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Tara Mazza

Videos For Modeling Social Skills - 0 views

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    This site is great for viewing examples of videos designed for modeling appropriate social behaviors. Although videos are available for purchase on this site, many helpful tips are offered on how to use video modeling most effectively.
Alyssa Griffin

NAGC Homepage - 0 views

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    This is the website for the National Association for Gifted Children and it has many resources available. It incluldes a Frequently Asked Questions page with general questions about gifted education. The site also includes information for families and a variety of teacher tools.
Samantha Tengs

How Schools Are Hurting the Fight Against Plagiarism - Plagiarism Today - 0 views

  • While these policies are well-intended, they actually do more to create a climate of fear
  • desire to try and defeat the systems that check for plagiarism.
  • educators have accidentally created a plagiarism war
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  • earn on their own how to better get away
  • want to know about how to detect it more effectively, not how to prevent it
  • ant to know about how to beat the tools that detect it (often through very sneaky questioning), not how to actually cite sources.
  • ware of the detection methods
  • source under the radar
  • students who want to plagiarize can do so with little fear of getting caught
  • ocus on actually teaching about plagiarism
  • how to cite sources, paraphrase correctly and be a good researcher
  • rafting assignments that are resistant to plagiarism
  • Strict plagiarism enforcement without solid plagiarism education doesn’t make better students, it makes better cheaters.
  • current path only makes cheaters more resistant to the methods that are used to catch them and creates a climate of fear that is both counter-productive for learning and can actually encourage cheating,
  • igh level of disrespect for intellectual property
  • For the sake of academia and the creative world at large, it is crucial that school shift the way they deal with plagiarism and find a more product approach to the problem.
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    This source offers a different perspective on plagiarism detection methods, arguing that they cause more harm than good. Students become better at cheating by finding ways around these barrier. In addition to this, there is an atmosphere of fear in classroom, even for those who haven't plagiarized. Instead, teachers should focus on teaching preventative measures, like how to properly cite and research.
sasha thomas

Teaching with Google Earth - 0 views

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    a complete guide for using google earth in the geoscience classroom. most useful link is ready-to-use-clasroom activities which maps out lesson plans for teachers.
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    a complete guide for using google earth in the geoscience classroom. most useful link is ready-to-use-clasroom activities which maps out lesson plans for teachers.
Catherine Barrack

Defining the YA Literature - 0 views

  • classics they could adopt into the Y.A. family. J.D. Salinger’s Catcher in the Rye, Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Maya Angelou’s I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, C.S. Lewis’ Chronicles of Narnia, Charles Dickens’ Great Expectations, and William Golding’s Lord of the Flies are just a sampling
  • The look and age of the characters—from the lightning bolt on Harry Potter’s forehead (J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series) to the shaved head of Egg (Cecil Castelluci’s Boy Proof) The location of the stories—from a 1452 AD copy shop in Mainz, Germany (Matthew Skelton’s Endymion Spring) to the exotic tarpits (Margo Lanagan’s Black Juice) The action and plotting—vivid, fast-paced scenes and action The core conflicts—blackmail (Markus Zusak’s I Am the Messenger), date rape (Chris Lynch’s Inexcusable), telekinesis (Stephen King’s ,Carrie), performance enhancing drugs (Robert Lipsyte’s Raiders Night), and poverty (Markus Zusak’s Fighting Ruben Wolfe) Tone, voice, and point of view The linguistic and structural tricks the writers employ The characteristics that define what many are calling a “genre”
  • Christopher Paul Curtis said, “if the novel lets one child see that there is a real potential for beauty and fun and emotion in a book, I’m not greedy, I’ll happily take that”
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  • The Book Thief by Markus Zusak (Knopf, 2006) Narrated by Death and set in a small town outside Munich during World War II, this is the story of nine-year- old Liesel Meminger, a German girl taken into Hans Huberman’s household as a foster child. As likeable as she is well-developed, it is amazing to watch a young girl remain so strong in the face of human tragedy, impossible hatred, and adolescent love. This story pays tribute to the simple power of words, to their ability to change our minds, destroy our lives, move our souls, recount our memories, and yes, heal our world. When Death starts telling stories, teens are likely to listen. When the story is about a nine-year-old girl in World War II Germany, teens might stop. Death often interrupts the narrative to insert his own factoids and commentary, the last of which will chill readers to the bone. The center pages of the book feature an illustrated booklet designed over the torn-out pages of a copy of Mein Kampf. The frequent fragmented sentences give the language a structure geared for teens that conveys a much older voice, something Death cannot help but bring to his story about this pre-adolescent girl. First published in Australia as a Grownup novel, The Book Thief does not embody very many Young Adult elements, which does not mean that it is not a powerfully-crafted novel. It only means that Liesel is perhaps too young, the narrative too grand, and the voice too somber to fit with the rest of the expanding genre.
  • 2. A Distinctly Teen Voice
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    "What exactly makes Young Adult any different from Grownup or Children's literature?" and "What does it mean for a book to be Young Adult?"
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    "What exactly makes Young Adult any different from Grownup or Children's literature?" and "What does it mean for a book to be Young Adult?"
Chris Ruether

