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Amber Karpinsky

SMART Board Interactive Whiteboards in the Elementary Classroom - 0 views

  • The SMART website http://education.smarttech.com/ste/en-US/ provides extensive information on how to use various functions on the Interactive Whiteboard
  • Classroom Examples
  • Whole group technology instruction. SMART Boards allow teachers to integrate technology into whole-group instruction, whereas computers are only practical for use with one student at a time. The SMART Boards are also easy for students to use so they do not simply observe the teacher using technology, but they get to experience it on their own.
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  • Let students “play” with the SMART Board. This lets students become familiar with the resource and makes it less of a distraction during lessons.
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    Ways to incorporate a SMART Board into a lesson within elementary classrooms.
Miranda Milnes

18 iPad uses: How classrooms are benefiting from Apple's tablets | Education Dive - 0 views

  • Chris Williams, the Mathematics Co-ordinator at Spring Cottage Primary School in Hull, England, has a list of ten interactive iPad apps that helped him teach math to his students. Red Bull Kart Fighter, a track racing game, helped teach students how to calculate averages. 
  • Educators at Ringwood North Primary School in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, created the Epic Citadel Challenge to foster storytelling, creative collaboration and individual initiative.
  • For example, AutoRap will take your words and turn them into a rap and Strip Designer enables the creation of comic strips.
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  • Warringa Park School, a special needs institution in Hopper's Crossing, Victoria, Australia, has a list of apps which have been particularly successful in teaching students who have special learning needs.
  • Mad Addition, Mad Subtraction and Mad Multiplication help students learn math and have fun while doing it. Red Fish 4 Kids assisted students in learning how to spell.
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    18 ways to effectively use an ipad in the classrom.
Brianna Reid

Technology for Education - Teaching Excellence & Educational Innovation - Carnegie Mell... - 1 views

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    Basics of teaching with technology
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    This is a good way to see what kinds of technology is out there to incorporate into teaching. It gives more than one example as well so I can see what other options there are other than just one way of technology. 
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    Research on whether teaching with a chalkboard or a SMART Board are more useful in a classroom. Enhancing the classroom with technology.
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    This site will help teach how to digitally evaluate written work and to meet with students electronically.
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    This site would be helpful because it shows different ways that teachers can incorporate technology into the classrooms. It also shows that these technologies can help the class participate in active learning.
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    This site would be useful for teachers because they can get ideas of how to improve their classroom lessons. 
Chris Daley

Methods of English Language Teaching - 0 views

  • The grammar translation method instructs students in grammar, and provides vocabulary with direct translations to memorize. It was the predominant method in Europe in the 19th century. Most instructors now acknowledge that this method is ineffective by itself. It is now most commonly used in the traditional instruction of the classical languages.
  • anguage immersion puts students in a situation where they must use a foreign language, whether or not they know it. This creates fluency, but not accuracy of usage. French-language immersion programs are common in Canada in the state school system as part of the drive towards bilingualism.
  • Blended learning combines face-to-face teaching with distance education, frequently electronic, either computer-based or web-based. It has been a major growth point in the ELT (English Language Teaching) industry over the last ten years. Some people, though, use the phrase 'Blended Learning' to refer to learning taking place while the focus is on other activities. For example, playing a card game that requires calling for cards may allow blended learning of numbers (1 to 10). Private tutoring
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    Methods of teaching English to ELL students and how these methods hopefully work.
Faith Salentine

Technology in the Elementary Classroom: The iPad - 0 views

  • As the iPad evolves and new apps are developed, educators are exploring the possibilities in which this new technology can transform the ways in which teachers teach and students learn. In recent years, there has been a significant shift from traditional teacher-directed educational instruction to student-centered learning activities that promote interactive engagement, individual responsibility, and self-assessment. This is not to say that the role of the teacher in the classroom has diminished. In fact, teachers today now have the additional challenge of designing curriculum and learning activities that not only meet and exceed existing learning standards and prepare for the coming Common Core initiative, but also actively involve students in the development, implementation, and evaluation of their own educational experiences. Utilizing iPad technology, educators have the ability to integrate these student-centered learning activities into proven curriculum strategies and educational methods. For example, a teacher may assign a standards-based research project that requires student groups to utilize the iPad to develop an interactive audio / visual presentation. As part of the assessment process, students can exchange iPads and evaluate their peers' projects through "hands-on" engagement. On an individual level, the interactive touch screen of the iPad fosters interest and encourages students to master skills and strategies that have been previously introduced in class. The portable nature of the iPad also makes it possible for students to easily share information with classmates.
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    This site is about Student-Centered Learning with technology.
kirsten hammer

