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andrewmacrae

The TES - Education Jobs, Teaching Resources, Magazine & Forums - 0 views

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    A uk website which is one of the world's biggest collection of resources. While a lot is UK based a lot is transferable. Great stuff and real community of sharing teachers.
Alissa Blackburn

Lisa Highfill - 0 views

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    Great resources in her tech trainings and classroom websites.
Amanda Hatherly

John Seely Brown: Chief of Confusion - 0 views

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    John Seely Brown is an amazing thinker! There is so much to read and watch on his website - he writes about 21st century education, including participatory learning and networks. His book "A New Culture of Learning" is superb.
Amanda Hatherly

Connected Learning TV - 0 views

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    So much information about connected learning on this website, including videos, case studies, webinars and more. I love this quote from it: "Connected learning is when you're pursuing knowledge & expertise around something you care deeply about, and you're supported by friends & institutions who share & recognize this common passion or purpose." And look at this great infographic: http://connectedlearning.tv/infographic
Ross Craycraft

The Chronicle of Higher Education - 2 views

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    If I am sharing a site that probably visit the most, it would probably be The Chronicle of Higher Education. I love the writing and insight this site provides, along with the colorful debates in the comments section that some of the topics ignite.
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    The chronicle of Higher Education website provides peer reviewed in depth discussion about all things higher ed. This website gives great insight into edtech trends, policy debate and breaking higher education news.
bwiedeman

Adobe Kuler - 2 views

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    I taught Yearbook for the past three years and I loved teaching color theory to students. Kuler is a really fantastic website because it allows students to explore great color schemes but it also allows to create color schemes right in the website and then you can export them to Photoshopl
Levi Fletcher

A favorite website - dy/dan - 2 views

shared by Levi Fletcher on 01 Sep 14 - Cached
karencameron liked it
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    Trying to figure out this Diigo thing... This is a website by a guy named Dan Meyer who writes on math education. In particular, I'd recommend checking out his "Three Acts" posts.
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    Dan is an amazing individual! I had the pleasure of meeting him last April. We had a good chat and he seemed genuinely interested in what I had to say.
andrewmacrae

The Educator's PLN website - 8 views

I like the practicality of this site - more practice and a centre for PLNs than theory. A site I will use I think which is the whole point.

edtech543 PLNforeducators edchat PLN groups social media

Amanda Hatherly

Connected Learning Alliance - Make Learning Relevant - 2 views

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    The CLA supports educators, youth organizations and others to create meaningful social, interest driven, civic and participatory learning opportunities for youth. Watch the videos on the "Why Connected Learning" page of the website.
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    Great videos on connected learning. How do I get my school to that place? Very true, traditional learning used to take place within the confines of a school, but now we have so much more we can offer students. I passed it along to my admin, he has this line of thinking, but we need to encourage follow through.
Kim Hefty

Connectivism - 1 views

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    This article is actually a blog on connetivism. THe author of this post focuses on "sensemaking". He defines it as, Sensemaking is an activity that individuals engage in daily in response to uncertainty, complex topics, or in changing settings. Sensemaking is not about truth or right from wrong, bu rather about making information make sense.
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    This blog houses a wealth of information on connectivism and shared knowlege. While I did not read every post, there is a large variety of articles, posted by various authors, written in the past several years. I think this would be a great place to conduct research on current information since there are articles only a few months old.
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    This is a website dedicated to blogging on connectivism. Apparently no one cares about it anymore because the last post to it was over a year ago. However, it has quite a bit of content from 2005 to 2012 about connectivistic topics such as MOOCs and sensemaking.
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    Here is a great blog site from George Siemens where he posts on various topics in education and their relativity to connectivism. The blog has not been updated in some time, but there is still a lot of great info on the site.
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    This website page is the perfect summary of what Connectivism is and what it really represents. Stephen Downes states, "Learning is the creation and removal of connections between the entities, or the adjustment of the strengths of those connections. " This is probably the best resource I have found for truly understanding what Connectivism really is.
karencameron

Intro to communities of practice - 8 views

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    This shows how communities of practice is defined, explains the process of how they've created and what they look like. Further explanation into how they can be applied in a wide variety of environments. The application part discusses how specifically it can exist within education both internally and externally. For EDTECH students, web communities of practice enable us to " extend the reach of our interactions beyond the geographical limitations of traditional communities."
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    I like the table they provide that asks the question that a community of practice would ask for each category. I like how they always use the word "we" because of the community aspect.
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    This is a great intro to communities of practice. I've been referring to this site as I work on my creative expression. I like how its written in plain language and easy to understand. The way the theory is broken down is also really helpful.
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    I appreciated the definition. Specifically, I appreciated the distinction between a community and a community of practice based on these three characteristics: the domain (an identity defined by a shared interest(s), the community (engaging in joint activities. Interestingly, a website or having the same job/title is not a community unless there is mutual learning), and the practice (mutual interests do not make a community of practice; by definition, members must be practitioners.) I also found interesting that 1) learning can be the reason or an incidental outcome and 2) sometimes people may not even know that they form a community of practice (for instance, nurses meeting regularly at lunch to discuss their prof. practice.) Thank you for sharing!
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    Etienne Wenger-Trayner explains what CoPs are, where the idea originated, and how the idea of CoPs are being applied in different domains.
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    This website provides an introduction to Communities of Practice, which includes the characteristics of a CoP, examples of Communities of Practice, and how the theory is being applied.
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    This article was incredibly helpful in my comprehension of CoPs. It explains what they are, their three domains, what they look like, and how they are being applied in real life.
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    This is a great resource giving the reader an introduction to CoP - a group of people who share a concern or a passion for something they do and learn how to do it better as they interact regularly.. The best part of this resource are the 3 critical characteristics of a CoP (domain, community, and practice) explained well.
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    I forgot to add my summary! This is an excellent source that fully explains what a Community of Practice is and how it can be applied. "Communities of practice are groups of people who share a concern or a passion for something they do and learn how to do it better as they interact regularly." I particularly liked the section about what CoPs actually look like. This is a must have resource for every EdTech student.
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    The author lists three "must-haves" to be considered a community of practice: the domain - shared interest, the community - learn from each other, the practice - share a repertoire of resources. Communities of practice fall back to learning theories. The term community of practice refers to a living curriculum. The concept is being applied in organizations, government, education, associations, social sector, international development, and the web.
Melissa Getz

