Skip to main content

Home/ educators/ Group items tagged Microsoft

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Jeff Johnson

Digital citizenship curriculum encourages students to be good 'digital citizens' - 0 views

  •  
    Students interact with music, movies, software, and other digital content every day-but many don't fully understand the rules surrounding the appropriate use of these materials, or why this should even matter. To help teach students about intellectual property rights and encourage them to become good "digital citizens," software giant Microsoft Corp. has unveiled a free curriculum that offers cross-curricular classroom activities aligned with national standards. The Digital Citizenship and Creative Content program was designed for students in grades 8-10 but can be adapted for use in grades 6-12, Microsoft says. In one unit, students are given a scenario in which a high school sponsors a school-wide Battle of the Bands. A student not involved in the production decides to videotape and sell copies of the show to students and family members. Later, one of the performers ("Johnny") learns his image has been co-opted by the maker of a video game without his permission. Students research intellectual property laws to see who owns the "rights" to the Battle of the Bands as a whole, as well as the rights of individual performers, to determine three or four steps that Johnny can take. http://digitalcitizenshiped.com
Angela Maiers

Top News - Microsoft releases new tools for academics - 0 views

  •  
    New tools for educators from Microsoft!
Vicki Davis

Libraries Shun Deals to Place Books on Web - New York Times - 0 views

  • Open Content Alliance
  • , a nonprofit effort aimed at making their materials broadly available.
  • Libraries that agree to work with Google must agree to a set of terms, which include making the material unavailable to other commercial search services. Microsoft places a similar restriction on the books it converts to electronic form. The Open Content Alliance, by contrast, is making the material available to any search service.
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • many in the academic and nonprofit world are intent on pursuing a vision of the Web as a global repository of knowledge that is free of business interests or restrictions.
  • Many prominent libraries have accepted Google’s offer — including the New York Public Library and libraries at the University of Michigan, Harvard, Stanford and Oxford. Google expects to scan 15 million books from those collections over the next decade.
  • libraries and researchers worry that if any one company comes to dominate the digital conversion of these works, it could exploit that dominance for commercial gain.
  • “One is shaped by commercial concerns, the other by a commitment to openness, and which one will win is not clear.”
  • The Open Content Alliance is the brainchild of Brewster Kahle, the founder and director of the Internet Archive, which was created in 1996 with the aim of preserving copies of Web sites and other material.
  •  
    This New York Times article on the Open Content Alliance is an essential article for librarians and media specialists to read. It is also important for those following the fight for information and control of that information. In this case, the Open Content Alliance wants to make books that they scan available to any search engine while Microsoft and google are aggressively approaching libraries for exclusive access to their content. (which could be rescanned by another later, possibly.) Librarians and media specialists should understand this... when will people approach schools to scan annuals or student produced works? Maybe that is a while off, but for now, be aware that it is probably inevitable.
  •  
    An overview of the Open Content Alliance versus Google and Microsoft battling to take control of the content housed in libraries.
Vicki Davis

List of keyboard shortcuts for Word 2002, Word 2003, and Word 2007 - 0 views

  • Apply List Bullet CTRL+SHIFT+L
  • Bold CTRL+B or CTRL+SHIFT+B
  • Create Auto Text ALT+F3
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • Delete Back Word CTRL+BACKSPACE
  • Delete Word CTRL+DELETE
  • Hyperlink CTRL+K
  • Grow Font CTRL+SHIFT+. Grow Font One Point CTRL+]
  • Italic CTRL+I or CTRL+SHIFT+I
  • Paste CTRL+V or SHIFT+INSERT
  • Paste Format CTRL+SHIFT+V
  •  
    Cool page with a lot of neat hotlinks in Microsoft Word. I've highlighted some that I really like.
  •  
    Cool website with hotlinks -- great for teachers of Microsoft Word.
Vicki Davis