Benefits of technology in the classroom - and how to get started! - 0 views

  • Technology serves as an excellent tool for building this background knowledge as the internet connects us with a wide array of information, photos, videos and interactive materials related to any subject or question we can imagine.
  • Technology is also useful in that it can provide a variety of accommodations for students with different learning needs. For example, if students have difficulty seeing, screen size and print can be enlarged for ease in reading. There are programs available online or for the desktop, which can translate text to other languages or even read it aloud to students as they follow along silently. In addition, many programs and activities are interactive and allow students to manipulate objects while exploring new concepts in subjects such as math and science.
  • With the wide variety of resources available online student can virtually be the master of their own learning—with little direction from their teacher—and most students are happy to do so
Nathan Loft

Teaching Strategies - 0 views

  • Fit the lecture to the audience 2. Focus your topic - remember you cannot cover everything in one lecture 3. Prepare an outline that includes 5-9 major points you want to cover in one lecture 4. Organize your points for clarity 5. Select appropriate examples or illustrations 6. Present more than one side of an issue and be sensitive to other perspectives 7. Repeat points when necessary 8. Be aware of your audience - notice their feedback 9. Be enthusiastic - you don’t have to be an entertainer but you should be excited by your topic.
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    Teaching Strategies continued..
Rachel Saueressig

50 Ways to Use Twitter in the Classroom | TeachHUB - 0 views

  • setting up a feed dedicated exclusively to due dates, tests or quizzes
  • track hash tags for another interesting lesson
  • Subscribe to relevant
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  • hash tags and accounts
  • weet their own notes during lessons and share with their peers
  • Subscribe to different mainstream and independent news feeds with different biases as a way to compare and contrast how different perspectives interpret current events and issues.
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    This site gives descriptive information about how Twitter can be used in the classroom. It also gives examples from grades K-12 and different uses for Twitter in the classroom for each grade.  
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    More ways to incorporate Twitter in a classroom.
Kodi Porter

Technology Tools for Teaching & Learning - 1 views

  • Timetoast
    • Betsy Jordan
       
      This website is able to provide a website where educators can properly use technology in their classrooms.
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  • Glinker
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  • Free account available. Visually appealing interface with extra features. Maps can be shared for collaboration, published, printed/exported as a pdf and embedded.
  • mindmeister
  • ree Google account. Create documents, presentations, spreadsheets, form or drawing. Organize into folders, publish to the web and share documents with other users. Supports existing document upload (word & powerpoint).
  • Google Docs
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    This website includes tools for teaching different web based technologies to students. Students can learn to create timelines, portfolios, books, record audio, etc.
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    Good lay outs and gives examples on what you want your students to learn from these web pages.
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    gives links and tips on different things teacher will want to know about. It also gives teachers ideas on what they can do with students through technology.
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    This website outlines many resourceful ways to use technology as a teacher. There are different learning goals that are laid out and it is very helpful when trying to decide what would work best in your classroom.
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    This website gives a list of things that teachers would use technology for in a classroom, then under each different thing they would use, it gives a list of websites and applications that could be used.
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    Different beta sites for teachers to try in the classroom
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    This is a good site because it has a lot of different things that you can look at that will help from web timelines to recording and editing audio.
Angela Lazzeretti

