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Educational Uses of Digital Storytelling - 0 views

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    University of Houston: A storyboard is a written or graphical representation of the all of the elements that will be included in a digital story. The storyboard is usually created before actual work on creating the digital story begins and a written description and graphical depiction of the elements of the story, such as images, text, narration, music, transitions, etc. are added to the storyboard. The elements of the story are arranged in the storyboard in the chronological order in which they will appear in the story and this allows the developer to organize and re-arrange the content for maximum effect.
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Digital Storytelling - 0 views

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    The elements of digital storytelling. This site is introducing the elements of digital storytelling, include: media, action, relationship, context, and communication. 
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http://npiis.hodges.edu/IE/documents/forms/Holistic_Critical_Thinking_Scoring_Rubric.pdf - 0 views

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    The introduction of how to use the holistic critical thinking scoring rubric.Holistic scoring requires focus. Whatever one is evaluating, be it an essay, a presentation, a group decision making activity, or the thinking a person displays in a professional practice setting, many elements must come together for overall success: critical thinking, content knowledge, and technical skill (craftsmanship). Deficits or strengths in any of these can draw the attention of the rater. However, in scoring for any one of the three, one must attempt to focus the evaluation on that element to the exclusion of the other two. To use this rubric correctly, one must apply it with focus only on the critical thinking - that is the reasoning process used.
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http://www.digitales.us/files/Take%20Six.pdf - 1 views

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    High level overview of six elements leading to effective "digital stories." Via @DianaAmend
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http://www.m-learning.org/archive/docs/The%20m-learning%20project%20-%20technology%20up... - 0 views

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    Mobile learning: Provide an update on the development of mobile phone technologies with the potential for supporting and/or delivering some elements of teaching and learning. Report briefly on the work and key findings of the m-learning research and development project.
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Scoring Guides for Digital Stories - 1 views

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    This site lets you  customize your scoring guide by checking the traits and elements you want to use at the time. 
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The Seven Elements of Digital Storytelling - 0 views

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    The Digital Storytelling consists of seven elements of effective digital stories:
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    1.Point of View 2.A dramatic question 3.Emotional Content 4.The gift of your voice 5.The power of the soundtrack 6.Economy 7.Pacing
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THE ORIGINAL Scary 'Mary Poppins' Recut Trailer - YouTube - 0 views

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    A superb example of "remixing" for popular culture content. While not, obviously, licensed for remixing (via Creative Commons or alternative), this parody (consistent with fair use of copyrighted materials) still showcases tactics involved in remixing (e.g., excerpting, re-sequencing, adding content elements) in a way that creates a new work from the old.
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Scholastic Story Starters - 1 views

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    This resource is excellent for K-6 Writing/Language Arts teachers. Teachers or students can spin four different wheels which will result in an interesting combination of four different plot elements that can be used to create a story.
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Intel® Teach Elements - 1 views

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    Intel® Teachhelps K-12 teachers of all subjects engage students with digital learning, including digital content, Web 2.0, social networking, and online tools and resources. Intel Teach professional development empowers teachers to integrate technology effectively into their existing curriculum, focusing on their students' problem solving, critical thinking, and collaboration, which are precisely the skills required in the high tech, networked society in which we live.

ASSIGNMENT - 6 views

started by John Lucyk on 29 Jan 16 no follow-up yet
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Presentations ETC Homepage - 2 views

  • Free presentation resources for students & teachers! Use these free backgrounds, templates, letters, frames, and buttons for school presentations, websites, class newsletters, digital scrapbooking, and student portfolios. Thousands of presentation elements and millions of combinations allow you to customize your school projects, electronic scrapbook, or eportfolio
    • Cindy Hanks
       
      Gives you many more options than the typical backgrounds you find in the PowerPoint program.
    • Cindy Hanks
       
      Whenever I cover PowerPoint presentations with my elementary kids in computer lab, I have always felt "limited" with the choices that I'm given within the program itself. I tend to use the same background each year, because not many appeal to me personally. Tools like these will enable my students (and me) to create presentations that visually appeal to me as well as my audience.
  • over 20,000 background slides
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    Resources to use for presentation projects for both teachers and students.
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Travel Journals: Student-Created Textbooks - 0 views

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    this would be great modified into a digital means Students create a variety of content types for their journals -- from written reflections to maps and diagrams -- in response to teacher prompts and open-ended questions. Below are the essential elements of the journal project: Blank journals: At the beginning of each module, teachers hand out a blank journal to each student.
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Wendy Bray Teacher at UCF - 1 views

shared by John Lucyk on 29 Jan 16 - No Cached
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    How to Leverage the Potential of Mathematical Errors Author(s): Wendy S. Bray Source: Teaching Children Mathematics, Vol. 19, No. 7 (March 2013), pp. 424-431 Published by: National Council of Teachers of Mathematics Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5951/teacchilmath.19.7.0424 Accessed: 29-01-2016 05:23 UTC Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/page/ info/about/policies/terms.jsp JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. This content do 3 on Fri, 29 Jan 2016 05:23:09 UTC 3 on Fri, 29 Jan 201 ll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 424 March 2013 * teaching children mathematics | Vol. 19, No. 7 Copyright © 2013 The National CounTcilhoisf TceoanchteenrstodfoMwanthleomadateicds,fIrnocm. w1w3w2..n1c7tm0..1or9g3. .A7ll3rigohntsFrreis,e2rv9edJ.an 2016 05:23:09 UTC This material may not be copied or distributed electronicaAllylloruisneasnuy bojtehecrt ftoormJSatTwOithRouTt ewrrmittsenapnedrmCisosniodnitfiroomnsNCTM. x www.nctm.org to Leverage the Potential of Mathematical EIncorporrating arfocus oon students'rmistakses into your instruction can advance their understanding. By Wendy S. Bray elling children that they can learn from their mistakes is common practice. Yet research indicates that many teachers in the United States limit public attention to errors during math- ematics lessons (Bray 2011; Santagata 2005). Some believe that drawing attention to errors publicly may embarrass error m
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