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Shobhana G

Resources for edtech 541 - 39 views

My two resources for this final week of EDTECH 541 are Internet Evaluation Forms: WWW CyberGuide Ratings for Content Evaluation : A guide for rating the curriculum content on web sites. http://...

quiz nutrition teaching tools

Darla Grant

QuadBlogging Connects Student Writers with Global Audiences | Edutopia - 2 views

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    This article discusses a way to incorporate blogging as way to enhance student writing. Four classes take turn blogging once a week, and on the other three weeks, the other three classes comment. It's a great way to keep blogging fresh and hold students accountable for writing.
Melissa Getz

QuadBlogging | "In terms of young children developing as writers this is the most inter... - 0 views

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    This website organizes groups of four students to work collaboratively to create a blog. Each student is in charge of writing to the blog for one week, others make comments during their "off" weeks. The cycle continues for 4 months.
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
anonymous

OIF Blog » Banned Books Week Machinima Winner: Clark Abismo in SL (Miguel Mim... - 0 views

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    "For the first time ever, ALA hosted a Banned Books Week machinima contest in Second Life. Machinima is filmmaking within a real-time, 3-D virtual environment like Second Life. The entries were inspired by this year's theme: "Think for Yourself and Let Others Do the Same." We are pleased to announce that Clark Abismo in SL (Miguel Mimoso Correia in RL) is our grand prize winner!
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    Wow! The Power of Visual Media! Even if you aren't in Second Life, this is a must see for the potential in education and the message.
Kathy Grubb

Wired 11.09: PowerPoint Is Evil - 0 views

shared by Kathy Grubb on 01 Oct 12 - Cached
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    Doing my assignment this week in EDTECH 541 on interactive presentations led me to this article. Wow! How right he is and the fact that it was written 9 years ago and things haven't really changed since then is amazing!
Gretel Patch

'A Week in the Life...' Project - Flat Classroom® Projects - 0 views

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    This Flat Classroom project brings together Grades 3-5 to explore similarities and differences in their lives and cultures. Using Edmodo, Wikispaces, VoiceThread, and other online multimedia tools, it helps students learn, connect, share, and create.
joannalieberman

Resources - Social Networking and Walled Gardens - 0 views

Social Networking and Walled Gardens ​1. Amanda Lenhart. (2015, April 9). Teens, Social Media & Technology Overview 2015. Retrieved from http://www.pewinternet.org/2015/04/09/teens-social-media-te...

education technology resources edtech541

started by joannalieberman on 16 Oct 16 no follow-up yet
brianbetteridge

'Connectivism' and Connective Knowledge - 14 views

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    George Siemens and Stephen Downs were offering a free course to the first 2200 people to discover connectivism and study its principals. They chose a free online course format to illustrate connectivism.
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    The main idea of this article is to explain how and why he and George Seimens offer MOOCs to the world. Downes believes that all learning is about connections made among the learners, just we are the neurological connections that our brains make every second. He does not believe knowledge is acquired or transmitted, but rather experienced. One of his most telling statements is his belief that the process of taking the course is more important than what people may happen to learn from it--which is at the heart of what he believes connectivism is.
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    I was very excited to find this article! In it, Stephen Downes, Canadian Education Technology Research Specialist, describes his and George Siemens,' Associate Director, Technology Enhanced Knowledge Research Institute, free course, 'Connectivism and Connective Knowledge' -- or CCK11. It is a twelve week course of readings and online seminars, where learners are invited to read selected materials and study the content with a connectivist's approach. Downes says, "What is important about a connectivist course, after all, is not the course content. Oh, sure, there is some content -- you can't have a conversation without it -- but the content isn't the important thing. It serves merely as a catalyst, a mechanism for getting our projects, discussions and interactions off the ground. It may be useful to some people, but it isn't the end product, and goodness knows we don't want people memorizing it." I want to register for the next one!
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    This is a blog post from Steven Downes about the courses on connectivism he offered with George Siemens. It offers a good argument for taking the connectivist approach to learning and explains what connectivism is. It offers an explanation for connectivist teaching and learning falling into the 4 major activities of aggregation, remixing, repurposing, and feeding forward. He stresses that connectivism is a pedagogy based on the realization that knowledge is not something you can solidify into a single perfect product to pass along because different people/communities will always interpret/learn from it differently.
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    George Siemens and Stephen Downes provide online courses call 'Connectivism and Connective Knowledge' to over 2,000 educators on the philosophy of teaching and learning they instill in their learners. http://cck11.mooc.ca is a twelve week course that is free for those who register. They disclose attributes to connectivist teaching and learning. Aggregation provides a starting point. Remixing draws connections to others. Repurposing is practicing the concepts learned, not just repeating them with route memorization techniques. Feeding forward consists of sharing with others and being able to collaborate on others' projects to use them as your own.
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    What I find really cool about this is that the content of the course is not what is important, but rather the fact that they are connecting and networking. The networking is more powerful than the content is what seems to be the focus.
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    I found this quote interesting, "So what a connectivist course becomes is a community of educators attempting to learn how it is that they learn, with the objective of allowing them to be able to help other people learn." I like that there is no distinction between the "teacher" and the "student". Instead, everyone is seen as both learner and educator. However, I have some concerns about how this works with middle school or high school students. Are they mature enough to really take on that role and stay on task? How do you ensure the respect and authority in the class when you are putting yourself on nearly an equal foot with the students? Kids are so used to a traditional direct instruction class they they often get confused or rebel against anything different.
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    This is one of the resources listed in the video I posted earlier. It is an introduction to the Connectivism and Connective Knowledge course. It explains how the core aspects of connectivism are built into the course and gives a description of each aspect.
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    This article introduces the term connectivism as a "network-based pedagogy" Through the article the author makes references to a course that he will be providing. Overall though there is some really good information about connectivism from both the teacher and learner perspectives.
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    Along with George Siemens, Stephen Downs is one of the intellectual leaders of connectivism, which he describes in this article. One of the things I really like about this article is the fact that it is written for a wide audience via an outlet like The Huffington Post, rather than an exclusively academic audience.
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    I enjoyed this article because it identified 4 connectivist "activities." They are aggregation, remixing, repurposing, and feeding forward. It explains these concepts clearly while also giving a succinct overview of connectivism, and their relationship to connectivism.
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    This article provided me with a clearer understanding of the Connectivist approach and the four activities that surround it--aggregation, remixing, re-purposing, and feeding forward. It was interesting to read under the Aggregation portion that Siemens and Downes have to tell participants to pick and choose what they read for the course. We are still very pre-conditioned to want to read and study everything that is handed to us and regurgitate it back. There is something about Connectivism that bothers me. It seems a little "loosey goosey" at times. I like the idea of people being able to gather and share ideas and make meaning from them, but I wonder if one can become a true expert in something by just solely using this approach.
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    I love the explanation of connectivism at the beginning. The explicitness with which they say it's not about the content but the process is refreshing and true to my experience in the classroom as well. There are many days when I know the student will never remember the content I taught but they will remember how they found it and the way that they discussed, dissected, and applied it to their selves.
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    I think out of all the articles I read about connectivism, this one was the easiest for me to understand and truly grasp the meaning of connectivism. The author gave clear examples of how learning happens through connectivism and that the course he was providing truly used this theory in helping the learners. This article helped me solidify how important I think schooling is for school aged children and the connections they make with their peers academically and socially. They are using this theory without even thinking about it, and in connecting with others ideas they are learning on their own without a teacher telling them facts, dates or formulas.
Kathy Grubb

