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Susan Oxnevad

Google Docs for Learning - An Interactive Graphic Filled with Resources - 70 views

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    Explore this interactive graphic used to successfully drive some recent professional development.
Chris Betcher

google-blockly - A visual programming language - Google Project Hosting - 35 views

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    Blockly is a web-based, graphical programming language. Users can drag blocks together to build an application. No typing required.
Dave Crusoe

Boolify Project: K-12 Graphical Boolean Search Tool - 0 views

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    Educational tool for K12s built on the Google AJAX Search API technology
Gail Braddock

morguefile.com Where photo reference lives. - 0 views

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    Copyright friendly pics/ free high resolution digital stock photography for either corporate or public use.
Chris Telfer

Google Body - Google Labs - 39 views

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    This is an amazing virtual anatomy system. 3-dimensional views of all human organ systems. Zoom through the body . Use the label layer to learn anatomical vocabulary. Stunning graphics. A free virtual tour of the body. This is a beta offering. You need a Web browser that supports WebGL. This means Google Chrome or Firefox 4 beta. Well worth installing a new browser if you haven't already done so.
adina sullivan

Google Doodles: 2011 April - June - 36 views

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    Google Doodle and Logo archive
Dr. Sorin Adam Matei

GE | Plug Into the Smart Grid | Augmented Reality - 0 views

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    Very smart augmented reality simulation (or maybe more)
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.
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