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Judith Roberts

WebsiteTips.com Web Design Tips, Web Page Design Tutorials CSS HTML Tutorials Website D... - 0 views

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    Educational Web site design & development tutorials, tips & resources: for Web site owners, Web designers, Web professionals, webmasters, teachers & educators & students - anyone wanting to learn about Web sites." /> r
Steve Yuen

The Innovative Educator: 5 Steps to Harnessing the Power of Cells in Education Today - 0 views

  • The five steps are:Step One: Teacher Use of Cell Phones for Professional PurposesStep Two: Teacher Models Appropriate Use for LearningStep Three: Strengthen the Home-School Connection with Cell PhonesStep Four: Students Use Cell Phones for HomeworkStep Five: Students Use Cell Phones for Classwork
  • Three Ideas for using cell phones for professional purposes. Use Polleverywhere to conduct staff surveys that would be useful and interesting to share with students and the school community. Use Twitter and have the updates feed into your class or school blog, website, or wiki to reinforce the home/school connection and build class/school pride.Set up Google Voice to serve as your personal secretary who will transcribe your messages and enable you to easily share with others.
  • Three Ideas for modeling appropriate use of cells for learningIt goes without saying then when modeling appropriate use of cells you do not have your phone ring or make any type of noise not related to instruction. With that as a given, here are three ideas.Model for your students how you use your cell phone to support your work using the phone for basic features like alarm clock, calendar, calculator, stop watch, note taking.Demonstrate how you can use your phone to gain information instantly using Google SMS or ChaCha.Use your cell phone as a camera often to capture student work and events and load them to Flickr so they can be embedded in your class or school website, wiki or blog.
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  • Three Ideas for using cells to strengthen the home school connectionUse group texting through your phone provider or through a service like Swaggle to send out reminders to parents.Show parents/families/guardians their thoughts and opinions matter. Poll them or request open response using a tool like Polleverywhere. Text home to celebrate student success or reach out via text if there is an area of concern. This can be done quickly with minimal disruption to either party.
  • Three Ideas for enabling students to use cell phones for homeworkUsing cell phones to enrich learning makes a lot of sense for schools and districts that ban students from using personal learning devices at schools and enables educational leaders interesting in changing policy to gain some evidence of how these tools can benefit student learning.Use ChaCha to connect your students to a free network of thousands of guides who can help them when they get stuck and/or have no one around to help. Have students do their oral reports using Google Voice. If they don't like how they sounded the first time, they don't have to send the message. They can re-record until they have something with which they are happy.Test prior knowledge of a unit your class is about to study and use Wifitti to have students share one thing they know about the subject.
  • Three Ideas for Empowering Students in the Use of Cell Phones for LearningYou're going on a field trip. Ask students to determine how they might want to use cell phones to meet the learning goals of the trip using tools most phones have. They may decide to Tweet for a scavenger hunt, send reflections to Wifitti or capture pictures with captures to Flickr.You're about to learn about a new country or explore your own neighborhood. Ask students for ideas to meet learning goals using their cells. Have them use Google SMS to collect data about the area.Students are asked to share how hard work impacted someone influential in their lives. Invite them to use cell phones if they'd like. Perhaps they use a Voki character with a phone to record their voice. Maybe they'll suggest a Drop.io account is set up where the subject and people s/he knows can share experiences. Perhaps they set up a Google Voice account to capture responses.
Steve Yuen

Detecting Plagiarism for Free - Learn How to Prevent Plagiarism in Your Classroom - 0 views