Home - Microsoft Popfly - 0 views

  •  
    Using mashups is going to become an essential skill, I believe. Students should understand what they are.
  •  
    Microsoft Popfly lets you make mashups and build web pages without knowing code. I am to the point I don't teach the detailed web site creation coding I used to. I teach RSS, embedding, creating wikis, uploading media of all kinds, but I just don't know how important coding is any more at the basic level. I want to spend some time tinkering with this.
Nelly Cardinale

Microsoft DreamSpark - 0 views

  •  
    Microsoft products for college and high school that they can download for free.
Vicki Davis

So.cl - 9 views

  •  
    This is the Microsoft Research so.cl website (pronounced social) that is being tested in a few universities. I find it incredibly interesting that students sign in using Facebook instead of Windows Live ID, the preferred sign in for other services.
Vicki Davis

Windows 8 Consumer Preview - 3 views

  •  
    Here's the Windows 8 consumer preview version if you just have to download and try it out. (Or, if, as Microsoft hopes, you want to start building apps.)
Vicki Davis

Microsoft OneNote for iPhone on the App Store on iTunes - 2 views

  •  
    One Note for iPhone is free
Vicki Davis

Microsoft's photo and movie making apps revealed ahead of Windows 8.1 release | The Verge - 7 views

  •  
    Here comes Windows 8 with a lot of new settings. These are talking about the Windows phone updates but other updates are on the way. "While Windows 8.1 adds a lot of features and improvements across the OS, the built-in apps include some of the biggest changes. Microsoft is detailing a few of the more creative ones ahead of the Windows 8.1 release tomorrow. The photos app in Windows 8 included Facebook and Flickr integration, but the Windows 8.1 version drops that in lieu of some improvements to editing. You can now select auto fix for a selection of different corrections, and there's also manual cropping, red-eye removal, retouch, and other basic contrast and brightness settings. One of the more interesting features is color enhance that lets you pick an area of a photo to brighten up or darken areas of photos."
Vicki Davis

Windows Essentials - Download Windows Live Essentials - 6 views

  •  
    Here's the links to the free apps from Microsoft and Windows essentials for those of you who want LiveWRiter.
Carl Bogardu

A free tool from Microsoft Learning: LCDS v2.5 - Microsoft Press - Site Home - MSDN Blogs - 9 views

  •  
    Microsoft's free online course builder.
Tero Toivanen

Optimize Microsoft Word Editor Area for Better Writing - How-To Geek - 2 views

  •  
    Great tips about how to optimize Word Editor Area.
Kelly Faulkner

http://montage.cloudapp.net/montage/whatsmontage/ - 15 views

  •  
    microsoft app for arranging search results in newpaper-like style.
Vicki Davis

Samsung's Hope for Education - Win $200,000 for technology - 0 views

  • Each year, Samsung's Hope for Education holds a contest where students from schools nationwide can write a 100-word essay about how technology benefits and helps education. In 2008, the top winner receives a grand prize of over $200,000 worth of Samsung technology, Microsoft software and cash grants from DIRECTV, as well as the SCHOOL CHOICE® educational television programming package. Entries are open now. Contest will run until August 31, 2008.
  •  
    This is a cool grant requiring a 100 word essay about how technology benefits and helps education and is one I'll be doing in the fall -- it is only open to schools in the US but it is public and private -- check the website for rules and good luck. Info from their site: "Each year, Samsung's Hope for Education holds a contest where students from schools nationwide can write a 100-word essay about how technology benefits and helps education. In 2008, the top winner receives a grand prize of over $200,000 worth of Samsung technology, Microsoft software and cash grants from DIRECTV, as well as the SCHOOL CHOICE® educational television programming package. Entries are open now. Contest will run until August 31, 2008."
  •  
    win a $200,000 grant by having your students write essays. This is exciting.
Vicki Davis

Office Add-in for Moodle - 15 views

  •  
    Free Microsoft Office Add in for Moodle - you can save files directly from Word to Moodle. This is pretty cool.
Ted Sakshaug

Microsoft Education: Teacher and faculty resources, lesson plans, and free tools - 0 views

  •  
    lots of stuff for teachers
‹ Previous 21 - 40 of 125 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page