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R Ferrazzani

Using QR Codes to Differentiate Instruction | Edutopia | Diigo - 1 views

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    I found this article while searching the "community" tool in Diigo. It's a great companion to Kerry's top 3 apps she can't live without.
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    People are using QR codes to differentiate learning or create stations within your class. I can see applications for kindergarten on up to use this tool. The article mentions Viualead as tool to create unique looking QR codes. My ADD is kicking in and now I have to find out about Visualead!
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    I love the idea of using it for stations! My head is spinning already. Maybe I will use it for an activity on the Protestant Reformation with my 9th graders next week. One station for each of the Reformation movements after Luther: Anglican, Calvinist, Anabaptist, etc. The code could lead the kids to primary sources on the web. Thanks for the new idea Robyn.
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    Thanks for sharing, Robyn! What a great and simple way to differentiate instruction! In class last Monday, I was thinking of ways to use audio QR codes as a way to share student work...this article gave me a ton of new ideas on how to integrate QR codes into my instruction!
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    Love these ideas. Jan and I talked about using QR codes for a project with third grade and this gives us some great information. Thanks for sharing!
Kerry Gallagher

Vine & Instagram Video in the Classroom - 3 views

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    I started using Vine late last year to post videos of our students doing great things. (Reading to first graders, working together at field day, encouraging one another during a Smart Board review game, etc.) This Edutopia blog post gives TONS of links to really great ideas for using Vine with kids as a way to assess their understanding. Some of them are really funny and insightful. I know there is some nasty stuff out there on Vine and Instagram, but if we teachers don't show kids how to use these social media outlets in a positive way, who will? Right? I think I might give some of these ideas a shot.
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    Thanks, Kerry. I haven't used Vine before, though I've seen it used. I'm definitely interested in trying it out this year. It's amazing how creative some people can be in six seconds! Taylor and I recently started using Instagram to post what's going on in our classrooms. We are loving it so far. It's something that the kids are on anyway, so the interest is there. They love going on to "like" pictures of themselves and their peers, and even "like" the picture Taylor posts of the homework board! It's also a fast and easy way to keep parents informed about what's going on in the classroom on a daily basis. I also love that even though we're only in October, it's a photo log of the many things that we've done already this year. I look forward to giving the video capabilities a try.
Marti Neugarten

Games in the Mathematics Classrooms: There's an App for That! - 0 views

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    Quick read for ideas on how to include math games in the classroom and recommedations for free apps to try
Julie Merrill

Projects to Engage Middle School Readers - 0 views

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    Nothing earth shattering in this article, but a good reminder to think outside the box when it comes to asking students to demonstrate understanding of what they're reading. I love the movie trailer idea, and the kids have shown they can do some amazing things with iMovie. I'm also interested in exploring some of the apps that the author says would allow students to put characters into new settings - it may be a neat way for them to demonstrate deep understanding of character's personality and motives.
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    Julie, I agree that these projects are interesting and also that kids like doing them. But...always...I wonder... do they really get kids more interested in reading or do they really just help kids get through the monotony of assessing reading? I think the latter goal is a worthy one and I do feel that kids get something out of these projects.researching, writing and collaborating. Even when I was a student, I used to wonder about these questions. Outside my school life, my reading was so rich and varied. English classrooms to me seemed places devoid of books and the discussion of books that took place in my home. So I don't think think this is a new question, but I like to think of the primacy of helping kids finding books they love as well as giving them a place to discuss them.
Kerry Mullen

iPads redefine the writing process - 0 views

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    Interesting article that discusses augmentation of the writing process with using the iPad. I think I need to try MindMeister with some students!
Kerry Gallagher

The Biggest Lie Students Tell Me (and How to Turn It Around) - 2 views

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    How to break through what seems like opposition or apathy. Decent advice. Not fool-proof, but not bad at all. "It's easy to say that students lie to teachers all the time. Frankly, everyone, including teachers, has a lie in them, and these untruths keep the schooling process rolling along. When adults say, for instance, that they develop rules with the students, chances are that students often develop rules that teachers already thought of anyway."
annemariecory

The Balance of Screen Time - 0 views

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    Beth Holland is an insightful, creative educator who I saw at MassCUE yesterday so I decided to follow her and see what else she had to say. This is an interesting and insightful discussion of the potential positives and negatives of screen time. A good reminder to keep it meaningful, and as we have all said, avoid "technology for the sake of technology." "Television rots your brain." In a similar vein, video games turn your mind to mush, and staring at a screen for too long potentially makes you a zombie. In 1999, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) published a report suggesting that children under two should not have any screen time.
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    I also saw Beth Holland at MassCUE. What surprised me about her was that despite having limited classroom experience, she has brilliant ideas about how to help make teaching better for our students. Her backchanneling idea to help give all kids a voice in or outside of class was powerful. In one class period it is impossible to hear what all of the kids are thinking. I agree that she is someone to follow.
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    The three questions this article asks are something I think a lot about when using the iPads in my classroom. Last year when I first started using them in my classroom they were mostly being used as mobile educational gaming devices. The kids were using apps that reinforced the phonics and math concepts we were learning, but they weren't really going anything further than that. They certainly were engaged and learning so I don't feel that it was time wasted, however I always knew there was more they could be doing with the devices. The third piece, is it empowering, was the piece I was missing last year and am trying to incorporate more this year.
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    Great article. I agree there needs to be a balance with screen time and how we should use that time. The 3 questions of screen time being appropriate, meaningful, and empowering are key to allowing students take charge of their learning. The article states "… teachers had found educational apps to reinforce math and reading concepts, the students passively interacted with content rather than constructing understanding. The interaction primarily consisted of students just tapping on a screen." I feel it is important for us to limit these types of apps and find the few that are going to allow students to "construct understanding" and apply content they learn outside of screen time. To me, this strikes a good balance. At MassCUE this past Thursday, I attended a session by a district that made the decision to use apps that allowed for creativity. They recognized that there were many apps for gaming and skill drills, but they wanted their students to be able to use their devices to apply learning in a meaningful way. This was music to my ears. I applaud their efforts, and based on the examples of student work that were shown, it's working.
Marti Neugarten

A Guide to Game-Based Learning - 0 views

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    You want students to learn. Shall we play a game? Absolutely! But what is a game? Game: a form of play or sport, especially a competitive one played according to rules and decided by skill, strength, or luck. Not exactly.
Kerry Gallagher

Changing the Teaching of History - 1 views

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    The importance of asking students GREAT questions to help them understand how to use the Internet properly. There is a lot of history propaganda and misinformation out there. How do we help kids sort it all out?
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