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Ms Vaks

Washington Post suspends columnist for Twitter hoax | The Upshot Yahoo! News - Yahoo! News - 1 views

  • publishing fabricated information on Twitter
  • prove a point about how reporters will run stories in today's fast-moving news environment without  independently verifying the information.
  • ther news outlets went with the apparent scoop
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • guidelines on correctly using social media.
  • why Twitter users (including other journalists) assume respected journalists are publishing accurate information on the medium
  • nobody checking facts or sourcing
  • credibility
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    Credibility of info posted on social media. Role of reposrteers: fact checking sources.
Tom McHale

Strategies for Helping Students Motivate Themselves | Edutopia - 0 views

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    "My previous post reviewed research on extrinsic and intrinsic motivation, and described the four qualities that have been identified as critical to helping students motivate themselves: autonomy, competence, relatedness, and relevance. In this post, I'll discuss practical classroom strategies to reinforce each of these four qualities."
Tom McHale

Word Up: The Must Dos of Vocabulary Instruction | Edutopia - 0 views

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    "A while ago, I wrote a post called Doing It Differently: Tips for Teaching Vocabulary which spells out (get it?) the process and rationale for selecting certain vocabulary words and also describes six steps for teaching new words. Here, I'm going to add to that earlier musing on this topic by offering up some must dos that took me a few years down the teaching road to figure out."
Brendan McIsaac

Twitter as a Metacognitive Support Device by Alan Reid : Learning Solutions Magazine - 1 views

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    Maybe twitter for goal setting and learning log posts
Tom McHale

From 'Lives' to 'Modern Love': Writing Personal Essays With Help From The New York Time... - 0 views

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    If you're a regular Times reader, you've no doubt enjoyed, and maybe even taught with, some of the 1,000-plus personal essays from the Magazine's Lives column, which has run weekly for decades. But did you know that NYTimes.com also regularly features personal writing on everything from love and family to life on campus, how we relate to animals, living with disabilities and navigating anxiety? In this post we suggest several ways to inspire your students' own personal writing, using Times models as "mentor texts," and advice from our writers on everything from avoiding "zombie nouns" to writing "dangerous" college essays."
Tom McHale

12 Contemporary Writers on How They Revise | Literary Hub - 1 views

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    ""Writing is rewriting," says everyone all the time. But what they don't say, necessarily, is how. Yesterday, Tor pointed me in the direction of this old blog post from Patrick Rothfuss-whose Kingkiller Chronicle is soon to be adapted for film and television by Lin-Manuel Miranda, in case you hadn't heard-in which he describes, step-by-step, his revision process over a single night. Out of many, one assumes. It's illuminating, and I wound up digging around on the Internet for more personal stories of editing strategies, investigating the revision processes of a number of celebrated contemporary writers of fantasy, realism, and young adult fiction. So in the interest of stealing from those who have succeeded, read on."
Tom McHale

Student Contest | Write an Editorial on an Issue That Matters to You - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "Every day during the school year we invite teenagers to share their opinions about questions like these - on topics from hip-hop to climate change - and hundreds do, posting arguments, reflections and anecdotes to our Student Opinion feature. With this, our first-ever Student Editorial Contest, we're asking you to channel that enthusiasm into something a little more formal: short, evidence-based persuasive essays like the editorials The New York Times publishes every day."
Tom McHale

Get a Life, Holden Caulfield - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "Holden won over the young, especially the 1960s generation who saw themselves in the disaffected preppy, according to the cultural critic Morris Dickstein. "The skepticism, the belief in the purity of the soul against the tawdry, trashy culture plays very well in the counterculture and post-counterculture generation," said Mr. Dickstein, who teaches at the Graduate Center of the University of the City of New York. Today, "I wouldn't say we have a more gullible youth culture, but it may be more of a joining or togetherness culture." The culture is also more competitive. These days, teenagers seem more interested in getting into Harvard than in flunking out of Pencey Prep. Young people, with their compulsive text-messaging and hyperactive pop culture metabolism, are more enchanted by wide-eyed, quidditch-playing Harry Potter of Hogwarts than by the smirking manager of Pencey's fencing team (who was lame enough to lose the team's equipment on the subway, after all). Today's pop culture heroes, it seems, are the nerds who conquer the world - like Harry - not the beautiful losers who reject it."
Jeremy Long

Our Top 13 Voices Posts for 2012! - 0 views

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    A "Connected Educators Month" in the United States - the rapid rise of Twitter PD - the coming of age of the Personal Learning Network. No question: It's been an historic year for connected professionals, including PLP's extended family of teacher and school leaders.
Tom McHale

