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Kenton Engels

Library of Congress Home | Library of Congress - 0 views

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    This website is great for both teachers and students. It has millions of primary sources from U.S. history. It works for research or even simply as a lesson starter with an interesting photograph.
Kenton Engels

Channel One News | Non-Fiction, Common-Core Aligned News Video for Kids - 1 views

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    I know many schools have used this but it is all archived online for use. Students can learn about current events and then share what they learn with others.
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    Kenton - We used to be a channel.one school, but stopped viewing it last year. I love the current news - but hated all of the commercials. Can you view online without all of the commercials? This site reminds me of newela.com. It is a wonderful site for reading current non-fiction articles and is also related to common core standards. I like that you can select the reading level for students on the article. You can create classes and assign readings and it has quizzes, too. I haven't used any of those features. I just used the articles for read-alouds and they were high interest. I can see Channel One working well for history, but also for English. We need to teach students to be critical viewers as well as critical readers. Let's face it - a lot of information they will receive (for elections, ads of products to buy, etc.) will be visual. They need to know how to interpret information in this medium, too.
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    Kenton - I agree that this seems like it would be a good tool for students and educators. I think that students could watch the short videos and do reports on what kinds of things are happening in around the world. I think educators could use it to stay more informed as well. I had not heard of this resource before I saw your posting. Do they post new videos weekly? Also, how do they come up with their topics? Do people submit ideas of different topics they would like to hear more about?
Tamra Willis

Dipity - Find, Create, and Embed Interactive Timelines - 0 views

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    Find or create timelines to share, embed and collaborate. Add images, audio, video, links and social media in your timelines.
Kenton Engels

EDSITEment | The Best of the Humanities on the Web - 0 views

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    This website uses primary sources to teach the humanities to students. It is great for lesson plan ideas and has a strong focus on concepts rather than facts. Teachers can use it in the classroom by downloading the sources from the website. Teachers can either use the given questions or apply their own.
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    This website uses primary sources to teach the humanities to students. It is great for lesson plan ideas and has a strong focus on concepts rather than facts. Teachers can use it in the classroom by downloading the sources from the website. Teachers can either use the given questions or apply their own.
Kenton Engels

Mission US | THIRTEEN - 0 views

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    This simulation has 3 chapters to it. It allows students to make decisions as if they were a person during that event. It has revolutionary war, civil war, and settling the west as missions. Students learn a great deal about the event while interacting with the characters and the primary sources. There is also a game functionality with it as well.
Scott Boylen

QR Code Generator: QR Stuff Free Online QR Code Creator And Encoder For T-Shirts, Busin... - 2 views

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    QR code generator. Has some options other than plain B/W. Pretty cool!
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    This resource is an excellent tool for my classroom. This would go well with another tool that I commented on- Socrative. I could post a QR code on the board. When students feel confident they could take a quick quiz and move on to another standard. Students could use this tool as well. I have heard of students working to create a kind of scavenger hunt based on QR codes. I would like to learn more about that. I have used QR codes in the past but am excited to see that this one has color and other options.
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    Scott, as Kayla said, this is a great website for website short cuts! I've also used it with book reviews my students have made. I first have my students create a video of a book review they made. I then have them upload it to Youtube, followed by making the QR code for the video. I then place the code on the back of the book and then students can go back later and see a book review on the book. I'd like to know more about Socrative though. Is that like QR Stuff?
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    I have done student multimedia projects for parent night. we just hung a picture of the QR code next to their name in the hallway. Their parents got to see their presentation which was web-based. QR codes are so handy and so is this site.
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    I like QR Stuff so much I have even paid for its use. I like that they keep track of your history in a paid subscription. I've used QR Stuff to create vocabulary scavenger hunts, to make a poster of sites to share with other teachers and post a video of the scavenger hunt to share. I've even made my own audio book recordings through QR Stuff. I see this resource as one to be used by students and teachers. The site has so many options for teachers to create codes for their classrooms. Students can link documents to digital portfolios, QR Creators are popular, but I haven't found another one that offers as many choices in codes and personalization features as QR Stuff. Ben you should look into Aurasma, an augmented reality app that adds a 3D component. And Socrative can be used for formative assessments.
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    QR codes are great for students, teachers and community members. I would guess many students and adults are familiar with them and if they don't know how to use them, know someone who is. Renee and Ben, I know some teachers use QR codes as a link to their Aurasma pages. I like this site because it offers more than the first-generation QR code generators. I can see many uses - I'd love to try one of the t-shirt or visual AR codes. I'm a fan of Tagxedo, which reminds of of the visual AR codes shown on the website.
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