How Social Networking Helps Teaching (and Worries Some Professors) - Technology - The C... - 1 views

  • Ask students to do role-playing exercises on Facebook or Twitter. For instance, students in an American-history course could each be required to set up a Facebook page for a historical figure and periodically post "status updates" of things the famous people did. Similarly, Utah State University organized a Civil War re-enactment on Twitter.
  • Some attendees stressed that there is a danger that professors would use
  • new technologies just because they seemed cool, rather than for any specific learning goa
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    This article gave specific examples of how social media was used in the class room. Being a History major I especially liked the idea of making pages for certain historical figures and posting status updates about things that person did
sasha thomas

Classroom Resources - Google Earth for Educators - 0 views

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    Googles published website giving tutorials and tips for teachers. Can be used as a place to share student projects, teacher reviews, and lesson plans. plans range from population growth tracking to up to the minute earthquake watching.
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    Googles published website giving tutorials and tips for teachers.
Cyndi Sitterding

Animal Assisted Therapy for Special Needs Children - 0 views

  • Kids and animals are a natural combination. Pets are great companions, and they teach the value of responsibility to children. For children with disabilities, this companionship is particularly invaluable, as they may have trouble making friends with kids their own ages because of low self-esteem. Animals give children an opportunity to connect with another living being, which is extremely important to any child's development.
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    National site promoting animal therapy for special needs children. Highlights horses, dolphins, and dogs.
Chris Ruether

100 Tips, Tools, and Resources for Teaching Students About Social Media | Teaching Degr... - 2 views

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    many different ways for teaching students to about social media
Chris Ruether

Education Week: Schools Are Using Social Networking to Involve Parents - 0 views

  • This school year, the 1.1 million-student New York City system launched a new text-subscription service that notifies parents in English or Spanish of school news and a series of webinars on topics of relevance to parents. The 640,000-student Los Angeles school district hired its first-ever director of social media this past spring, whose main charge is communicating and sharing district information with parents and students via tools such as YouTube, Twitter, and Tumblr.
  • In the 182,000-student Fairfax County school system in Virginia, 84,500 people have subscribed to the district's enhanced news and information email and text service, the district's Facebook page has 26,000 "likes," and its Twitter account has 8,100 followers
  • digital technologies to improve communication between the school and parents
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  • has its teachers use Skype to run parent conferences and airs live and archived video of all parent and teacher association meetings for parents who are unable to attend. Recently, Mr. Mazza and some staff members even brought laptops into a local mosque that a number of the school's families attend, and streamed live footage there of one of the meetings
  • About 2,000 parents have already received training since the start of school this year, according to Kelly Cline, the senior manager of parent engagement for the Houston district.
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    This article talks about teaching the parents about how to use social media properly in order for them to stay up to date about many things in their children's lives. one example is using Skype to do parent teacher conferences. Also using high-quality digital content in the homes is allowing parents to once again help their students with homework.
Cyndi Sitterding