  • Quick Facts 80% of college students admit to cheating at least once. (Center for Academic Integrity) 52% of 1,800 students at nine state universities had copied several sentences from a website without citation. (McCabe, D.L.) More than two-thirds of 2,100 students from 21 campuses copied or plagiarized work done by another student (Center for Academic Integrity) 15% of high school students admit to obtaining a paper from a term paper mill or website (Plagiarism.org) 50% of high-school students surveyed by Rutgers University see nothing wrong with cheating (McCabe, D.L. ) 90% of students believe that cheaters are either never caught or have never been appropriately disciplined (US News and World Report)
  • Free Tools for Detecting Plagiarism Google and Google Scholar: If a sentence strikes you as odd, put it in quotation marks and run a Google search on it. If the student cut and pasted the phrase, it will show up on Google. And as more books are uploaded onto Google Books, Google Scholar and Google Books will become increasingly powerful weapons against plagiarism. The Plagiarism Checker: The Plagiarism Checker allows you to run a Google search on large blocks of text. This is easier than cutting and pasting sentence after sentence. Articlechecker: Works the same as Plagiarism Checker, but gives you the option of checking against Yahoo as well as Google. Plagium: Like The Plagiarism Checker, this site Googles text you submit. Unlike most other checkers, Plagium works in several languages. PlagiarismDetect: A plagiarism detector that allows you to upload whole documents rather than cutting and pasting blocks of text. It's free, but you have to register. Duplichecker: Another checker that plugs submitted text into search engines. Duplichecker's interface makes it easy to submit entire documents as well as excerpts. SeeSources: Searches the Web for sources similar to the text you entered. You can scan both excerpts and whole documents. DOC Cop: Doc Cop offers a few features more than the minimal Web-based detection services. For instance, you can check for collusion—that is, you can check the similarity between two papers. However, you do have to register. WCopyFind: WCopyFind is a downloadable scanner that checks for similarities between two papers, but it can't search the Web. Viper: The Anti-Plagiarism Scanner. Although it's free, Viper is software, so it's a bit more of a commitment than Web-based tools. However, it has some neat features, such as side-by-side comparisons of the submitted text with the potentially plagiarized one. Viper touts itself as the free alternative to TurnItIn. SafeAssign/MyDropBox: This is free if you're already using a Blackboard Learning System. As students submit papers to Blackboard, SafeAssign checks their papers against its database of source material. PAIRwise: PAIRwise (Paper Authorship Integrity Research) can compare documents to one another while searching the internet for similar documents. However, PAIRwise is intended for use on an institutional level—for departmental or college-wide servers.
Christine Mark

Using Twitter For Recruiting - Definitely Maybe | Unbridled Talent - 0 views

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    If you're a Recruiter who has been resisting the idea of checking out Twitter for finding candidates or for sharing your job openings, you're not alone. But
Jennifer Styron

Synchronous and Asynchronous Learning Tools: 15 Strategies for Engaging Online Students... - 0 views

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    Great resource to have on hand! Provides practical advice from educators who've found effective ways to promote learning and build a sense of community in their online courses. Please note: You have to provide an email address to receive the report for free.
Dane Conrad

Apple - Education - Resources - Teachers and Administrators - 0 views

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    Page with pdf's, videos, and other resources for Teachers/Administrators and also IT staff for the educational environment
Judith Roberts

Can we use Twitter for educational activities? - 0 views

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    Twitter is the most popular microblogging application, with almost one million users called twitterers, who can send and receive messages via the web, SMS, instant messaging clients, and by third party applications. Posts are limited to 140 text characters in length. With a solid experience in using Web2.0 technologies in education, the authors are trying to provide arguments for using Twitter as microblogging platform / social network in education, underlining its advantages, but also possible bad points. The article also presents an application related to the Romanian Twitosphere and a Romanian microblogging platform, already used in education. technologies education Web2.0 collaborative microblogging Twitter Technology-Web-20 published research
Judith Roberts

Social Media in Education: The Power of Facebook | Edutopia - 0 views

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    Social media like Facebook provides 21st-century learning opportunities for students -- and a forum for teachers all over to unite and network.
Madelon Gruich

Second Life - Classroom 2.0 - 0 views

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    This group will host discussions around the topics of using Second Life for both professional development of educators and for use with students to deliver content. Feel free to add your thoughts at any time!
Bobby Hinton

An Online Research Toolkit - Exploring Web 2.0 for Library Research » HigherE... - 0 views

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    An Online Research Toolkit - Exploring Web 2.0 for Library Research
Jennifer Styron

12 Screencasting Tools For Creating Video Tutorials - 0 views

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    Great site which provides different types of screencasting tools for various platforms.
Rachel Mercer

The Partnership for 21st Century Skills - Framework for 21st Century Learning - 0 views

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    A guide for creating and developing 21st century learning.
Tim Dedeaux

8 awesome augmented reality apps for iPhone | News | TechRadar UK - 2 views

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    Names and descriptions of 8 new AR apps for iPhone
Steve Yuen

18 Web 2.0 Tools for Instruction -- Campus Technology - 0 views

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    "18 Web 2.0 Tools for Instruction"
Judith Roberts

Social Media in Higher Education for Marketing and Communications | .eduGuru - 0 views

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    This guide about Social Media for Higher Education professionals was put together by Rachel Reuben.
Bobby Hinton

Instructional Strategies for Online Courses - 0 views

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    Instructional strategies for online courses
Christine Mark

Using Twitter for Recruitment - 0 views

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    Twitter used for recruiting employees
Tim Dedeaux

Web 2.0: A New Wave of Innovation for Teaching and Learning? (EDUCAUSE Review) | EDUCAUSE - 0 views

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    Educause article on Web 2.0 and its applications for learning. Includes basic Web 2.0 structures, social bookmarking, blogging, microblogging, and copyright issues.
Dane Conrad

Vimeo, Video Sharing For You - 0 views

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    Video sharing - upload and use embed codes for many different platforms
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