Schools Turn to In-House Experts for Tech Training - US News and World Report - 0 views

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    Great article on schools using teachers to help teach others in the school about different areas in technology that they are competent in. My only thought was that it really should have gone further and reported on schools using its students to train the teachers and fellow classmates. We have a school nearby that has a class on basic computer repair and then the students then spend one hour a week going around the school helping out the teachers. Really cuts down on expenses and students have a sense of pride and a useful and marketable skill!
Katy Cooper

School-Wide Twitter Chats | Edutopia - 0 views

  • Kidsedchatnz is a weekly Twitter chat between New Zealand classes and students, every Thursday at 2:00-3:00PM. It is organised by seven New Zealand teachers via Twitter, each taking a turn to run the chats.
  • All topics and questions are posted on the Kidsedchatnz blog prior to the chat so that students can prepare beforehand.
  • This is where the questions are based on material that the students have to read or watch prior to the chat.
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  • After each Kidsedchatnz session, a "Tweet of the Week" is announced for the best tweet during that session. This encourages the students to produce quality tweets.
  • "Kidsedchatnz is my favourite hour of the week! I love putting my ideas out there for everyone to see."
cbjohnsrud

Learning and Sharing with Ms. Lirenman: Social Media In Grade One? You Betcha! - 0 views

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    This teacher has a great idea to show even the youngest students how to use Twitter- she allows a few students each week to create the Tweet to share what they've learned with parents.
Megan Gooding

Week 1 - What Is Connectivism? ~ CCK11 - 0 views

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    The resource linked here is a page to the first lesson of a MOOC on connectivism and connective knowledge. This page features several resources on connectivism, many f which are from Siemens and Downes themselves.
Jill Miller

What is connectivism? - 2 views

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    This blog post appears to be a reflection on what the author learned during her first week in the MOOC offered by Siemens and Downes on Connectivism in 2008! I like that the author, having tackled the assigned first-week readings for the MOOC, still finds connectivism to be ambiguous. This makes me feel a little less alone, as it reflects my own opaque understanding of the theory!
Patricia Smeyers

AT Blogs & Wikis: text, images, music, video | Glogster - 2 views

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    Found this when searching assistive technology and thought it may be useful for some this week.
Patricia Smeyers

Apple - Education - iPod touch and iPhone enable on-the-go learning - 1 views

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    I just recieved this in my inbox today.  This would have been helpful for the extra credit this week.  IThe website is a great tool for educators looking to integrate iPod touch into their classrooms.
danica marble

10 Resources Week 2 EDTECH543 - 6 views

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    This is a list I created summarizing the articles I found for the week 2 module in Edtech 543.
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    I especially liked the principal's reflection. There were sooo many examples of places to start. I think most people would be familiar with or able to set up at least a couple of these.
katelyngriffin

Miss Griffin's Class Website - 3 views

Here is the website my students and I update. Most exciting places to look: Room 13 news (blog that I update) and Student News (updates from the kids). My newsletters are pretty cute but nothing to...

EdTech543 teaching technology website tools web2.0

started by katelyngriffin on 06 Jun 17 no follow-up yet
Allison Hall

16 Apps and Websites Kids Are Heading to After Facebook | Common Sense Media - 5 views

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    Since we're getting started with a few social media platforms this week, here are a few more that are out there.
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