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Trudy Sweeney

Curriculum Leadership Journal | Abstracts - 1 views

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    "What is Web 2.0? Ideas, technologies and implications for education"
Trudy Sweeney

Purdue OWL: Annotated Bibliographies - 2 views

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    A bibliography is a list of sources (books, journals, websites, periodicals, etc.) one has used for researching a topic. Bibliographies are sometimes called "references" or "works cited" depending on the style format you are using. A bibliography usually just includes the bibliographic information (i.e., the author, title, publisher, etc.). An annotation is a summary and/or evaluation. Therefore, an annotated bibliography includes a summary and/or evaluation of each of the sources. Depending on your project or the assignment, your annotations may do one or more of the following:
Trudy Sweeney

Transforming learning with interactive whiteboards: Towards a developmental framework |... - 0 views

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    "Transforming learning with interactive whiteboards: Towards a developmental framework"
Trudy Sweeney

Revisiting WebQuests in a Web 2 World. How developments in technology and pedagogy comb... - 0 views

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    The WebQuest was launched in 1995 to scaffold advanced cognition by integrating the "ill-structured" nature of the World Wide Web with a process that guides novices through decisions and experiences that characterize experts' behaviors. Recently, the Web has morphed into Web 2.0 with its social networking sites, blogs, wikis and podcasts. Given this richness, revisiting WebQuests is in order. This paper reviews the critical attributes of true WebQuests and reviews recent research in thinking routines and intrinsic motivation to recommend new paths for WebQuests that could scaffold student use of Web 2.0 environments, enabling a shift toward authentic personal learning.
Trudy Sweeney

Students creating digital video in the primary classroom: student autonomy, learning ou... - 0 views

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    student-created digital video as a pedagogical approach to achieving a variety of educational objectives.
Toni Curtis

Web 2.0 tools in the reading classroom: Teachers exploring literacy in the 21st century - 0 views

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    This article provides a great reflective insight to the integration of Web 2.0 based tools in the classroom with literacy.
Trudy Sweeney

iPods and iPads in the Classroom | Startl - 1 views

  • You are here: Home » iPhone App » iPods and iPads in the Classroom iPods and iPads in the Classroom 0 Comments and 0 Reactions January 14, 2011 | The Startl Team The Herald Journal posted an article this week detailing one school’s use of iPods and iPads in the classroom.  Kids and teachers alike find these devices not just entertaining but useful in learning as well.  Something that we at Startl have seen first-hand through our Developer Boost and Accelerator programs. Students are using the popular gadget to practice math skills, learn how to read and improve English fluency. In the last year, iPods and iPads have been introduced into Logan classrooms. According to local educators, kids have excelled because of it. Classrooms have iPods or iPads available for various curriculum throughout the day. In Jen Green’s English as a Second Language class at Adams Elementary, students in kindergarten through fifth grade use iPods. On Tuesday morning, a handful of them spent about 40 minutes working on iPods. To help kids with reading and fluency, Green has students use iPods to record themselves reading. Green and the student then listen to the recording together. They hear any errors, and then the student reads and records again until they have read it correctly in a certain amount of time. Green said student progress has been “unbelievable.” With one student, she saw results in just minutes. Green has kept some of the recordings to measure progress. By listening to the child’s first recorded reading, it was difficult to understand what they were saying. Green played a reading recorded 15 minutes later and the words were clear and understandable. While we see a broader adoption of use of apps and devices in the classroom, the question to ask is how can teachers evaluate what apps suit their needs best and how will they be integrated into the classroom?
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    ... the question to ask is how can teachers evaluate what apps suit their needs best and how will they be integrated into the classroom?
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