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Nadia Afzal

Virtual Math Manipulatives for K-4 - 0 views

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    Get your students interacting with many math backgrounds and manipulatives that are commonly used in K-4 classrooms including: bar diagrams, calendars, grids, equation charts, number lines, place value charts and all the markers, counters, game pieces, money images, blocks, and clocks that you will need.
Victoria Ahmetaj

Digital Storytelling Follow-up | Tech4Learning - 2 views

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    Sample student stories for digital storytelling
Coral Holcomb

NSTA Position Statement: The Role of E-Learning in Science Education - 0 views

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    National Science Teachers Association's Position Statement regarding E-Learning in Science Education. How does e-learning fit with the goals and standards for science education?
Carla Whetzel

Timelines of Invention and Technology - 0 views

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    Invention and technology timelines tell the history of famous 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th and 20th century events. Timeline of Electronics Timeline - important events in the history of electricity. Timeline of Inventions Timeline of technology and inventions - complete with leads to detailed articles and photos.
Nadia Afzal

Use of Technology in Teaching and Learning - 0 views

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    Online learning opportunities and the use of open educational resources and other technologies can increase educational productivity by accelerating the rate of learning.
Carla Whetzel

An Effective use of ICT for Education and Learning by Drawing on Worldwide Knowledge, R... - 0 views

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    Article on the use of ICT's in education. Topic of our WAR this week.
Coral Holcomb

New Horizons for Learning | EdTech Resource Database - 0 views

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    EdTech Resource Database with teacher-tested resources! lots of quality materials here for education technology!
Coral Holcomb

StoryJumper: Publish and read children's story books - 0 views

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    Publish your own book! Great for students to practice using their vocabulary words, etc... Love this! Cool way to incorporate publishing too!
Nadia Afzal

From Chalkboards to Tablets: The Digital Conversion of the K-12 Classroom - 0 views

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    What makes today's education landscape different than last year, the year before or five years ago? What is different?
Carla Whetzel

The Importance of Computer Technology in an Elementary School - 0 views

This article is about the importance of technology in the classroom. It focuses on technology based learning.

eme5050 research

started by Carla Whetzel on 15 Feb 14 no follow-up yet
Coral Holcomb

http://www.naeyc.org/files/yc/file/200311/TechInPrimaryClassrooms.pdf - 1 views

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    great article from the National Association for the Education of Young Children about using technology in primary classrooms.
Victoria Ahmetaj

laptops litera - 0 views

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    Can the use of laptops in the classroom cure the fourth grade slump?
jchristina

Is it Unethical to use Untested Technology in the Classroom? - 0 views

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    Is this a real question?!
Victoria Ahmetaj

Excel Formulas - Get your Excel question answered - 2 views

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    Excel Formulas and questions answered
Nadia Afzal

Direct Instruction - 1 views

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    An explicit, intensive instructional method that allows students of all abilities to become confident, capable learners.
Coral Holcomb

Evaluation Studies of the National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assista... - 0 views

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    Great resource for learning more about research studies and findings. The National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance. Can learn about research studies in progress or look at specific categories such as ELL, teacher quality, Math, etc... This bookmark links to "Evaluation of the Effectiveness of Educational Technology Interventions"
Coral Holcomb

Best Websites for Teaching & Learning 2013 | American Association of School Librarians ... - 0 views

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    American Association of School Librarians website. Links to other useful websites for media sharing, digital storytelling, classroom management & organization, social networking & communication, content resources, and curriculum collaboration! Excellent FREE resources for the clasroom!
Nadia Afzal

Twitter Goes to College - 0 views

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    Students and profs use "tweets" to communicate in and outside of class.
Victoria Ahmetaj

From Labs to Laptops to Carts at Las Montanas: A Story of Principals at Work | Larry Cu... - 0 views

  • From Labs to Laptops to Carts at Las Montanas: A Story of Principals at Work
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    Larry Cuban's blog on Las Montanas High School- Laptops in the classroom
Victoria Ahmetaj

Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice | Just another WordPress.com weblog - 0 views