Art Room 161 - 0 views

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    Tim Needles' class If you need inspiration on ways you can add art, design, or creative student projects to your class, check out this website.
jrkrolson

Spelling & Vocabulary Website: SpellingCity - 0 views

shared by jrkrolson on 15 Jun 13 - Cached
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    This is a great website to aid with spelling and vocabulary. As a teacher, you can enter word lists for your students. They then can play fun games like HangMouse or word scrambles to practice. They also can take tests on the words.
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    Teaching spelling and vocabulary is easy with VocabularySpellingCity! Students can study and learn their word lists using vocabulary and spelling learning activities and games. Students can take final or practice spelling and vocabulary tests right on this engaging site. Premium games and automated student record keeping are available to Premium Members.
Katie Sisson

Resources for Using iPads in Grades 9-12 - 0 views

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    This website is an excellent resource for teachers who have a classroom set of iPad's or tablets. Many teachers have classroom tablets but do not know how to integrate them into the classroom. This website has a list of great apps to download for tablet use in classrooms. Students need to be engaged, challenged and be able to practice the skills learned. Using classroom tablets as a group/partner activity or individual use is a great way to incorporate technology into a lesson plan. High school students are a great age to use tablets with because they are more mature than elementary/middle school and (hopefully) will respect the technology devices.
Katie Sisson

Khan Academy - 0 views

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    Excellent videos on common math topics - Jennifer Frisk
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    This site is a great resource for math teachers. It provides video tutorials of many math concepts from basic math through advanced math such as Calculus.
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    It is amazing how diverse Khan Academy has become. They are great for math, but I even use them in my social studies classroom. They provide simple, yet detailed quick lessons on a lot of the major topics we cover. Provides a great resource for my students to utilize when they have questions or missed a certain topic!
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    Thanks for sharing this!! I work in Higher Ed. So I always thought the Khan Academy was for very young kids. It does appear that is still who it is geared towards, but looking around I can see some beneficial information for all ages. Great resource!!
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    Khan Academy is one of the most popular tutorial websites on the internet. This website covers every subject you can think of with step by step tutorial videos along with the option to practice the concepts as well. The students receive feedback from the practice and the tutorials provide detailed instructions for each lesson.
anonymous

Lessons Worth Sharing | TED-Ed - 3 views

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    These are flipped TED lessons--a great resource for educators. Each video is professionally animated and narrated. Best of all, you can flip any YouTube video using TED Ed.
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    Great tool for flipping lessons.
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    I love the Ted Ed website. It offers educators the opportunity to "flip" YouTube videos to enhance learning. You can use any video that make relate to your subject, share it, and have students watch. Then, students answer questions that you've made up specifically to go along with the video. There are also many "flipped" lessons already made up and available to use. It is a great site that helps integrate technology into curriculum.
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    Absolutely love this website. TEDEd allows educators to create and share lessons built around YouTube videos. The embedded lesson creator allows users to 1) FIND video content through an integrated search panel, 2) SELECT a video or lesson to be customized, and 3) FLIP a video by adding questions, notes, and content. The TEDEd library is continually growing and is searchable and browsable by series and subject. Grades K-12. Tip: The best lessons are curated by volunteer teachers and TEDEd and compiled under the Best Flips tab. If you're looking for teaching inspiration, look no further!
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    This is a great collection of videos and lesson plans for educational use. The videos are searchable by subject.
jdprance

Biz Kids | The place where kids teach kids about money and business. - 0 views

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    Biz Kids is a great website that provides business education resources and lesson plans for all age groups.
Katie Sisson

Upload videos - YouTube Help - 0 views

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    This site walks you through each step on how to upload a video to YouTube and post it on a website. This video is very useful because many videos are uploaded to Youtube and then can be embedded into a website for use.
Katie Sisson

How to Embed & Resize a Google Document - 0 views

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    The Google Docs platform not only embraces portability by enabling you to create, update and store documents online, it also provides a way for you to publish documents to your website or blog. ...
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    This website gives a step by step explanation of how to embed a Google Document and how to resize the embedded image. There is a default size when embedding an image and most of the time users want to enlarge that image.
lisamcleod

graphite | The best apps, games, websites, and digital curricula rated for learning - 0 views

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    Graphite is a website created by teachers which is a searchable collection of educational technology resources for teachers.
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    Common Sense Graphite is a site by teachers, for teachers that helps you find the best educational technology resources and learn the best practices for implementing them in your classroom. Brought to you by Common Sense Media: Empowering kids to thrive in a world of media and technology.
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