How pets benefit child development - 1 views

  • Physical
  • Walking a dog or running in the yard and throwing a ball are great ways to exercise the dog as well as for children to get away from sedentary indoor activities and move around. Small motor skills can be encouraged by allowing children to scoop food and pour water into dishes, and by helping to groom them
  • Social
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  • Children are more prone to approach and interact with another child who is playing with a pet. In this way, a pet can be the bridge between a less socially outgoing child and other potential playmates.
  • Emotional
  • Pets can facilitate various aspects of emotional development such as self-esteem and a sense of responsibility.
  • Cognitive
  • Encouraging children to read about their favorite pet or to take part in obedience classes with a parent and the pet can all encourage a child's cognitive development as it sparks the desire for learning. Bringing the child along to a veterinarian appointment will give him a chance to ask questions about proper care and his pet's health.
  • Pets as therapy
  • Because of the special bond that often develops between pet and child, pets can sometimes fill the role of comforter. Since the relationship is non-judgmental from the pet's perspective, a hurting child might be more willing to initially trust a pet than a person
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    Focus on the benefit of pets for children.
Xandra Peter

Bringing Babies to the Classroom to Teach Empathy, Prevent Bullying | PBS NewsHour - 2 views

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    This article is probably one of my favorites. It shows how children's interactions and care for another person can greatly impact their aggression levels. The response of caring for someone else overcomes the want to hurt another. 
Ashley Brown

Is the iPad bad for children? - The Week - 1 views

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    theweek.com/article/index/242107/is-the-ipad-bad-for-children Three Kindergarten classes in Australia are participating in a study of benefits. Experts agree that children are better off simply talking than zoning out over an iDevice in order to develop social skills and to learn to cope with or grow from boredom.
Lily Varner

Using Technology in the Elementary Classroom - 0 views

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    A great website for math resources for primary grades!
anonymous

http://www.tandfonline.com.ezproxy.library.wwu.edu/doi/pdf/10.1080/00094056.1999.10521999 - 0 views

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    A journal article explaining why there is a need for change in the way students are graded, ideas for forms of alternative assessment and what it would look like, and how it contributes to children's learning.
Catherine Barrack

vlogbrothers - YouTube - 0 views

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    VlogBrothers is a video blog style channel on YouTube hosted by brothers, John Green and Hank Green. John Green is a popular YA Lit author (Looking for Alaska, The Fault in our Stars)
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    VlogBrothers is a video blog style channel on YouTube hosted by brothers, John Green and Hank Green. John Green is a popular YA Lit author (Looking for Alaska, The Fault in our Stars)
Brianna Barkley

Education World: Hand-Held Technology 'Clicks' With Students - 1 views

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    So far, the best resource for my topic would probably be "Education World: Hand-Held Technology 'Clicks' With Students". This article is about the effects of the clicker in the classroom. Like how the clickers help students become more engaged with the lesson and gives the teacher feedback of how the students are responding to the lesson. This article also addresses the issue of why the clickers might not be for everyone.
Jenna Stollberg

The Teacher's Guide to Facebook - 0 views

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    This blog gives guidelines for teachers about how to present themselves on facebook and how to handle requests from students. It stresses that teachers are professionals and the way they present themselves on any type of social media should reflect that.
Claire Kotler

Video Games Affect the Brain-for Better and Worse - Dana Foundation - 0 views

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    This article outlines the debate on wether video games are good or bad for the brain. It includes research on positive effects and negative effects on people's brains. It also includes five aspects of video games that affect the players long term influences.   
Katie Savinski

7 Ways Teachers Use Social Media in the Classroom - 0 views

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    This article explains seven effective ways that teachers can incorporate social media into their classrooms. It says that social media can serve as a tool or simply a way to connect people together.
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    This article is great for generating ideas for unique ways to use social media to enhance the classroom experience for students.
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