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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.
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Virtual School in Washington State - 1 views

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    This website contains all the information that is provided for a no-cost public school funded system where families can have curriculum appropriate materials ("even bags of rocks and dirt") delivered to their front door and complete graded Kindergarten through the 12th grade virtually from home. They claim these virtual students will spend about 20-25% of their time working on the computer, while high school students in this program can plan to spend about three hours each day on the computer. This site offers free examples of lesson plans, and lots of information on how this system works.
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    Search Criteria: Google: virtual school Washington state (I started with virtual school and Google provided me the rest)
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Why Schools Must Teach Social Networking | Network.Ed - 0 views

  • Students have discovered that learning is no longer bound to the confines of the school building and schools are beginning to realise that teaching students how to use these technologies effectively for academic purposes is essential if they want their students to engage in the use of social networking appropriately, less sporadically and more spectacularly.
  • The use of the internet is becoming an ever more integral part of young people’s lives and, as a result, they are communicating with each other on an unprecedented scale.
  • In my view, teaching and learning need to reflect these social changes and conform to the needs and expectations of today’s young people.
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  • Your private life should remain private. Being friends with pupils on Facebook is not ok as it exposes you and your pupils to unacceptable risks.
  • Handling all this information has suddenly become one of the most precious skills we can hope to pass on to our students. How teachers and schools react and adapt to this new paradigm will bear direct consequences in the future success of their pupils, for remembering facts and figures may not be as important to them in their lives as being able to successfully acquire, manipulate and exploit information.
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    This article argues that teachers should actually teach their students how to use these social media outlets successfully so they can use them in the class room. I think this is an important article to show how important it is to bridge that gap between student and teacher.
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Is It Safe to Allow Cell Phones in School? | District Administration Magazine - 0 views

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    Cell phones are mainly banned because of being a distraction. However, after 911 events, parents want their children to have cellphones because it makes parents feel better in a school crisis.
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    Cell phones are mainly banned because of being a distraction. However, after 911 events, parents want their children to have cellphones because it makes parents feel better in a school crisis.
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SMART Board interactive whiteboards shown to be highly effective for collaborative lear... - 0 views

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    This study was done at a high school and the evidence showed that doing group activities, discussions, etc. on a SMART Board is an effective tool. Although this was conducted at a high school, the evidence may correlate to all age groups in activities where the entire class works as a whole. (Complete URL: http://downloads01.smarttech.com/media/research/international_research/canada/11_0142_new%20brunswick_research_summary.pdf) Bing: SMART Boards in schools
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National School Lunch Program (NSLP) | Food and Nutrition Service - 1 views

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    National school lunch program explained with connections to applications, program history and notes
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iPads in Elementary School - 0 views

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    Slideshare presentation showing how children in elementary schools can effectively use iPads in the classroom!
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iPad Apps for Education - Jeffreys Grove Elementary School - 0 views

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    A list of education apps that could be used in elementary schools when iPads are also present
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Report: Online Learning Nearly Doubles Among High School Students -- THE Journal - 0 views

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    Talks about a report of online education among high school students. States how the growth of this method is not enough to keep up with all the students that want to enroll.
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South Florence High Makes Art and Technology Work for Student and Adult Learners - 0 views

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    This article talks about a high school in South Carolina that used extra tech. money to integrate more art into their school. It lays out "what's it like?" "why bother?" and "how to start?"
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Cyberbullying: Should schools police students' social media accounts? (+video) - CSMoni... - 0 views

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    This article talks about the trouble with to much social media and the use of "Cyberbullying". I think this is an important article for all incoming teachers to read and understand.
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Service Animals in Schools (Adopted January 2012) - 0 views

  • In the past 20 years there has been an expansion of the diversity of service animals being utilized by persons with disabilities, with some confusion as to what truly is a “service animal”.  Effective March 15, 2011, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) regulations define a service animal as “a dog that is individually trained to do work or perform tasks for the benefit of an individual with a disability” (USDJ, 2011). 
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No Child Left Untableted - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Real teachers discuss the pros and cons of tablets in the classroom. North Carolina middle schools receive 15,450 tablets for educational purposes and discuss their impact on learning. K-12 schools spend $17 billion annually on instructional materials and technology.
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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.
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Should Tablets Replace Textbooks in k-12 Schools? - 0 views

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    This article explained the pros and cons of using tablets(Ipads) over textbooks. Some ideas that were discussed were; the idea that tablets reduce paper waste, so they are better for the environment. Another idea was brought up about price, textbooks in schools is a 8 billion dollar industry where as tablets are a 35 billion dollar industry.
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Social Media in Higher Education: A Literature Review and Research Directions | Charles... - 0 views

  • Given this insight
  • SMTs are reshaping theway students communicate
  • They utilize wall posts, event notifications, and tweets to inform students about upcoming
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  • events and
  • activities, athletic games and competitions, deadlines, reminders, general college
  • These young media consumers are more connected than
  • emergencies. The use of social media in recruitment, marketing, or managing the college’s brand
  • image (mostly through one-way communication) was the next most frequent purpose listed.
  • announcements, school closings due to inclement weather or other reasons, alerts, and
  • any previous generation, and they have an expectation to remain that way in all aspects of their lives (Prensky, 2005).
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    This article indicates the increased usage by universities and other higher education institutes of social media. It seems to imply that the more integrated a teacher is with social media such as Facebook and YouTube in the class room the better the students respond.
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School Pen Pals and Key Pals - 0 views

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    I though this website was way cool! It introduces people who want video pen pals all over the world, ready to share their experiences! As a Spanish teacher, I want to give my students opportunities to speak with native speakers, but the site is not specifically for language learners. You can set up an exchange with students from Australia, England, or anywhere else you might want!
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"We Don't Need Smart Boards, We Need Smart People (Jerry Brodkey) | Larry Cuban on Scho... - 1 views

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    The author of this article discusses why SMART boards (and other technology) are not needed in the classroom. The author finds no extraordinary benefits of SMART boards and therefore supports the idea of less technology in the classroom.
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    The author of this article discusses why SMART boards (and other technology) are not needed in the classroom. The author finds no extraordinary benefits of SMART boards and therefore supports the idea of less technology in the classroom.
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L.A. Unified takes back iPads as $1-billion plan hits hurdles - 0 views

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    LA times article about LA school district that spend $1 billion on getting students ipads. The school district is now trying to get the ipads back, it has gotten 2/3 of the devices back.
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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?"
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