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Sarah Downie

Promethean - 0 views

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    The Promethean website promotes its interactive whiteboards and their positive effects on classroom performance.
Brian Ely

teachwithyouripad - Social Studies Apps - 0 views

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    This blog offers numerous apps that can be used in conjunction with ipads and tablets in the social studies classroom. Various apps can help students learn geography, American history, and connect with different cultures around the world.
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    This blog offers numerous apps that can be used in conjunction with ipads and tablets in the social studies classroom. Various apps can help students learn geography, American history, and connect with different cultures around the world.
Alyssa Deaton

Unexpected Learning Opportunities Through Games | Grand Canyon University - 2 views

  • When a student can be so engaged and motivated, this type of learning tool becomes an important part of the curriculum. Clegg (1991) pointed out the most important predictor of learning is the instructional context and not necessarily the actual game, but the collaborative and cooperative learning built into the overall experience, offering an engaging environment for information assimilation.
  • Games create competitive and collaborative situations making learning fun and engaging; meeting the many needs of the students (Weiss & Loebbeck, 2008). During the early grades, teachers spend up to eight hours with their students each day; they could utilize the interactive and social aspects in games in order to realize additional learning in the classroom and use it to support other subjects (Klopfer, Osterweil, & Salen, 2009).
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    An article about the benefits of games in the classroom. Provides statistics and examples on how effective they are. Search Criteria-Bing: Learning through games research
Cyndi Sitterding

Animal Assisted Therapy, Exploring the therapeutic link between animals and humans - 0 views

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    Humane society advocates using animals to heal, comfort and give purpose to lonely or sick children.
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.
Cyndi Sitterding

Revised ADA Requirements: Service Animals - 0 views

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    ADA requirements for service animals.
Cyndi Sitterding

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). 
Sarah Lillejord

Five Ways that Smart Boards Are a Smart Choice in the Classroom - 2 views

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    This site gives five ways that the smart board could be used to help you teach your students.
Christina E

18 iPad Uses: How Classrooms are Benefiting from Apple's Tablets - 0 views

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    Identifies a variety of ways classrooms can use iPads in beneficial ways
Hope Odendahl

The Teacher's Guide To Using YouTube In The Classroom - 0 views

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    YouTube can be an effective way to add visuals, give students resources to review lectures, and create centers in the classroom.
Jaime Lemmer

Educational Leadership:Multiple Measures:Teaching with Interactive Whiteboards - 0 views

  • What the Research Found
  • The study results indicated that, in general, using interactive whiteboards was associated with a 16 percentile point gain in student achievement. This means that we can expect a student at the 50th percentile in a classroom without the technology to increase to the 66th percentile in a classroom using whiteboards. In addition, three features inherent in interactive whiteboards have a statistically significant relationship with student achievement. The first is the learner-response device—handheld voting devices that students use to enter their responses to questions. The percentage of students providing the correct answer is then immediately displayed on the board in a bar graph or pie chart. Using voting devices was associated with a 26 percentile point gain in student achievement. A second feature is the use of graphics and other visuals to represent information. These include downloaded pictures and video clips from the Internet, sites such as Google Earth, and graphs and charts. Use of these aids was also associated with a 26 percentile point gain in student achievement. A third feature is the interactive whiteboard reinforcer—applications that teachers can use to signal that an answer is correct or to present information in an unusual context. These applications include dragging and dropping correct answers into specific locations, acknowledging correct answers with virtual applause, and uncovering information hidden under objects. These practices were associated with a 31 percentile point gain in student achievement.
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    Robert Marzano's research on the effectiveness of interactive whiteboards in the classroom.
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.
Cyndi Sitterding

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
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.
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