Skip to main content

Home/ GHAEA-TLC/ Group items tagged applications

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Maryann Angeroth

Official Google SketchUp Blog: LumenRT: Explore rendered models in real time - 0 views

  •  
    " a tool for turning your models into interactive, photo-rendered environments. The output is a stand-alone file - a whole mini application, really - that anyone can open and explore like they're in a video game. Take a look at this video to see how the navigation works: "
Judy Griffin

http://www.central.k12.ca.us/district/Central_Google_aup.pdf - 0 views

  •  
    Student code of conduct with Google Applications
Maryann Angeroth

Dan Pink: How Teachers Can Sell Love of Learning to Students | MindShift - 1 views

  • So how do educators help kids become problem-finders when they don’t know what the problem is or where the next one might be coming from? “A lot of people hate this word but I think we have to take it seriously, which is relevance,” Pink said. “There’s something to be said for connecting particular lessons to something in the real world.”
  • For instance, application of math principles, which has real relevance in the real world. “Even with my own kids, to some extent I see math has become an abstract code designed to get a right answer rather than seeing that math explains why this building is standing up, or why the traffic is going slow right now, or why the 49ers are kicking a field goal rather than going for first down.”
  • standardized,” Pink said. “So, 11-year-olds are all together in one room. No 10-year-olds, and certainly no 13-year-olds. And [assuming that] all
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • transcendence — to making something personal. That’s the best way to “sell” students on what they’re learning, Pink
  • together in one room. No 10-year-olds, and
  • so much of education policy seems designed for the convenience of adults rather than the education of children,” he said. “Start time is a perfect example
Judy Griffin

Apple - Accessibility - iPad - Vision - 0 views

  • iPad Vision Hearing Physical & Motor Skills Accessibility Solutions for iPhone and iPad. You can find a variety of hardware and software products (sold separately) that adapt iPhone and iPad for specific needs. Learn more Vision iPad includes an amazing screen reader along with other innovative accessibility features that make it easier to use for those who are blind or have impaired vision. VoiceOver The same VoiceOver screen reader available on iPhone comes standard on iPad. It’s the world’s first gesture-based screen reader, and it allows you to enjoy the fun and simplicity of iPad even if you can’t see the screen. With VoiceOver, you use simple gestures to physically interact with items on the screen. Instead of memorizing key commands or repeatedly pressing arrow keys to find what you’re looking for, just touch the screen to hear an item’s description, then gesture with a double-tap, drag, or flick to control iPad. Because VoiceOver on iPad allows you to interact directly with objects, you can understand their location and context. When you touch the upper-left corner of the screen, you hear what’s in the upper-left corner of a web page. And as you drag your finger around the screen, you learn what’s nearby, providing an unprecedented sense of relationship and context. VoiceOver on iPad also gives you information about your device — including battery level, network signal level, and time of day. It even lets you know when the display changes to landscape or portrait orientation and when the screen is locked or unlocked. Adjustable speaking rate The speaking rate in VoiceOver is adjustable so you can set it to a speed that best suits you. VoiceOver uses distinctive sound effects to alert you when an application opens, when the screen is updated, when a message dialog appears, and more. And when VoiceOver is talking, the volume of background sounds and music is automatically lowered, “ducking” under the voice, so you can clearly hear what VoiceOver is telling you. It speaks your language VoiceOver includes built-in voices that speak 36 languages: Arabic Chinese (Cantonese) Chinese (China) Chinese (Taiwan) Czech Danish Dutch English (Australia) English (Britain) English (Irish) English (South African) English (United States) Finnish Flemish (Belgian Dutch) French (Canadian) French (France) German Greek Hindi Hungarian Indonesian Italian Japanese Korean Norwegian Polish Portuguese (Brazil) Portuguese (Portugal) Romanian Russian Slovak Spanish (Mexico) Spanish (Spain) Swedish Thai Turkish Getting started VoiceOver is built right into iPad so there’s nothing extra to purchase or install. All you need is the latest version of iTunes and a Mac or PC. You can activate your iPad and enable VoiceOver without sighted assistance using Setup Assistant. Sighted users can also enable VoiceOver directly on iPad using the Accessibility menu in Settings. How it works With VoiceOver enabled, you’ll use a different but simple set of gestures to control iPad. For example, instead of tapping to ac
  •  
    For Vision Teachers
Deanna Etherington

HiddenWebtools2011v2.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 2 views

  •  
    Terri Bush shared this with me. Looks great!
Judy Griffin

How to Make Old Programs Work in Windows Vista and 7 - 0 views

  • Many good programs and games that were written for Windows XP have problems in Windows Vista or Windows 7. There are two approaches to getting older applications to work in the more recent operating systems and they are the subject of this tip.
Maryann Angeroth

Guidelines for Educators Using Social Networking Sites - Home - Doug Johnson'... - 1 views

  • Links Blue Skunk Blog My website My contact My bio My books My biases Archives Endorsement Policy Why the Blue Skunk blog? Search this site Subscribe Home RSS Home Comments RSS Other stuff Follow me on Twitter at:@BlueSkunkBlog All banner artwork by Brady Johnson, college student and (semi-) starving artist. Shameless self-promotion dept My latest book: School LibrariesHead for the Edge My book Machines are the easy part; people are the hard part is now available as a free download at Lulu.  The Blue Skunk Fan Page on Facebook « Happy Birthday, Blue Skunk | Main | Thank you, U.S. taxpayers » FridayAug072009 Guidelines for Educators Using Social Networking Sites Friday, August 7, 2009 at 09:37AM ATTENTION: These guide lines have been revised and the newest version is available here. - Doug     My friend and colleague, Tech Director Jen Hegna over in the Byron (MN) schools developed this set of guidelines for the staff in her district. (She was motivated, she said, partially by posts here and here on the Blue Skunk. Cool!) Anyway she's given permission for me to share her work here and says readers are welcome to use and
1 - 11 of 11
Showing 20 items per page