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Ashley Leneway

SurveyMonkey: Free online survey software & questionnaire tool - 0 views

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    SurveyMonkey is a free online service used for surveys and questionnaires. Need to get anonymous feedback? Create a survey using SurveyMonkey. It's quick, it's easy and best of all the basic package is free. This can also be an excellent resources to receive feedback about your interactive presentations.
meganapgar

Integrating Technology and Literacy | Edutopia - 0 views

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    A middle school language arts educator shares his favorite digital tools for text and video annotations, teacher feedback, and formative assessment.
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    A middle school language arts educator shares his favorite digital tools for text and video annotations, teacher feedback, and formative assessment.
Rhonda Lowderback

Using Diigo in the Classroom - 0 views

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    Dr. Steven Yuen presents on the use of Diigo in classrooms. Notably, faculty members can use Diigo to comment and provide feedback on sticky notes that students have made in Diigo, on both their research and projects.
ShellyWalters

Social Media in Education - YouTube - 0 views

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    This is a student's reflection on the use of social media in a patent engineering course.  He had positive feedback and even offered a suggestion to make it easier to find other students' work.  He gave examples of what the students did in the course.
vanessa botts

Personal Learning Networks: Knowledge Sharing as Democracy | Open Education | HYBRID PE... - 0 views

  • instead constructed from knowledge distributed across networks and on the Web.
  • r assistive guides for self-directed learners—work to develop the fluency required to succeed in these spaces.
  • there is also evidence suggesting social communication strengthens human relationships, particularly for introverts, and has benefitted families, youth and businesses around the world.
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  • The PLN consists of relationships between individuals where the goal is   enhancement of mutual learning
  • The currency of the PLN is learning in the form of feedback, insights, documentation, new contacts, or new business opportunities. It is based on reciprocity and a level of trust that each party is actively seeking value-added information for the other.
  • Underlying the development of a PLN is the need for individual learners to be able to have the capacity for self-direction, which requires a higher level of learning maturity—an absence of which may represent a barrier for a percentage of adults to learn in this way.
  • play an important role in creating richness within a PLN, too. Learners who store important information in Web 2.0 tools such as wikis, blogs, microblogs, social bookmarking and on other platforms create quickly accessible resources.
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    Seamon states in this article that there is evidence that social communication (PLN) can strengthen human relationships, particularly for introverts. It may help foster family and business as well. It encompasses learning from feedback, insights, new contacts, and is based in reciprocity and trust. It is needed to increase the chance of higher levels of learning maturity.
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    The author addresses concerns about the feelings of isolation that can stem from the use of technology (in the sense that it is utilized to the exclusion of in-person connections) but makes sure to point out the benefits of technology as evidenced by Personal Learning Networks.
Christina Jorgensen

Twitter hashtag each week - 0 views

http://readwrite.com/2009/06/01/how_one_teacher_uses_twitter_in_the_classroom This teacher uses Twitter for comments, questions, and feedback. The teacher assigns a new hashtag for each week to o...

education technology edTech543

started by Christina Jorgensen on 31 Oct 12 no follow-up yet
Molly Large

Douchy's Biology Podcast - 0 views

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    While there is also a closed group for members of the class, Douchy's Biology Podcast page is open to anyone wanting to learn biology. Students post questions and provide comments and feedback.
Hanna Coleman

Social Media for Science Outreach - A Case Study: Upper-level biology students blog abo... - 0 views

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    Science students use blogs to reflect and share their research. They commented on each others' blogs and provided feedback. The students found this to be a valuable experience.
jescaron

Student Response Technology: Empirically grounded or just a gimmick? - International Jo... - 0 views

