content, remix it, share it, collaborate with others, and create media-rich deliverables for the classroom teacher as well as a global audience. A specific focus on using cell phones as mobile recorders for digital storytelling projects, like the Library of Congress' Veteran Oral History Project, will also be included.
1 - 8 of 8
Showing 20 items per page