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Clayton Mitchell

How Students Leverage Social Media For Public Awareness Campaigns | Above the Fold & So... - 0 views

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    This post talks about a project where graduate students at John Carroll University were asked to use social media while learning about gender in modern Africa. The students created a public awareness campaign around an activism project. They were then charged with using social media to get the word out about their campaign. 
anonymous

Censorship in the classroom: Understanding controversial issues - 0 views

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    "Censorship in the classroom: Understanding controversial issues\n\nhttp://www.readwritethink.org/lessons/lesson_view.asp?id=203\n\nA lesson plan for grades 9-12 English Language Arts and Information Skills\nLearn more\n\n * Learn more about banned books, biases, censorship, language arts, media, persuasive writing, propaganda, reading, stereotypes, and writing.\n\nHelp\n\nPlease read our disclaimer for lesson plans.\nLegal\n\nPrint\n\n * Print\n\nShare\n\n * Email\n * Delicious Delicious\n * Digg Digg\n * Facebook Facebook\n * StumbleUpon StumbleUpon\n\nIt is important for young people to understand their individual rights and what they, as citizens, can do to protect these rights. In addition, young people need to understand the way in which bias and stereotyping are used by the media to influence popular opinion. In this ReadWriteThink lesson, students examine propaganda and media bias and explore a variety of banned and challenged books, researching the reasons these books have been censored. Following this research, students choose a side of the censorship issue and support their position through the development of an advertising campaign.\nNorth Carolina Curriculum Alignment\nEnglish Language Arts (2004)\nGrade 9\n\n * Goal 3: The learner will examine argumentation and develop informed opinions.\n o Objective 3.01: Study argument by:\n + examining relevant reasons and evidence.\n + noting the progression of ideas that substantiate the proposal.\n + analyzing style, tone, and use of language for a particular effect.\n + identifying and analyzing personal, social, historical, or cultural influences contexts, or biases.\n + identifying and analyzing rhetorical strategies that support proposals.\n\nGrade 10\n\n * Goal 3: The learner will defend argumentative positions on literary or nonliterary issues.\n o Objective 3.01: Examine controversial is
anonymous

New campaign targets online privacy for children and teens | Featured on eSchool News |... - 0 views

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    We can use Common Sense Media's Internet safety information and discourage use of the book ratings, right?
Ira Miller

Links used in Assignment for Week 8 - EdTech 541 - 1 views

Links used in this week's assignment for EdTech-541: http://www.tobaccofreekids.org/campaign/global/pdf/ag2.pdf http://www.stateoftobaccocontrol.org/2009/states/report-card.html http://dwc.hct.ac....

web 2.0 tools

started by Ira Miller on 17 Mar 10 no follow-up yet
Dennis Large

Common Core Practice | Young Voters, College Rankings and Food Journeys - 2 views

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    Presidential campaigns implement extensive efforts to capture the youth vote by posting huge amounts of information on the Internet. This lessons combines students, social media, and politics.
Ashley Ford

IXL Language Arts | Online English language arts practice - 0 views

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    IXL allows students to use drill and practice software for a specified amount of time for free. Students can join for unlimited access for a fee. Language Arts and Math are focused on and drill and practice activities are broken up by standards.
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