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Monica Asher

Amazing new Titanic pics in National Geographic - 0 views

  • The April issue of National Geographic is marking the centennial month of the sinking of the Titanic with exceptional new pictures of the wreck composed from thousands of side-scan, sonar and high definition images taken by the 2010 expedition
Monica Asher

7 Dangerous Games Parents Must Know About - 1 views

  • they should also warn against so-called "games" that are so risky that they can lead to injury or death.
  • Parents often don't hear about them until someone in the community is rushed to the emergency room or dies.
  • "Boys tend to take more risks, as do teens in middle school, although kids of any age may try,"
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  • They usually happen in groups, where there is peer pressure."
  • 1. Choking Game
  • 1. Choking Game
  • The study found that the average age of kids who died was 13, but those who died ranged in age from 6 to 19.
  • Most of the parents cited by the study (93%) said that they hadn't heard of the Choking Game until their children died.
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    I know it says parents must know about, but I think that teachers should also know about these dangerous games.
Monica Asher

Too Big for Your Britches - 0 views

  • size is a real enemy to innovation
  • Change is difficult for any organization and education is particularly difficult because of its systematic problems and tensions as a public sector institution
  • the story of Clarence Fisher and Heather Durnin.
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  • Two teachers
  • rural provinces whose classrooms are one
  • constantly exploring new opportunities for their students
  • his students are getting more of an opportunity to learn than many of our students from our biggest districts. 
  • Another disturbing trend with many of our larger districts and schools is an arrogance to admit they might not have all the answers
  • ignore or at least neglect to look to our smaller schools for expertise and innovation
Monica Asher

With autism, no longer invisible - CNN.com - 0 views

  • Just last week, U.S. health authorities announced that autism is more common than previously thought. About 1 in 88 children in the United States have an autism spectrum disorder
  • Diagnoses have risen 78% since 2000
  • Most medications don't help, and while some find improvements with intense (and expensive) behavioral therapy, there is no cure .
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  • People with more severe forms of autism may not be able to live independently or hold complex, social jobs
  • Adults with high-functioning autism typically have difficulties perceiving the nuances of speech and behavior
  • other day-to-day challenges
Deb Gardner

The Innovative Educator: Google Voice Provides Every Teacher with a Personal Secretary - 0 views

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    Gets around the issue of providing personal cell phone numbers to students and/or parents. Many more uses for teachers.
Deb Gardner

Revisiting Cell Phone Bans in Schools -- THE Journal - 0 views

  • Twenty-four percent of K-12 schools ban cell phones altogether, and 62 percent allow phones on school grounds but ban them in the classroom, according to the most recent national data available. But it's about time for those schools to rethink those bans,
  • We have to decide if we are going to continue to ban cell phones, and we have to weigh the balance between pros and cons.
  • He described one example of a teacher using Poll Everywhere in a social studies classroom. As students enter the classroom, the teacher has posted a question on the whiteboard asking students what they believe to be the most important cause of the Civil War.
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  • QR codes are also making mobile phones more attractive as educational tools.
  • research has demonstrated that using texting to provide students and parents with regular information about classwork leads to higher assignment completion rates.
  • To create the Web pages for each site of interest, we used the WordPress blogging tool,"
  • The cell phone bans are in place, Bellarmine's Thomas said, because of legitimate concerns about cheating, texting, sexting, and cyberbullying. Thomas argued that the mobile phones themselves are not causing these problems. They are moral and ethical in nature, not technical. "These are new forms of old behaviors. Banning will not be the solution," he said. "We have to educate students about proper way to use the tools."
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    Read the comments by readers - lots of insights here.
Deb Gardner

Free Technology for Teachers: Still Crazy After All These Years - Crazy About RSS - 1 views

  • Without a doubt RSS feeds and Google Reader are the most important tool that I use on a daily basis.
Brittney Horlacher

Advancements in High-Tech Assistive Technology Devices | Assisted Disability - 0 views

  • think automatic garage door openers and the bell that dings when an elevator arrives
  • Computers can now be activated by voice, and users with limited vision can listen as their computer communicates with them; touchscreen technology is ideal for users with limited dexterity.
  • o rely on memory or a manual system for taking medication.
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  • e potential for members of the aging and disabled population to live active lives continues to expand.
Bradley Yust

Can a Smart Phone Program Really Close the Achievement Gap? | MindShift - 0 views

  • The majority of participating students scored 20 percent higher on standardized tests than their peers in the same school and 30 to 40 percent higher than students in the district and state after a single year.
  • “Social networking is heavily questioned by adults, so at first, no one thought students were going to be using blogs to actually do math. It turned out that those adults were dead wrong
  • Teachers have gone from lecture-style textbooks to a completely different approach: It’s project-based learning design that they’re doing, now.
Bradley Yust

