Skip to main content

Home/ EDTECH at Boise State University/ Group items tagged interactives

Rss Feed Group items tagged

ron gardiner

PowerPoint: Using macros to increase interactivity - 1 views

I found both these links very interesting and informative this week as I was working to make a presentation more interactive. Drag and Drop PowerPoint Macro: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wQHhh...

Education technology teaching tools

started by ron gardiner on 01 Oct 12 no follow-up yet
Gretel Patch

ePals Global Community - What's outside my Window? - 0 views

  •  
    This ePals project brings K-8 students together to explore "What's Outside My Window?" Through email interaction, students will build relationships with students in another part of the world and develop a table of similarities and differences. Using photos they have taken, students will create a collaborative presentation to demonstrate their learning.
annieyip

Personal Learning Networks - 0 views

  •  
    This article by Amy Chu on the Education in America website discusses how professional development has evolved from face to face interactions to online discussions. It lists some of the many websites used by teachers now to create these PLNs.
Clayton Mitchell

Can Social Media Play A Role in Improving Retention in Higher Education? Research Says ... - 0 views

  •  
    "Studies have concluded that social engagement can benefit retention efforts, and schools and teachers are successfully pursuing this tactic with the help of social media applications." This is an article that points to studies indicating that just as social interaction can help with student retention, both in the field of study and at the school, so to can social media fill this need. 
meganapgar

Classroom Aid | Learning Games - Social Studies - 0 views

  •  
    This site aggregates information on history games, interactives, and simulations resources. There are currently 126 shared games.
alannashaw

My Library - 1 views

  •  
    This article summarizes the results from two research studies of how communities of practice can improve the classroom experience and instruction. Interactions among students and social opportunities were the emphasis of the studies. Some key questions in the studies were: How does relationship building affect student learning in communities of practice? How do different types of assignments and class activities affect learning?
kristiedtech

The Future Of LMS and Personal Learning Environments - 4 views

  •  
    This article focuses on the future of the learning management system in online education. It argues that the closed LMS is incapable of offering the interactivity of web 2.0 technologies to students. It stresses the need for greater connectivity and environments that can be personalized.
  •  
    I had never heard of start pages until reading this article. Are these used? I didn't recognize any of the products listed.
  •  
    As the person in charge of the LMS at the School of Nursing, I find this article to be completely valid. We have some younger faculty that want to do more than our LMS will allow, even with some of the widgets that have been added. The main problem that we have is that our current faculty simply use our LMS as a place to provide information instead of encouraging students to use it more like a PLE.
nicsza

Two great Science Simulations Websites for physics and chemistry - 0 views

Colorodo Phet - HTML 5 and Java Interactive Simulations: https://phet.colorado.edu/ Sim Bucket - HTML 5 Interactive Simulations https://www.simbucket.com/

edtech541 resources teaching

started by nicsza on 29 Jan 17 no follow-up yet
Leanne Tacosik

Evolving Strategies for Using Interactive Video Resources in Mathematics Classrooms. - 1 views

This article was used to provide evidence that the use of videos in a classroom lesson was beneficial to students and helped them become more engaged in their lesson. Reference Phillips, R., Pead...

education technology resources tools digital learning

started by Leanne Tacosik on 26 Jun 16 no follow-up yet
Leanne Tacosik

Creating an Interactive Quiz using Google Slides - 1 views

Coding with Dad. (2016). How to create a quiz in Google Slides for school. Retrieved from https://youtu.be/P4fIvP5pf5Q. This video tutorial provides step by step instructions on how to create an ...

education technology tools

started by Leanne Tacosik on 21 Jun 16 no follow-up yet
Molli Brown

Haring Kids | Welcome - 1 views

shared by Molli Brown on 05 Jul 12 - Cached
  •  
    Created by the Keith Haring Foundation this site is full of fun activities for kids, images of Keith Haring's artwork, a movie on his life, snapshots of Haring working, virtual interactive books by the artist, links to over 180 lesson plans, and more.
Nona Barker

Communities of Practice: a brief introduction - 3 views

  •  
    This is an excellent overview of what communities of practice are, the characteristics that define them and some examples of what they "look" like. Gives great information to those new to the idea.
  • ...2 more comments...
  •  
    An introduction to Communities of Practice which provides a well written yet concise overview of the systems organization and application in the real world.
  •  
    Summary: This user-friendly article discusses what CoPs are and what they look like. I appreciated the fact that Etienne Wenger says a CoP could be " … a tribe learning to survive, a band of artists seeking new forms of expression, a group of engineers working on similar problems, a clique of pupils defining their identity in the school, a network of surgeons exploring novel techniques, a gathering of first-time managers helping each other cope." However, he also adds, that sharing the same job or the same job title doesn't mean you are part of a CoP. A true community must interact and learn together! This article provides a great starting point for those who do not know much about CoP and / or where the concept came from.
  •  
    I really enjoyed the author's writing style which included metaphors and lots of examples and non-examples of COP. I noticed this blog post was 2006, and so I was curious what the author had been involved with since this post, especially since he points out the importance of sustained interaction. He now has a consulting business to help problem solve education solutions found at http://wenger-trayner.com/
  •  
    Excellent resource to begin to understand CoP's. Etienne Wenger was cited in many of the articles I researched.
Russell Nash

Communities of Practice - 4 views

  •  
    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.
  • ...4 more comments...
  •  
    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.
  •  
    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
  •  
    This is just a basic definition of communities of practice. It is a very easy way to understand it.
  •  
    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.
  •  
    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.
  •  
    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.
Clayton Mitchell

Connectivism: A new pathway for theorising and promoting mobile language learning - 0 views

  •  
    The authors of the paper postulate that traditional learning theories do not adequately cover the use of mobile technologies, particularly phones in a learning context. This paper looks at a class of native Arabic speaking students learning English as a second language through the use of mobile phones and facebook. They conclude that in this context, connectivism fully accounts for the interactions that their students naturally gravitated towards when interacting in english thus furthering their study of interest.
Jaime Bennett

Connectivism - Emerging Perspectives on Learning, Teaching and Technology - 0 views

  •  
    This wiki describes the basic premise of connectivism. Included in the wiki is a table that compares major epistemological philosophies with connectivism.
  •  
    This site defines connectivism and provides a clear list of some of the principles George Siemens deems to be most important to this theory. There is also a fun interactive component that allows the viewer to consider a situation involving connectivism that could be applied to the lives of many people.
angi_lewis

Communities of Practice - 2 views

  •  
    Etienne Wenger discusses elements of Communities of Practice, with a focus on the private sector. Though the discussion is pertinent to all uses of CoP. Noted as a crucial component is how the community is managed by facilitators, for that is who is ultimately responsible for caring for the domain of information. And who must know what the group needs in order to prosper. Where the information is being shared by peers to address questions and challenges in common. While interactions among community members include cultural and structural components, there is space for each participant to realize their identity through connections and engagement
Ag Gaire

Draw a Stickman - 2 views

  •  
    fun, interactive drawing site---simple line drawings are transformed into a story
Ashley Leneway

MrNussbaum.com - A Thousand Sites in One; Educational Games in math, reading, science, ... - 0 views

  •  
    Mr. Nussbaum has created an impressive resource list of educational, interactive games and websites divided by educational category.
Gretel Patch

Intel Education: The Journey Inside - 0 views

  •  
    Collection of 35 interactive free online lesson for students to learn about technology, computers, and society. No need to register.
Molli Brown

Smarthistory: a multimedia web-book about art and art history - 0 views

  •  
    An amazing virtual interactive art history timeline. 
« First ‹ Previous 41 - 60 of 320 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page