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Lauren Gould

U.S. State Department Unveils Online Game, and Web Site, to Teach English - Digital Edu... - 5 views

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    U.S. State Department Unveils Online Game, and Web Site, to Teach English -- 3D video game designed to help students abroad acquire English language skills
Andrea Bush

Technology in the ESL Classroom - 0 views

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    Interesting article about teaching ESL that brings up the question "is learning another language based largely on interpersonal relationships?" Language is essentially about communicating with other people, whether in spoken or written form, so computers may actually not be that helpful in this process.
Andrea Bush

ReadSpeak - 0 views

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    ReadSpeak, is an emerging technology in language learning. Innovative captioning can make initial language acquisition and ESL easier.
Maung Nyeu

ACCESS distance learning program helps Alabama high school students catch up or get ahe... - 0 views

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    Alabama offers blended learning for 9-12 grades, called Alabama Connecting Classrooms, Educators and Students (ACCESS). It allows students take courses, such as, foreign languages, their own school may not offer. It also allows students to catch up if they fall behind or simply graduate early.
Maung Nyeu

Overcoming the Divide Between Curriculum and Technology Leaders | EdTech Magazine - 3 views

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    Communication and ­collaboration between curriculum and technology leaders are necessary to impact teaching and learning. Educators are knowledgeable about ­research on effective ­instructional ­strategies while tech leaders are familiar with educational technology trends and emerging applications and mobile devices. Together, these leaders can ­develop a common language that aligns ­evidence-based instructional practices.
Ayelet R

Can an Online Game Crack the Code to Language Learning? | MindShift - 1 views

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    Getting kids excited about learning Latin.
James Glanville

Education Week: Digital Book-Sharing Unlocks Print for Students - 2 views

  • Bookshare memberships are for students who are blind, have low vision, have such learning disabilities as severe dyslexia, or have a disability such as cerebral palsy that could keep them from holding a book. Such students have what are collectively called print disabilities—a distinct departure from saying “learning disabilities,” said David Rose, the chief education officer at the Center for Applied Special Technology, or CAST, in Wakefield, Mass. Related Blog Visit this blog. Using the phrase “print disability” said Mr. Rose, “is co-locating the problem. Print is part of the problem.” His nonprofit organization works on expanding learning opportunities for all individuals, especially those with disabilities, through a set of principles called “universal design for learning.” “We can convey that information in a whole host of ways now. In that world, you go, ‘Print is not very good for a lot of kids,’ ” he said.
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    Interesting article in edweek on Bookshare - a non-profit electronic book service that provides free digital copies of books in accessible formats for kids with print disabilities, a term coined by George Kerscher to cover visual, physical and language based disabilities that impact the ability to read a physical book.
Adrian Melia

Five secret ways that games are changing the world. - Kill Screen - 0 views

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    Interesting examples of how some games are used for more than just entertainment including crowdsourcing for scientific progress, helping support research, and bridging the language gap.
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    Hi Adrian, thanks for sharing this. I think that the crowdsourcing potential for online games is great for solving real-life problems. Maybe educators could actually use such a platform for engaging students in school too, like crowdsourcing to solve problems in school.
Jenny Reuter

Deaf Magazine uses augmented reality to teach readers sign language | VentureBeat - 2 views

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    Augmented reality is bridging divide between signing and non-signing communities.
Mirza Ramic

Should Coding be the "New Foreign Language" Requirement? | Edutopia - 1 views

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    This reflects on our discussion from earlier in the semester on the merits of teaching coding in schools.
Jennifer Jocz

Southeastern Researchers Explore Approach to Improve Deaf Education - 0 views

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    An article describing the use of radio frequency identification (RFID) technology to help deaf children learn American Sign Language (ASL).
Cameron Paterson

Disrupting Class comes to life - 2 views

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    If you haven't yet seen it, there is a fascinating video of Sal Khan speaking at the Gel 2010 conference. For those who haven't been following, Khan is the creator of the Khan Academy-a non-profit that has over 1,800 videos for free on the Web that teach topics in Math, Science, the Humanities, and so forth-and have attracted such an impressive following that they have more viewers than even MIT's open courses on YouTube. The Khan Academy reaches people all over the world with these videos, and recently Google awarded it $2 million to create more videos and translate them into additional languages.
Maura Wolk

Hyperbole and a Half: The Alot is Better Than You at Everything - 2 views

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    For all you English teachers out there who die a little bit inside every time you read shortcut language- I wish you a happy Friday.
Amanda Comperchio

Save the Words - 4 views

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    This site might have some interesting application in a language arts or English class.
Sabita Verma

GoGo Lingo Makes Education Entertaining | GeekDad | Wired.com - 1 views

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    This is a company created to help kids learn foreign languages through activity based play in an online environment.
Rupangi Sharma

Sugata Mitra shows how kids teach themselves - 1 views

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    Saw this over the summer and thought it raised some good questions about IEP initiatives, a child's ability to learn technical frameworks without explicit instruction, community engagement, technological innovation in impoverished areas, etc.
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    Speaking at LIFT 2007, Sugata Mitra talks about his Hole in the Wall project. Young kids in this project figured out how to use a PC on their own -- and then taught other kids. He asks, what else can children teach themselves? Sugata Mitra's "Hole in the Wall" experiments have shown that, in the absence of supervision or formal teaching, children can teach themselves and each other, if they're motivated by curiosity and peer interest.
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    I thought this was a great video when I watched it. Very interesting experiment. It reminded me of how I know people who learned other languages through their love of music--they just memorized song lyrics and practiced until they figured out the language!
Stephen Bresnick

Video: An Automatic Text-To-Sign-Language Translation System | Popular Science - 0 views

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    In the USDOE Educational Technology plan, Universal Design for Learning standards require that information be presented in a way that is accessible to people with disabilities such as sight or hearing impairment. I found this article about automatic text-to-sign avatar software that would seem to be a no-brainer for anybody who is creating an eLearning experience that is primarily text-based. We have text-to-speech, which is as easy as opening a document and having a robot read the text for you. I wonder if there are any text-to-sign avatars that are available in English.
Xavier Rozas

Social implications of emotional readers - 0 views

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    I have over my career in the classroom become somewhat of an expert on reading kids' emotions through body language. Def. not on par with 'The Mentalist', but I can tell when I kid is going to explode or is hiding something or is in need of a lerning intervention. This is not really possible with distance learners...or is it and if possible, what are the implications on the students' psyche?
Uly Lalunio

Dyslexia has big differences in English and Chinese - 0 views

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    "Researchers looking at the brains of dyslexic Chinese children have discovered that the disorder in that language often stems from two separate, independent problems: sound and visual perception. "
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