SMART board in the classroom - 0 views

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    electronic whiteboards in the classroom and its benefits
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    I believe that this website would be useful to teachers because it gives examples of different learning styles and how to better involve your students in your lecture.
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    Tells benefits of using Electronic Whiteboards in classrooms. This website shows the specific uses of a smart board in the classroom. It also provides other URLs for sites that talk more about smart boards and their uses and how they are beneficial in the classroom
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    This explains why white boards are a helpful tool in the classroom it allows students to get involved with the teacher
Nathan Karraker

| NAESP - 1 views

  • Creation and Design. Likewise, creation activities provide students the ability to develop creativity and problem-solving skills by displaying their mastery in profound and meaningful ways. Teachers at McKeel Elementary Academy in Lakeland, Florida, integrate the use of technology for student-created digital media into all areas of curriculum: Kindergarteners create image-based movies on recycling and insects; First graders develop PowerPoint presentations for “My Time to Teach” projects to share with the class; Fourth graders prepare for their statewide standardized writing assessment by developing elaborate digital storybooks on free web 2.0 sites such as Storybird (www.storybird.com) or StoryJumper (www.storyjumper.com). Fifth graders collaborate to launch a Web Safety Wiki to teach other students worldwide about digital citizenship (wildcatwebsafety.wikispaces.com). The projects created are excellent tools for formative and summative assessment. Yet more than that, through creation activities, students design products that make them active partners in constructing learning experiences in the classroom and beyond. In demonstrating their skills and knowledge, they become more confident in their own abilities and their own voices.
  • A dramatic shift is sweeping through our schools. The signs are all around us. Third graders texting on their cell phones. Kindergarteners who can navigate an iPod Touch better than we can. Middle schoolers who already have an Internet following on their blog or YouTube channel. These are not the same 21st century learners we came to know over the first decade of the new millennium. For these students, simply watching videos or images during class, playing an Internet multiplication game, or even taking turns at an interactive whiteboard is no longer enough. These new 21st century learners are highly relational and demand quick access to new knowledge. More than that, they are capable of engaging in learning at a whole new level. With the world literally at their fingertips, today’s students need teachers and administrators to re-envision the role of technology in the classroom.
  • Following the joyous moment when educators realize their students are capable, independent technology users who can create inspiring digital masterpieces, the next reaction is often a more solemn, “How do we fit it all in?” In fact, the answer to this question is vital to a successful technology integration transformation. In the former mindset of teaching with technology, the teacher was the focal point of the classroom, creating (often time-consuming) interactive and multimedia presentations to add shock and awe to his or her lessons and capture the attention of the 21st century child. A new mindset of teaching through technology must emerge, which depends on a vital shift in teacher/student roles.
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  • In technology-infused discovery activities, Internet research, virtual manipulatives, and multimedia resources allow students to explore unanswered questions.
  • Ideally, to maximize these opportunities, every student needs direct access to technology on a daily basis
  • The new 21st century learners must master more than the core curriculum to succeed in secondary and postsecondary institutions, as well as in the workplace. The Partnership for 21st Century Skills, a national organization advocating for 21st century readiness for every student, explains the outcomes of this transformation as fusing the traditional three R’s with four C’s: critical thinking, creativity, communication, and collaboration. As students develop the four C’s, we have discovered that effective application of these vital skills in a technology-infused life and workplace requires acquiring them in a technology-infused learning environment. This environment calls for two elements: We must increasingly put technology into the hands of students and must trust them with more progressive technology use. It is no longer sufficient for students to have less access to technological tools than the teacher, nor is it enough for any one suite of software to serve as the zenith for technology mastery. For student performance to approximate student potential, students need access to a constantly evolving array of technological tools and activities that demand problem-solving, decision-making, teamwork, and innovation. The four C’s are at the heart of the International Society for Technology in Education’s National Educational Technology Standards (NETS) for Students, providing a substantial framework for defining the focus of technology objectives for K-12 students. For example, in implementing these standards we have found that even our youngest 21st century learners are capable of independently creating digital storybooks, artwork, presentations, and movies.
  • The projects created are excellent tools for formative and summative assessment. Yet more than that, through creation activities, students design products that make them active partners in constructing learning experiences in the classroom and beyond. In demonstrating their skills and knowledge, they become more confident in their own abilities and their own voices.
  • The projects created are excellent tools for formative and summative assessment. Yet more than that, through creation activities, students design products that make them active partners in constructing learning experiences in the classroom and beyond. In demonstrating their skills and knowledge, they become more confident in their own abilities and their own voices.
  • Shift in Roles
  • In this configuration, the teacher acts as a learning catalyst, orchestrating and facilitating activities that spark defining moments for students. The most effective activities take two forms— discovery and creation—though they often symbiotically work together. The student then becomes the focal point of the classroom, acting as explorer (e.g., mathematician, scientist, sociologist) and designer (e.g., author, artist, composer).
    • Nathan Karraker
       