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    Abstract: Student Response Technology (SRT) involves the use of hand-held remotes by students during classroom lectures to electronically respond to questions. This study surveyed 350 students enrolled in one of 13 lower-division university science classes taught by five different instructors who used SRT. The survey probed students' perceptions of SRT in terms of enhancing student learning, and investigated which features of SRT students felt had the greatest/least impact on student learning. The majority of students reported that the SRT increased their content understanding, class participation, alertness, and interactions with fellow students, helped with examination preparation, provided important and immediate instructor feedback, and made class more enjoyable. Students in this study scored more positively than peer groups on survey questions related to student engagement in academic and intellectual experiences, suggesting that SRT helps to promote student engagement. Important instructor actions identified during this study that augment the enhancing effects of SRT on student learning, even in large lecture settings, include designing clear, substantive questions, reviewing correct and incorrect answers with students, and making pedagogical adjustments based on class responses.
Janice Bezanson

NVDA Screen Reader - 0 views

shared by Janice Bezanson on 06 Mar 11 - Cached
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    This is a free open sources screen reader for Windows operating systems. It provides feedback using both Brailled and a synthetic voice.
khegel

PenPal News - 0 views

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    PenPalNews allows people to create an anonymous pen pal relationship in order to obtain feedback from someone or just to chat. Students can get feedback on opinions or can complete research from other areas of the world.
joshgiudicelli

unit1finalprojectpdf | Romeo And Juliet | Twitter - 0 views

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    This project has students recreating scenes from older text using social media. Here, students were given different scenes from the play Romeo and Juliet. Students had to retell the scene using different social media platforms. This involved them creating accounts for the characters in their scene and reenacting it through the digital medium. When they were finished with their project they needed to tweet out the results to the class. Then they could view other peoples projects and comment on what they had done. This project gives students a way to think about older situations and reimagine them. It requires them to understand the important pieces of their scene and express them in a contemporary way. The feedback element through Twitter provides an audience for their work where they can get praise and feedback. This project would likely take a longer amount of time if social media accounts had not already been made, but it would be a great culminating activity. Freshman at my school read this play and I could see myself using this project.
Ilene Reed

Learning Communities - 5 views

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    Learning Forward notes that learning communities are those in which "Professional learning that increases educator effectiveness and results for all students occurs within learning communities committed to continuous improvement, collective responsibility, and goal alignment."
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    Hi Molly, This article gave a helpful overview of learning communities. I specifically found value in the section focusing on collective responsibility. Participation is key in learning communities and includes feedback, clear communication, collaboration, trust, shared focus, and accountability. Educators need to invest in their learning community and teach students how to utilize technologies in order to do so. Thanks for sharing, Hanna
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    Hi Molly - Another part that plays into the development of learning communities is the creation of policies to set formal accountability for student learning. This was the first resource that I have come across that mentions about policies, visions, and goals - you almost forget that still needs to be in place!
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    Greetings Molly, Thank you for sharing this article. I especially liked the video. In a perfect world all grades and subjects would be aligned. I think most schools attempt continual improvement by evaluating student data. I hope. I like the idea of owning students in such a way as to be responsible for all student learning. Good article.
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    Bookmarked from Molly on EdTech SN
Melissa Getz

Educational Leadership:The Key to Changing the Teaching Profession:Professional Learnin... - 2 views

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    Suggestions on ways to maximize efficiency, reminders that telling/sharing may not be the same as facilitating, and examples of ways to turn routine activities into collaborative or connective activities.
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    I actually found myself getting excited about the thought of communicating with staff in a more effective and efficient way. So many times we attend staff meetings and have to take that time to read articles instead of using it to benefit our students' learning. I would love to see this changed SOON! #EdTechSN
Christina Jorgensen

Kindles in the class - 0 views

http://mykindleclassroom.blogspot.com/2012_10_01_archive.html Students can use Kindles to highlight readings and then twitter the notes from it. Students would be able to share thoughts on readin...

education technology web2.0 edTech543

started by Christina Jorgensen on 31 Oct 12 no follow-up yet
Christina Jorgensen

Blogs to share work. - 0 views

http://www.educationnews.org/ednews_today/157355.html Students share essays, projects, and poems, short stories, book reports on a secure password protected webpage. By doing this students are ab...