  • He pointed out to me how similar teachers experiencing failures with students is to physicians erring in diagnoses or treatments (or both) of their patients.
  • In the other book, surgeon Atul Gawande described how he almost lost an Emergency Room patient who had crashed her car when he fumbled a tracheotomy only for patient to be saved by another surgeon who successfully got the breathing tube inserted. Gawande also has a chapter on doctors’ errors. His point, documented by a paper in the New England Journal of Medicine (1991) and subsequent reports  is that nearly all physicians err. If nearly all doctors make mistakes, do they talk about them? Privately  with people they trust, yes. In public, that is, with other doctors in academic hospitals, the answer is also yes. There is an institutional mechanism where hospital doctors meet weekly called Morbidity and Mortality Conferences (M & M for short) where, in Gawande’s words, doctors “gather behind closed doors to review the mistakes, untoward events, and deaths that occurred on their watch, determine responsibility, and figure out what to do differently (p. 58).” He describes an M & M (pp.58-64) at his hospital and concludes: “The M & M sees avoiding error as largely a matter of will–staying sufficiently informed and alert to anticipate the myriad ways that things can go wrong and then trying to head off each potential problem before it happens” (p. 62). Protected by law, physicians air their mistakes without fear of malpractice suits.
  • Nothing like that for teachers in U.S. schools. Sure, privately, teachers tell one another how they goofed with a student, misfired on a lesson, realized that they had provided the wrong information, or fumbled the teaching of a concept in a class. Of course,  there are scattered, well-crafted professional learning communities in elementary and secondary schools where teachers feel it is OK to admit they make mistakes and not fear retaliation. They can admit error and learn to do better the next time. In the vast majority of schools, however, no analogous M & M exists (at least as far as I know).
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  • substantial differences between doctors and teachers. For physicians, the consequences of their mistakes might be lethal or life-threatening. Not so, in most instances, for teachers. But also consider other differences:
  • From teachers to psychotherapists to doctors to social workers to nurses, these professionals use their expertise to transform minds, develop skills, deepen insights, cope with feelings and mend bodily ills. In doing so, these helping professions share similar predicaments.
  • *Most U.S. doctors get paid on a fee-for-service basis; nearly all full-time public school teachers are salaried.
  • While these differences are substantial in challenging comparisons, there are basic commonalities that bind teachers to physicians. First, both are helping professions that seek human improvement. Second, like practitioners in other sciences and crafts, both make mistakes. These commonalities make comparisons credible even with so many differences between the occupations.
  • *Doctors see patients one-on-one; teachers teach groups of 20 to 35 students four to five hours a day.
  • *Expertise is never enough. For surgeons, cutting out a tumor from the colon will not rid the body of cancer; successive treatments of chemotherapy are necessary and even then, the cancer may return. Some high school teachers of science with advanced degrees in biology, chemistry, and physics believe that lessons should be inquiry driven and filled with hands-on experiences while other colleagues, also with advanced degrees, differ. They argue that naïve and uninformed students must absorb the basic principles of biology, chemistry, and physics through rigorous study before they do any “real world” work in class.
  • For K-12 teachers who face captive audiences among whom are some students unwilling to participate in lessons or who defy the teacher’s authority or are uncommitted to learning what the teacher is teaching, then teachers have to figure out what to do in the face of students’ passivity or active resistance.
  • Both doctors and teachers, from time to time, err in what they do with patients and students. Patients can bring malpractice suits to get damages for errors. But that occurs sometimes years after the mistake. What hospital-based physicians do have, however, is an institutionalized way of learning (Mortality and Morbidity conferences) from their mistakes so that they do not occur again. So far, among teachers there are no public ways of admitting mistakes and learning from them (privately, amid trusted colleagues, such admissions occur). For teachers, admitting error publicly can lead directly to job loss). So while doctors, nurses, and other medical staff have M & M conferences to correct mistakes, most teachers lack such collaborative and public ways of correcting mistakes (one exception might be in special education where various staff come together weekly or monthly to go over individual students’ progress).
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    Teacher vs. Doctor
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