"PARTS OF THESES. AND TAILOR THEM OT YOUR CLASS.
I WILL BE POSTING NEW ONES AS I MAKE THEM AND FIND THEM IN THE FUTURE ON THIS PAGE.
SORT OF AS A LARK HERE IS THE FIRST TECH RUBRIC I MADE ABOUT 9 YEARS AGO ON A PROJECT CALLED POSTCARDS FROM THE WEB
CLICK ON EACH PICTURE OF THE RUBRIC TO GET A PDF DOCUMENT OF EACH ONE.
FIRST RUBRIC I EVER MADE
IF YOU HAVE ONE THAT YOU WOULD LIKE TO SHARE SEND IT TO ME AND I WILL POST IT HERE. MOST OUR PDF DOC AND YOU JUST HAVE TO CLICK ON THEM TO DOWNLOAD.
TECHNOLOGY RUBRIC 6-8
RUBRIC FOR GRADES 3-5
RUBRIC TO EVALUATE TEACHER USE
TEHCNOLOGY RUBRIC FOR GRADES K-2
One response
Emesar
Thank you…This entry helps me so much as a guide for me to complete my assignment…
December 4, 2013 at 4:17 pm
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Starfall.com opened in September of 2002 as a free public service to teach children to read with phonics. Our systematic phonics approach, in conjunction with phonemic awareness practice, is perfect for preschool, kindergarten, first grade, second grade, special education, homeschool, and English language development (ELD, ELL, ESL).
A site aimed towards the primary years. Used this during my internship in a kindergarten classroom. Not only did the kids love it, they were able to interact with many of the aspects during the free time on one of the PCs in the classroom, or during the morning circle on the SMART board.
This is a great site for children ages 2-8. It teaches pre-reading as well as reading skills up to 2nd grade. Includes games, animated stories, songs, and writing activities. I use it daily!
Starfall is a free website that teaches children how to read through phonics. It has practice games on phonemic awaresness. The program is great for grades K-2, second language learners and special education.
A very useful tool for middle school and high school teachers, and maybe even later elementary grades. Not very useful to me as a first grade teacher, but when students are asked to do research papers, and they start citing Wikipedia as a reliable source, teachers should utilize this. :)
For any middle/high school teachers who plan on having their students write research papers - to avoid Wikipedia and other unreliable sources students may find via simple Google searches. :)
Great Narrated How-to Power Points for Parents organized by the 4 quarters of the school year, and by subject area. Gives suggested activities for blending CVC words in the Qtr 1 Reading Ppt.
A free website to teach children to read. Perfect for kindergarten, first grade, and second grade. Contains exciting interactive books and phonics games.
"Love it! My students and my own children can't wait to get on the computer, and I then have a hard time stopping them from using the site!" Special education teacher, Elmhurst, Illinois, U.S.A. "Thanks to IXL, our students' performance has increased dramatically.
This is a neat site! I did some of the questions for first grade fractions and chose the wrong answer on purpose. It provides a visual and explanation for the correct answer. Thanks! I will use this in the future.
All grades, all skills, provides explanation when students are incorrect, rewards, goals, badges to earn! It isn't free, but get enough teachers on board and your school could purchase for everyone. Teachers are sent class reports: we print them out and hang them up outside our classrooms "Miss Sipe's class has answered 3,000 problems on IXL"
Helping keep the digital world civil . . . This blog post lays it all out: the rationale for teaching digital citizenship; how to start teaching it in elementary grades, and some follow up ideas for middle and high school. It's never too late to start working with students on digital citizenship, though! :-)
This resource provides a multitude of fun, interactive math lessons for students of all ages. Teachers can select the specific topic that their students are working on and the website takes you to games with eye-catching graphics that assess students through interactive lessons.
This is a great website to learn about the currency of the United States. There are interactive games that allow students to learn more about currency past and present and even to try their hand at making their own. This website would fit in well in a history or social studies lesson and could be used for children in first through fifth grade.