School of One Revolutionizes Traditional Classroom Model | MindShift - 0 views

  • The system completely subverts the traditional classroom model of one teacher for 25- 30 students per classroom. And each student learns in different modalities throughout the day: individually with computer software, with groups, with a virtual tutor, with a live tutor, and so on
  • . And each student learns in different modalities throughout the day: individually with computer software, with groups, with a virtual tutor, with a live tutor, and so on. “There are so many ways that kids can learn,” Rush said. “It could be the best way is with a teacher, but that’s not the only way. There have to be choices.” Based in three public schools in New York, the School of One system is ripe for scaling — but only when the algorithm is as smart as it could possibly be, Rush says. “We have to build in time to try new things,” he said. “Some will work and some won’t, and that’s okay.” When it comes to creating a models of schools for the future, this could very well be it. It combines much of what forward-thinking education reformers say is key: individualized learning, the best of technology, and a flexible learning system that adapts to what students learn day by day. Check out the video to see more of how it works. MORE POSTS ABOUT Learning Methods individualized learning School of One How Do You Measure Learning? Getty It’s not a new question, but it’s certainly a divisive one — how to best measure student learning. As the Department of Education works toward finding a way to assess student learning beyond what most agree are sub-par standardized … Read More Facing Challenges as Dual-Language Programs Grow Do Students Know Enough Smart Learning Strategies? view all Learning Methods posts Should Students Advance At Their Own Pace? Flickr:Kreative Eye- Dean McKoy What if student learning wasn’t based on age, but on proficiency? That might happen soon in Oregon’s public schools if Senate Bill 909 unfolds as planned. Oregon governor John Kitzhaber ushered a group of education bills … Read More A Day in the Life of a Virtual School Student Can Learning Really Be Fun and Games? view all individualized learning posts New Startup Launches High-Tech Math Program School of One The folks behind The School of One, famous for creating daily playlists as lesson plans for students, have launched a non-profit that will allow any school to use its high-tech, personalized learning model. New Classrooms, a non-profit … Read More Will School of One Expand to a School of Many? Wireless Generation Awarded $27 Million Contract by NY Schools view all School of One posts Newer PostUpdate: California Graduation and Dropout Rates → Older Post← Step One: Start With What Kids Want 5 Responses to “School of One Revolutionizes Traditional Classroom Model” Sarah Peduzzi says: December 10, 2010 at 8:36 pm WOW this is so cool. I hope Scho
  • We have to build in time to try new things,” he said. “Some will work and some won’t, and that’s okay.
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  • individualized learning, the best of technology, and a flexible learning system that adapts to what students learn day by day.
Brittney Horlacher

Gadgets That Help Disabled People | Assisted Disability - 0 views

  • Technology has come a long way in terms of helping disabled persons live life with fewer obstacles
  • the Android Zio
  • will allow a blind person to hear website content read to them through an app.
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  • a deaf person to text in real time to people all over the world,
  • hysical challenge can be nothing more than the inability to use one hand or to walk
  • can remove lots of obstacles by allowing one to do business over the phone
  • notion of being disabled isn’t even a part of the modern world anymore.
  • ided by technology.
Bradley Yust

Open Source: A New Paradigm for Language Learning | MindShift - 0 views

  • “The first television broadcasts were of a man in an armchair with a microphone — exactly like the radio! It takes a while for things to sink in, for us to realize what the possibilities are.
  • A blended learning model is useful for language teaching, too, Miller says, because there is a rote element in learning a language and “that’s something we can do online, out of the classroom.
  • But those repetitive, fill-in-the-gap grammar exercises are not a good use of classroom time. We need to make sure that precious face-to-face time is used for what it is best for: true communication.”
Bradley Yust

Five Changes Every School Should Make | MindShift - 0 views

  • Even academically reticent students publish work prolifically, subject it to critique and improve it on the Internet
  • They demotivate learning and good teaching.
  • Restore arts, music, shop, P.E., dance: Kids need the soul-stirring learning that lets them move, make, sing, create, dream.
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  • Eliminate the “college prep” and AP distinctions,
Bradley Yust

Can an Idyllic Classroom Make a Difference in Learning? | MindShift - 0 views

  • Students are connected to the earth, to the Internet, to one another, to their teacher—who can see them from anywhere in the room, even though it’s a busy space.
  • “As a ten-year-old, I found learning — indoors, from a teacher and a textbook — far more engaging than the outdoors.”
Chrissy Clark

Jux: simple media literacy tool | Technology with Intention - 0 views

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    Really awesome tool to use in the classroom
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