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Maryann Angeroth

Take Me Back To: Find What Happened At A Specific Date - 1 views

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    "There are many people out there who would be interested in knowing the events that happened on a specific date, for example their birthday. Once you visit the website, you can enter the date into the "Text Box" such as "19th January 1995″ and click "Take Me Back". The website will then find events that occurred on that date. The website will tell you the day it was, for example Monday or Friday or whatever day of the week it was, and will also tell you important events and achievements of that day. These special events include Music Charts, Magazine Covers, Movies, Books, Astrology, Fashion, Advertisement, and many more. Features Find nostalgic events that occurred on a specific date. Know how the world looked like on your Birthday, or any date you want. Great for history buffs. Check out Take Me Back @ http://takemeback.to"
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
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    For Vision Teachers
Maryann Angeroth

Blogging About The Web 2.0 Connected Classroom: Flipping...It's Not Just For The Classroom - 1 views

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    "Faculty meetings. Someone on Twitter asked me the other day if I had any resources for making faculty meetings better. I thought about it and it dawned on me. Why not flip them. We use the same reasoning for flipping a classroom and apply it to the faculty meeting. Think about it. All the nuts and bolts stuff that is shared in a faculty meeting could be shared asynchronously via other means, freeing up the traditional faculty meeting time for other things. Not enough time for PLC meetings? Use the Faculty Flip to free up that time and allow grades and departments to meet, talk and plan. Not enough time for Professional Development? Use the Faculty Flip to have an unconference sharing session of what's working and ways to improve practice. "
Judy Griffin

Web 2.0/Mobile AUP Guide - 0 views

  • While they also use blocking and filtering that federal law requires, their policy is based on the premise that children need to learn how to be responsible users and that such cannot occur if the young person has no real choice. School personnel who take this stand contend that students need to acquire the skills and dispositions of responsible Internet usage and to be held accountable for their behavior.
  • often without board action.
  • a more inclusive process will result in better policy and more “buy-in” from those who are affected by the policy. Critical to the success of AUP policies is the sense of ownership of the policies by their prime target: students.
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  • The law requires any school district that receives E-Rate funding to filter or block visual depictions that are obscene, that contain child pornography, or material harmful to minors. Schools are required to enforce the operation of such technology protection measures (i.e., keep the filter operating) during any use of such computers by minors. The law also requires districts to have in place a policy of Internet safety that includes the use of a filter or blocking procedure for district computers used by minors.
  • Section 215 is most relevant to schools and requires them, as part of their Internet safety policy, to educate minors about appropriate online behavior. This includes how to interact with others on social networking websites and in chat rooms as well as cyberbullying awareness and response.
  • Policies on cell phone usage vary from districts that forbid students from bringing them into the school building (such as the Student/Parent Handbook in the New Haven’s  Connecticut schools), to schools that provide for limited use, to schools which are making use of them for instructional purposes
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
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
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  • 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
Maryann Angeroth

Wearing Four Pairs of Shoes: The Roles of E-Learning Facilitators - 2002 - ASTD - 0 views

  • The teacher-centered model that has dominated instruction for centuries is slowly giving way to a learner-centered model with instructors in the roles of facilitators or "guides on the side
    • Maryann Angeroth
       
      Characteristic of effective instruction from the Iowa Core Student centered learning
  • problem-centered environments
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      Teaching for Rigor and Relevance
  • The essential quality of learner-centeredness is most relevant when learners are personally challenged with a problem to solve, a project to complete, or a dilemma to resolve.
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      Rigor and Relevance
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  • make content more personally meaningful for learners.
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      AIW and Rigor and Relevance
  • Learners can practice what experts in their discipline do each day, with facilitators helping them revise and try again.
  • Facilitators-as-instructors provide informative feedback that offers learners guidance about how they might improve their performance. Both what facilitators say and how they say it has an impact on learners.
    • Maryann Angeroth
       