      NAESP has useful items on the standards regarding technology and the ways that technology has changed in the classroom. 
  • facilitating
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    This site shows teachers why technology is important and how it can effectively be used in the classroom.
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    This website shows why it is important for teachers to integrate technology into the classroom.
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    Technology Integration for the 21st Century Learner
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    This page encourages teaching with technology. The main reason for this is because of how our world has evolved, and is now full of technology.
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    How technology helps creativity. 
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    it talks about the shift of the use of technology in the classrooms. Integrating things that kids will need to be able to successfully use in the future.
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    NAESP has useful items on the standards regarding technology and the ways that technology has changed in the classroom. 
Griep Kaitlyn

2nd Grade: Writing Sample 2 | Looking at Writing | Reading Rockets - 0 views

  • What does this child need to learn next? She may benefit from seeing different ways to organize factual information. The teacher may use a mini-lesson to show different examples of nonfiction animal books. This student, and the rest of her classmates, could look at nonfiction text features and try to use them in their own writing (table of contents, captions with pictures, bold words, close-ups, diagrams with labels, an index). This may motivate her to find more information about white sharks and think about how to organize it in a multi-page format. This would be an effective tie to a nonfiction reading unit.
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    Strategies for helping a 2nd grader how to write
Donato DiGiulio

50 Education Technology Tools Every Teacher Should Know About - Edudemic - 0 views

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    This website would be very useful to teacher because there are different categories as in learning, social learning, lesson plans, and, much more.
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    This site provides you with tools and definitions that all teachers can use. There are many different types of technology used here that can help teachers use a wide variety of resources within their classrooms.
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    This article is about technology tools that every teacher should know about. It gives a list of 50 things that are very important for teachers in a classroom right now.
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    This article shows 50 different tools and tips that could help teachers in the classroom. The main topics are social learning, learning, lesson planning and tools, and useful tools. Many of these are different apps and websites that could be useful to teach with.
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    here's a website I found that may be useful for you all.
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    Great websites that provide both interactive technology with the teacher as well as technology just a teach can use. Includes programs that can be individualized, and mock-facebook like sites.
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    This website helps Teachers know helpful technologies for their classroom. It can can give step by step instructions and also keep teachers up to date. It has many examples and can give the teacher a broad perspectives of different technologies. 
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    This website would be useful for teachers because it gives 50 technology tools that teachers should be aware of. These tools can be useful for connecting with students outside of the classroom and connecting the students together for group projects.
Melissa Roush

How Can Teachers Use Technology in the Classroom? - 0 views

  • There are numerous ways that teachers can use technology in the classroom and many are already doing it. Some districts use interactive Smart Boards in place of traditional chalk or white boards in their classroom. These flat screen monitors are networked with the teacher’s classroom computer and the school’s internet connection. Interactive lessons in math, spelling, science and other subjects can be put on screen for students to participate in. The boards use touch screen technology and in some cases, kids are given handheld remote “clickers” that act as controllers for answering questions presented on screen.
Callie Doyle

http://education.mit.edu/papers/GamesSimsSocNets_EdArcade.pdf - 1 views

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    This website is informational and gives new teachers information on what new technology is out there to use in classrooms, even video games and computer games like, The Sims, where it encoorpaterates math and life budgeting skills into a computer game. 
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    It would be helpful because it provides examples of how we can use technology in the classroom and the benefits of using technology in the classroom.
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    This article gives a lot of information on sites including Diigo. It gives a description and other information on if the program is successful, how long it's been around, etc. I think it's very beneficial because it really shows how much technology is a big part of todays teaching.
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    This website wil be useful because it has great advice and good sources. Very relatable to children and teachers.
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    An article on utilizing today's technology in the classroom.
Casey Chopp

Assistive Technology in the Classroom | Assistive Technology Tools - Understood - 0 views

