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Tony H

Tips for conducting program evaluation - 0 views

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    One of the most important benefits of conducting a program evaluation is using your findings to improve services, motivate staff, or even to change public policy. This tip sheet focuses on ways to use your results to improve services.
Tony H

Designing Your Program Evaluation Plans - 0 views

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    Has specific information about nonprofit program evaluation.
Tony H

Checklist for Program Evaluation Planning - 0 views

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    The following checklist might prove useful when planning evaluations for programs.
peter bg

Primary Wall - 0 views

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    PrimaryWall is a web-based sticky note tool designed for schools that allows pupils and teachers to work together in real-time.
Trevor Takayama

John Wooden TED Talk - 0 views

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    Great for kids and adults to get inspiration from.
Chrissy Jarvis

How will we learn? - 2 views

shared by Chrissy Jarvis on 08 Apr 11 - No Cached
Chrissy Jarvis

Daily newspaper - 0 views

shared by Chrissy Jarvis on 08 Apr 11 - Cached
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    Make Twitter and Facebook read as a daily newspaper. This was just discussed in Moodle, but in case you missed it or didn't bookmark it...
Janice Bezanson

Hot Potato - 0 views

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    Freeware for educators. Creates six different types of interactive assessments: quizzes, crossword puzzles and more
Janice Bezanson

Yugma - 0 views

shared by Janice Bezanson on 09 Apr 11 - Cached
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    Free Web Conferencing Tool
Janice Bezanson

AAA Math - 0 views

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    This site offers a wide variety of interactive math lessons. It offers instruction at different levels which is great for differentiating instruction. This site is primarily for grade one through eight.
Janice Bezanson

CRLS Research Guide - 0 views

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    This site offers a step by step guide for students learning how to research. It is an interactive website that gives students direct tips for each step of the research process.
Twilla Berwaldt

Text message (SMS) polls and voting, audience response system | Poll Everywhere - 0 views

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    Create polls for students to answer or test questions with group polls using cell-phones. Great educational tool for higher ed.
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    This is an excellent resource for taking polls. Polls can be embedded into PowerPoint presentations giving them an interactive element while engaging your audience and providing you with real-time data.
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    This is a student response system that allows students to text their answers in, making lectures more interactive without expensive clicker systems
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    Add polls to your presentation.
Tony H

A User Interface Design Rubric for Evaluating E-Learning Applications - 0 views

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    Abstract: How critical is the role of the user interface in E-Learning? Simply put, the best-designed content will be useless without an equally well-designed user interface that will attract the learner's attention, retain the learner's interest, and allow the learner to interact with the content such that learning can take place. This paper presents a rubric that will help assess a user interface's contribution to the efficiency and effectiveness of an E-Learning application. The rubric focuses on the elements and attributes that comprise the user interface's visual design and dialogue design. A discussion on the user interface and the functions it performs in E-Learning applications serves as an introduction to the presentation of the user interface design rubric.
Janice Bezanson

Math Forum @ Drexel - 0 views

shared by Janice Bezanson on 23 Apr 11 - No Cached
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    A math forum that has weekly math problems that students can work through by themselves or collaboratively.
Janice Bezanson

Kids Zone - 0 views

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    This site has free graphing tools for students.
Janice Bezanson

Teach Me - 0 views

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    This site has a wide variety of flash cards to facilitate students learning Spanish.
anonymous

Home | digitalliteracy.gov - 0 views

  • This is the destination for digital literacy resources and collaboration. Use it to share and enhance the tools necessary to learn computer and Internet skills needed in today’s global work environment.
anonymous

Social Networking as a Tool for Student and Teacher Learning - 0 views

  • Online social networking includes much more than Facebook and Twitter. It is any online use of technology to connect people, enable them to collaborate with each other, and form virtual communities, says the Young Adult Library Services Association
  • Survey research confirms, however, that interest in harnessing social networking for educational purposes is high. As reported in School Principals and Social Networking in Education: Practices, Policies and Realities in 2010, a national survey of 1,200 principals, teachers and librarians found that most agreed that social networking sites can help educators share information and resources, create professional learning communities and improve schoolwide communications with students and staff. Those who had used social networks were more positive about potential benefits than those who had not. In an online discussion with 12 of the principals surveyed, most said, “social networking and online collaboration tools would make a substantive change in students’ educational experience.” They said these tools could improve student motivation and engagement, help students develop a more social/collaborative view of learning and create a connection to real-life learning.
  • Among students surveyed in a National School Boards Association study, 96 percent of those with online access reported using social networking, and half said they use it to discuss schoolwork. Despite this prevalence in everyday life, schools have been hesitant to adopt social networking as an education tool. A 2010 study into principals’ attitudes found that “schools are one of the last holdouts,” with many banning the most popular social networking sites for students and sometimes for staff.
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  • Most national, state and local policies have not yet addressed social networking specifically; by default, it often falls under existing acceptable use policies (AUPs). While AUPs usually provide clear language on obscenities, profanity and objectionable activities, they also leave out gray areas that could open students to harmful activities while excluding them from certain benefits of social networking. Likewise, boilerplate policies that ban specific applications, such as Twitter, may miss other potential threats while also limiting the ability of students to collaborate across schools, districts, states or countries. The challenge for districts is to write policies that address potentially harmful interactions without eliminating the technology’s beneficial uses.
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