Year-End Roundup, 2014-15 | Language Arts, Journalism and the Arts - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    "Below, all our E.L.A. and arts-related posts. On June 11 we'll publish a list of all of the Student Opinion questions we have asked this year. And if you'd like to go further, here are five more years' worth of lesson plan collections for English language arts, from 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014."
Tom McHale

50 Fancy Words - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    Words from NY Times articles that were looked up most often by readers using the site's dictionary function. This blog post comments on the list.
Tom McHale

STUDENT OPINION - The Learning Network Blog - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Posts connected to NY Times articles that can be used as writing prompts.
Tom McHale

The Age of the Essay - 0 views

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    An interesting post about how real essays are nothing like the 5-paragraph essay we learned in school
Brendan McIsaac

The Best Kept Secret About Private Schools - Walt Gardner's Reality Check - Education Week - 0 views

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    How private schools post strong test scores.
Tom McHale

Logical punctuation: Should we start placing commas outside quotation marks? - By Ben Y... - 1 views

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    For at least two centuries, it has been standard practice in the United States to place commas and periods inside of quotation marks. This rule still holds for professionally edited prose: what you'll find in Slate, the New York Times, the Washington Post-almost any place adhering to Modern Language Association (MLA) or AP guidelines. But in copy-editor-free zones-the Web and emails, student papers, business memos-with increasing frequency, commas and periods find themselves on the outside of quotation marks, looking in. A punctuation paradigm is shifting.
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    I've always placed punctuation marks (commas, periods) outside of the quotes for anything other than dialogue, feeling like I was breaking the rules (which says that they should be inside). It's nice to know that I was just punctuating in the "British" way!
Tom McHale

Warning: The Literary Canon Could Make Students Squirm - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "Should students about to read "The Great Gatsby" be forewarned about "a variety of scenes that reference gory, abusive and misogynistic violence," as one Rutgers student proposed? Would any book that addresses racism - like "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" or "Things Fall Apart" - have to be preceded by a note of caution? Do sexual images from Greek mythology need to come with a viewer-beware label? Colleges across the country this spring have been wrestling with student requests for what are known as "trigger warnings," explicit alerts that the material they are about to read or see in a classroom might upset them or, as some students assert, cause symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder in victims of rape or in war veterans."
Tom McHale

Our Third Annual Student Editorial Contest: Write About an Issue That Matters to You - ... - 0 views

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    The challenge is pretty straightforward. Choose a topic you care about, gather evidence from both New York Times and non-New York Times sources, and write a concise editorial (450 words or fewer) to convince readers of your point of view. Because editorial writing at newspapers is a collaborative process, you can write your entry as a team effort, or by yourself. When you're done, post it in the contest form below by March 29, 2016, at 11:59 p.m. Eastern."
Tom McHale

Jumping Into the Deep End: Preparing Students For Meaningful Social Media Discussions |... - 0 views

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    "This is the first post in a three part series explaining how I take my students from interacting with sources, to interacting with each other, to interacting with a larger discourse community through social media and multimedia text."
Tom McHale

A Dystopian High School Musical Foresaw The College Admissions Scandal : NPR - 0 views

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    "A new musical explores life in high school in a way that's eerily familiar. It's called Ranked, and it's set in a dystopian world where your class rank - determined by grades and test scores - governs everything from where you sit to what your future holds." This musical, written by a high school teacher, explores some really interesting questions inspired by the students including: "How do we know the difference between who we actually are and what people want from us?" Usually, Granite Bay announces its spring musical by posting headshots of the performers in the hallway. But this year, it tried something a little different: Holmes asked students to anonymously submit personal text messages, exchanges and emails that depicted the pressure the students were under from parents and counselors. One text exchange reads: A: How was the test? B: I got an 86%! A: Oh no what happened? Another: A: I'm watching you B: Where am I currently then A: Failing class They used the messages in a collage that included headlines from recent news stories ("The Silicon Valley Suicides," "Is class rank valid?") and hung it in the hallway instead of the headshots. A banner at the top reads: "Pain is temporary. Grades last forever."
Tom McHale

10 Ways to Teach Argument-Writing With The New York Times - The New York Times - 0 views

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    How can writing change people's understanding of the world? How can it influence public opinion? How can it lead to meaningful action? In this post, which accompanies our Oct. 10 webinar, Write to Change the World: Crafting Persuasive Pieces With Help from Nicholas Kristof and the Times Op-Ed Page, we round up the best pieces we've published over the years about how to use the riches of The Times's Opinion section to teach and learn. We've sorted the ideas - many of them from teachers - into two sections. The first helps students do close-readings of editorials and Op-Eds, as well as Times Op-Docs, Op-Art and editorial cartoons. The second suggests ways for students to discover their own voices on the issues they care about. We believe they, too, can "write to change the world." Join our webinar (live on Oct. 10 or on-demand after) to learn more, and let us know in the comments how you teach these important skills."
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