      This reinforces what we read in earlier articles for this lesson.
  • If praise is given, facilitators must communicate why performance is positive.
  • Facilitators must establish peer feedback as an expectation in delineated guidelines posted at the beginning of a course (though those guidelines may be discussed and negotiated by all learners).
  • they guide a developing sense of community within and between small groups.
  • suggests learning communities
  • Encouraging and ensuring a high degree of interactivity and participation is one of the most important facilitation skills according to e-learning experts
  • -they should guide learners in working together to become more skilled in such collaborative skills as scheduling, project management, time management, consensus building, and leadership.
    • Maryann Angeroth
       
      Employability Skills
  • study guides
  • help learners manage their time
  • make the technology transparent.
Maryann Angeroth

Video Games in Education and UDL | Heeding Thamus - 0 views

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    " the purpose of gaming in the classroom and the impact it can have on different elements of teaching. There are different ways to apply gaming theory and practice to the principles of Universal Design for Learning (UDL)."
Maryann Angeroth

Integrated & Interdisciplinary PBL | Project Based Learning | BIE - 1 views

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    Integrated & Interdisciplinary PBL You have begun to master the design process of Project Based Learning and the 8 Essential Elements of PBL are evident in the projects you have planned. That's great! The next step in your PBL journey might be to plan an integrated or interdisciplinary project. You can start by bringing other content areas into your own project, or begin planning projects with your colleagues from other content areas. Learn about successfully implemented integrated/interdisciplinary projects in various subjects and grade levels, and hear about design and management techniques to transform your projects into rich learning experiences for your students. Dayna Laur, BIE National Faculty member and featured teacher from Edutopia's Schools that Work series on integrated studies, will lead this hour long session.
Maryann Angeroth

Philly Teacher: Educon 2.3 Takeaways - 0 views

  • We can't expect children to find their passion if we don't expose them to as many experiences as possible and let them tinker with ideas and try out different roles?
  • This means we need to be our own filter--a skill we must teach children.
  • What about schools that don’t have access---are these students the new illiterate?
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  • are we saying anything new?--- I find that the group of educators that attends Educon tends to be of the same outlook, mindset and viewpoint. Many of the conversations we have had over the weekend are nothing new. How many times can we hash out an idea and say "We should do something about this" before something actually gets done? what are the new conversations?---what do we really need to be discussing as we move forward into the new year?
Maryann Angeroth

The Electric Educator: Google Docs and the iPad: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly - 1 views

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    What works and what doesn't Google Docs and the iPad.
Maryann Angeroth

CodeHS - 1 views

shared by Maryann Angeroth on 03 Mar 13 - No Cached
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    " CodeHS is the best way to learn how to program. CodeHS has everything you need to teach CS in your high school. We've been teaching at Stanford for the last 3 years, and we're creating the best possible online learning experience inspired by our work there. Email team@codehs.com today for a quote. "
Maryann Angeroth

Video Story Problems on Vimeo - 1 views

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    "Video Story Problems Created by Ben Rimes 1 year ago A collection of Video Story Problems created by students, teachers, and anyone looking to bring more of the "real world" into their classroom through the use of video. If you'd like to know more, just visit the link below. techsavvyed.net/archives/2352"
Maryann Angeroth

About us - Cyberbullying Research Center - 0 views

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    "The Cyberbullying Research Center is dedicated to providing up-to-date information about the nature, extent, causes, and consequences of cyberbullying among adolescents. Cyberbullying can be defined as "Willful and repeated harm inflicted through the use of computers, cell phones, and other electronic devices." It is also known as "cyber bullying," "electronic bullying," "e-bullying," "sms bullying," "mobile bullying," "online bullying," "digital bullying," or "Internet bullying.""
Maryann Angeroth

Check out the new Google Sheets - Docs editors Help - 0 views

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    "Whether you are trying to create a spreadsheet for keeping track of personal finances or analyzing data in your workplace, the new Google Sheets can help. The new version allows you to create and edit spreadsheets, whether you're online or not, and adds a number of speed improvements, new functions, features and more."
Maryann Angeroth

Time For An Education System Makeover - Forbes - 0 views

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    "Our educational system is grossly ineffective because the way we teach our children doesn't align with what we know about how the brain learns."
Maryann Angeroth

Heartland Activity Types - 0 views

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    Connecting technology to the Iowa Core. Using the TPCK process
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