education web2.0 tools edTech543

started by Christina Jorgensen on 31 Oct 12 no follow-up yet
lglaeser0925

What connectivism is - 0 views

http://halfanhour.blogspot.com/2007/02/what-connectivism-is.html A blog post by Stephen Downs that discusses connectivism including responses to others who have provided thoughts or feedback on co...

edtech543 resources connectivism

started by lglaeser0925 on 31 Aug 16 no follow-up yet
Jared Ritchey

6 great accessibility resources for improving your online course offerings - 0 views

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    This is a good resource for teachers that are interested in making their online courses more accessible. One of the resources is Quality Matters, an online certification process for online classes that sets standards and provides feedback on courses. At my school, we're currently in the process of making sure all of our online courses pass Quality Matter's standards and it's really improving the course curriculum.
skyrablanchard

Easy-to-use voting tool for interactive presentations - IQ Polls - 0 views

shared by skyrablanchard on 16 Jun 16 - No Cached
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    Ask questions and get real-time feedback from your audience. Your audience can participate by voting both with SMS and with web browsers.
Russell Nash

Communities of Practice - 4 views

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    Eckert looks at Communities of Practice (COP) to study situated language use. She finds that the COP is important because of "its focus on the fluidity of social space and the diversity of experience" (p. 3). She finds the COP to be complementary to the speech community and that feedback between the two approaches would provide the best process for analysis.
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    Communities of practice are groups of people who share the same job or a common interest in a subject. They come together to form a link to help each other perform in the world around them. This article talks about the value of communities of practice and how and why they work.
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    Eckert, P. (2006). Communities of practice. ELL, 2, 683-685. In this article, Mrs. Eckert does a great job in simplifying what a community of practice entails and means. She allows you to visualize the communities you belong to as well as other communities of practice you interact with or observe on a daily basis. One important distinction is that the author of this work is written from the sense of sociolinguistics and linguistic anthropology and not from an educator's mind set. Irrespective of this standpoint, you can see direct correlations to where students understand themselves and what communities of practice your own student population may fall under. In order to understand the social development of communities of practice Mrs. Eckert does a good job in breaking down common cores that can emerge from memberships. The linguistic side she writes, "A white working class Italian-American woman does not develop her ways of speaking directly from the larger categorical working class, Italian American, and female, but from her day to day experience as a person who combines those three memberships. Her experience will be articulated by her participation in activities and communities of practice that are particular to her place in the social order."(Eckert, 2006) Building upon that theory, she discusses the importance of social space "Emma Moore's study of teenage girls in Northern England (Moore 2003) traced the gradual split of a group of somewhat rebellious "populars" as some of them emerged as the tougher "townies" in their ninth year. In the process, the vernacular speech patterns of the "townies" intensified in opposition to those of their more Conservative friends". (Eckert, 2006) While the article sheds more light on the development of speech patterns and dialects through the medium of communities, we can also see the definition in practice in which a collection of people gather together over a common interest and then orients to their new surrounding
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    This is just a basic definition of communities of practice. It is a very easy way to understand it.
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    Communities of practice (CoP) are created through a community of people who have common interests. In communities of practice, Eckert (2006) explains "a community of practice develops ways of doing things, views, values, power relations, and ways of talking" (p.1). CoP's have a way of providing a personal identity and a way of speaking within a CoP.
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    Communities of Practice: Eckert describes a community of practice (CoP) as a group of people who interact ongoing with a common goal or endeavor. Sometimes they come about by similar interests, the workplace, and education. She concludes that communities of practice are very powerful inside and outside the community.
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    Penelope Eckert discusses the value of a community of practice in linguistic studies, giving a definition for a community of practice and distinguishing it from a more conventional linguistic construct: speech communities. Communities of practice link broad social patterns with concrete, observable behavior in individuals. They emphasize individual experience over demographic generalities. They address dynamic, fringe effects within a community. They build on social constructivism as groups of people engage in active sense-making.
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