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Kenton Engels

geniushour - home - 0 views

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    This wiki is dedicated to an ideal. That ideal is that students are given time within the class day to explore whatever it is they are curious about and then explain it to their peers. This wiki contains lots of information about what genius hour is, how to implement it in your class, and examples of how it has gone for others.
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    This wiki is dedicated to an ideal. That ideal is that students are given time within the class day to explore whatever it is they are curious about and then explain it to their peers. This wiki contains lots of information about what genius hour is, how to implement it in your class, and examples of how it has gone for others.
Tamra Willis

Just Call Me Ms Frizzle Science blog - 0 views

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    Science educator blog. She shares lots of lesson plans on many topics for science teachers. Great ideas to implement engaging lessons in your science class.
Mekca Wallace

Digital Citizenship - GDRSD EdTech Commons - 3 views

  • Student CurriculumGDRMS Digital CitizenshipCommon Sense Media for EducatorsFree technology for Teachers article "11 Resources for Teaching & Learning Web Safety"Larry Ferlazzo's article The Best Sites For Learning Online SafetyNetsmartz is a program designed for student ages 5-17, parents and guardians, educators, and law enforcement designed to educate, engage and empower users of the internet.Boston Public School Cyber Safety CampaignBrainPOP has several movies about Digital Etiquette:Digital CitizenshipCyberbullying      6. Common Craft "In Plain English" series:Protecting Your Reputation onlineComputer Viruses and ThreatsSecure PasswordsSocial Networking in Plain English
  • Teacher InformationSimple Guide to All That Teachers Need to Know about Digital CitizenshipEdutopia - Digital Citizenship: Resource RoundupEdutopia - Five-Minute Film Festival: Teaching Digital Citizenship
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    Digital Citizenship lessons for students and teachers
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    I love this link, Mekca! As I'm beginning to think about introducing social media into my classroom, the idea of teaching digital media keeps popping up. I know it needs to be taught, but I don't know where to begin! This would be a great place to start. I see that it is mainly for teacher usage, but it's a great place to start and get ideas. A lot could be implemented from the material presented. I plan to use this to plan my digital literacy lessons, thank you!
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    Thanks, Mekca! We spend very little time teaching Digital Citzenship. I think it needs to be embedded in every teacher's curriculum. There are so many "teachable" moments that present themselves that could be linked to proper social media usage. This is going to be an excellent resource for me to share with my fellow educators.
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    This is an excellent source for me to use in my Teen Insights classroom. We started with a unit on bullying... then cyberbullying... I think we're missing the point- students just need to learn to be good digital citizens! I will use this source to build my curriculum. I appreciate that the curriculum is geared towards students but that it gives teachers and parents good background as well. Parents are a huge part of cyberbullying problems. Much of the conflict we have in school has to do with something students do online at home and then carry those hard feelings with them to school. I do not have resources similar to these. The video that my curriculum used to show warned students to avoid chat rooms and to only choose names that gave no indication of their age, gender, or location. It's good for students to stay safe, but the world has become much more familiar and personal with technology. Our curriculum needs to adapt to keep up.
sautera

Iowa AEA Online - Welcome to Iowa AEA Online - 1 views

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    I think this is a very under-utilized resource in schools today, for both teachers and students. There is so much available on this website. The possibilities that these resources provide teachers are endless. One of my personal favorites that is on this site is Atomic Learning. This provides training resource videos in almost any technology tool you can think of. I have used this multiple times to help me out of a jam when using anything from Movie Maker, to to Excel, to Skype to iPads. The videos are chunked into short, searchable segments that are very useful when you are trying to learn anything about computers and what to do with them. This is a great resource to use in the classroom, both for personal (as a professional) use or for student use. Students are able to search videos independently and use them for assistance, contributing to self-reliance and independence in implementing classroom technology. I am not aware of any similar resources with a database this large, in one location. Although most websites or programs have instructions, sometimes even instructional videos, available to help new users understand the technology, Atomic Learning has them all in one place with easy to use videos that do a great job of demonstrating how to use the particular programs. apps, or instructional technology with your students.
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    I am totally in agreement with Tamra on this. People do not take advantage of this huge resource! This site is something our districts pay large amounts of money to have access to and it goes unnoticed so much of the time. It is definitely a teacher resource, but the resources with in this resource vary between for students and for teachers. I have no idea how we could compare this type of source to anything else. It is specialized for us as Iowa teachers and the scope of materials that it has is about as broad as education can get.
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    I agree with Tamra and Maria that this is an under-utilized resources. I have introduced and stressed the importance of these databases to students, teachers and other staff for several years. It is too easy to just 'Google It.' I used Atomic Learning when teaching middle school technology explore. One of our 8th grade skills was an understanding of Word, and I let students pick their own topics to study further through Atomic Learning. I just used Gale for peer-reviewed journals. I am also using SIRS to find articles for our Digital Citizenship (Protect It) curriculum. I am not aware of any other collections for education as robust as Iowa AEA Online.
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    I love AEA Online. Being a former AEA employee, I've become very familiar with it over the years. Like the other ladies who commented before me, it is very underused. I'm not sure whether it's because people are not well enough familiarized with what they have to offer, or because it presents another opportunity for information overload. Regardless, it is a wonderful resource for students and teachers. I used Atomic Learning to help a teacher develop her own skills. I've also recommended it as a resource to our Special Education teachers as a resource to learn when students need reinforcement of new concepts.
Rob Green

AUGMENT - Augmented Reality for Education - 1 views

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    Easily simulate your 3D projects in Augmented Reality. Impress your teachers and get a top grade. Express your creativity and get rid of prototyping cost and time barriers.
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    I have only started to explore the world of AR, but am excited for its use in education. I create a group of auras for a display board on digital citizenship this past autumn and am looking to use it here soon at a Leadership Workshop with other teachers. Right now, I can only think of use by teachers and that's because I haven't thought of ways to include students yet. looking for ideas though. Augmented reality apps and websites can easily be found: PopAR, colAR, Chromville, Elements4D, AR Flashcards, Layar, and Codigo Code just to name a few.
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    Rob, I've intrigued by augmented reality since I first learned about it at an EdCamp last winter. Since then I've played around with AR flashcards, Chromville and Aurasma. I can see this application used both by teachers and students. It is my hope to generate some Aurasma's next year that students can demonstrate to the public. This will work to connect student learning to the public and showcase our 1:1 ipad initiative! @travislappe is someone you should follow on Twitter - he's a tech integrationist in South Dakota that has been very active with augmented reality.
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    I have been intrigued by augmented reality since beginning the VREP program at my school. This resource looks like a user friendly way to introduce the concept of AR into the classroom. I have actually used Poly Fauna for a collaborative project with West Central's chorus. It was a great way to tell a story and adapt a virtual storyboard to music. It definitely expanded the lesson plans I had previously implemented with our peer groups.
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