A fusion of art and technology is the answer to realizing the NETS. This potent combination naturally creates opportunities for creativity, innovation, communication, higher-order thinking, differentiation, and tech literacy. This is the adventures of a middle school teacher in a real-world classroom implementing this fusion. Posts include successes, challenges, failures, model lessons, student work, tech tool reviews and tutorials.
is a free Windows-based program that anyone can use to create video games without writing code. The drag and drop interface relies on users being able to manage "if/ then" scenarios to design a rich gaming experience. Kodu users create the setting (trees, mountains, rivers, etc), specify the roles and place characters in their games, and program what players can and cannot do in their games.
This is cool. However it appears that there is not a lot of room for text. But definitely easier to make than Google Earth Trips. I like it. GE is still a more robust tool.
Not sure if you guys knew about this already, but Prezi has an educational version like Wikispaces. Nice for teachers who want to make their content private.
Take a collection of web sites, images, and videos and package it into a nice "all in one" presentation. Sort of like Share Tabs but a little more feature filled.