Skip to main content

Home/ Google in Education/ Group items tagged English

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Gail Braddock

Welcome to Bank Jr! - 0 views

  •  
    educational banking website designed for elementary school students. I discovered Bank Jr. through Donna Murray's excellent blog. Bank Jr. is an interactive website on which students can learn the in's and out's of banking. Bank Jr. has a glossary of terms, a help center, and savings wizards. Bank Jr. also provides students with a history of money and a look at how different countries use money. The teachers section of Bank Jr. provides an extensive glossary of terms and some lesson ideas. Bank Jr. does not provide full-length, detailed lesson plans, but it does provide PDF's of worksheets and handouts that teachers may find useful for teaching banking lessons. Yesterday, Common Craft released a new video that explains borrowing money in plain English. As always, Common Craft does an excellent job of explaining what can be a complex topic in a very easy to understand form. The video is embedded below in Dot Sub form. Applications for Education Bank Jr. could be a good place for students to learn about saving money and commonly used banking terms. In the teacher section of Bank Jr. teachers can find PDF forms for teaching banking basics like keeping an accurate ledger. The Common Craft video should be required viewing for high school and college students. Too many students get to college and get into debt in part because of ignorance about the pitfalls of borrowing more than you can afford to repay. Here are a couple of other resources for teaching about banking and economics. The History of Credit Cards in the United States Saving Money in Plain English
Cara Whitehead

Educational Standards Correlations - 4 views

  •  
    VocabularySpellingCity provides the following sets of correlations to standards: U.S. Standards by State Common Core Standards for each States' Implementation Australian Standards by State Canadian Standards by Province English National Curriculum Standards
Michelle Krill

Cresco Times > Archives > News > How-Winn goes 'online' in the classroom using Google t... - 7 views

  •  
    " According to one district teacher, all seventh grade English students with signed parental permission slips have been issued school email accounts and/or Google documents accounts."
Michelle Krill

Client Video: Google Reader in Plain English | Common Craft - Explanations In Plain Eng... - 1 views

  •  
    Another useful vid from CommonCraft folks.
Michelle Krill

The English Blog: Vocabulary Building with Google Docs Templates - 36 views

  •  
    "the Template Gallery contains a number of 'gadgets' which are really useful vocabulary building tools. For example,the Flash Cards spreadsheet gadget allows you to create flash card sets easily and quickly. "
Allison Campbell-Rogers

OTF/FEO - Professional Learning - Critical Thinking - 22 views

  •  
    Critical thinking tasks, resources, presentations by Garfield Gini-Newman
Elana Leoni

Google Lit Trips: Bringing Travel Tales to Life | Edutopia - 1 views

  •  
    Edutopia.org blogger, Suzie Boss reveals a step-by-step approach on how to easily create a Google Lit Trip for your favorite piece of classroom literature.
Dennis OConnor

Google Translate Adds Conversation Mode -- InformationWeek - 11 views

  • Conversation Mode has arrived. Conversation Mode is a user interface for mobile devices designed to facilitate a real-time conversation between two people speaking different languages.
  • "Google Translate will translate your speech and read the translation out loud. Your conversation partner can then respond in [his or her] language, and you'll hear the translation spoken back to you."
  • There are some limitations. The current version supports only English-Spanish translation in Conversation Mode. And rapid speech or a regional accent may be misinterpreted by Google's systems. But these are problems Google is working to overcome.
Mike Cullum

As Classrooms Go Digital, Textbooks May Become History - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  • students who own laptops can register for “digital sections” of several English, history and science classes
    • Mike Cullum
       
      Will this model work for publishers? Can we obtain the rights to distribute electronically some chapters of textbooks and only pay for the portions we use? An interesting question..
  • With California in dire straits, the governor hopes free textbooks could save hundreds of millions of dollars a year.
    • Mike Cullum
       
      So how are we going to pay the people who do the work of creating these "free" textbooks? If we could agree on content, perhaps school districts could work together and write the books and make them available through a creative commons license.
1 - 18 of 18
Showing 20 items per page