  • These tools can help them work around their challenges while playing to their strengths.
  • There are AT tools to help students who struggle with listening, math, executive functioning, reading and writing. The variety of available AT tools has grown rapidly in recent years. Despite the word “technology,” not all AT tools are high-tech. AT ranges from simple adaptive tools (like highlighters and organizers) to high-tech tools (like text-to-speech software).
  • IDEA also says the school district is responsible for choosing and purchasing the technology. The school must train its staff and your child to use it.
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  • t’s important to keep in mind that AT’s role is to assist your child’s learning. It doesn’t replace good teaching, but it can be used in addition to well-designed instruction.
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    More information on what assistive technology is to better help parents and teachers understand why a child may be using AT.
Kataryna Altobelli

8 Engaging Ways to use Technology in the Classroom to Create Lessons That Aren't Boring... - 0 views

  • While lectures and lessons can be informative and even “edutaining” when delivered with passion and good materials by knowledgeable experts, sadly many traditional lectures and lessons are boring, and even worse often ineffective.
  • Even if you don’t have computers or tablets available in your classroom, the fact that an increasing number of High School and college students have smartphones is making it easier than ever to leverage technology to create engaging, active lessons students enjoy working on. For younger grades, if you don’t have access to devices with Web access, perhaps you can access a computer lab by request, or use devices in your library.
  • 1. Incorporate Student Input & Gather Feedback
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  • Quick, easy Polling Applications
  • are two of many applications that make it quick and easy to create simple polls that can let you gather feedback from students – determine if they are struggling with a topic, if they know the correct answers to questions you ask, and so on. They can often participate in these polls using a smartphone.
  • You can also gather feedback by creating a “back channel” using Twitter.
  • 2. Gamify It
  • Leveraging gaming mechanics can make learning more fun is probably easier than you think. For example, any time you bring competition or levels of achievement to a classroom exercise, you’re gamifying your classroom.
  • Here’s a variety of resources and ideas for using gaming in the classroom:
  • 3. Let Students Create
  • 4. Get Interactive
  • Here’s a few tools and ideas to consider.
  • Online Interactive White Boards
  • Bounceapp
  • Interactive apps that work with Smartphones
  • 5. Have Students Collaborate
  • Here are a number of tools and techniques for classroom collaborations.
  • 6. Project Based Learning
  • 7. Simulations
  • Economics
  • Marketing
  • Medical:
  • Business
  • 8. Bring in a Guest or Two
  • With the power of video conferencing apps like Skype, Google Hangout, Facetime, and others, our ability to connect with people all across the world has never been better or less costly. Teachers have been using Skype and similar tools to being guest lecturers, experts, students, and others into the classroom for years
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    This website focuses on specific ideas of what you can do with technology and give ideas on how to keep students involved. I really liked their ideas about how to get feedback from students in a non-traditional way.
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    this website consists of ways to teach children through technology. It teaches the teacher to teach in new and exciting ways.
Jeremy Ganswindt

Technology in the Classroom - 0 views

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    This page provides a lot of helpful links to go to and help teachers get started into the technology world.  It also provides a multitude of other services to help teachers out. Also since it is made my a University sight it knows what teachers really need to get going.
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    This website is useful to teachers because it gives multiple links to all different articles. This website it also credible because it is a .edu.
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    This site will be good for me as a teacher, so that I can learn from these people about different ways to incorporate technology.  It will be useful when I try to come up with creative ways to get students enjoy topic through using the internet.
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    This site explains different technologies. It also provides guidance for teachers using technology in their classroom. Lastly, it provides tips for teachers.
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    This site would be useful for teachers, because it gives examples of teaching and learning with technology.
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    This page provides many resources that would help a teacher learn technology. There are many articles that would benefit a teacher with tools and tips on using technology.
Carli Schadeberg

Technology for the Elementary - 0 views

  • echnology for the Elementary
  • Technology for the Elementary
  • Technology Working in the Classroom... examples of iPads in Schools
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  • For the Love of Technology Lesson These videos are suitable for most grade levels and are designed to spark curiosity and discussion.
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    Pinterest technology use in classrooms
Corrinne Valleskey

Anti-Social Networking: How do texting and social media affect our children? A panel di... - 0 views

  • How much are kids using media? The total amount of media use by youth ages 8 to 18 averages 6-plus hours a day—more than any other activity. The amount of use has increased significantly, up from 4-plus hours in the last five years. Eighty percent of adolescents possess at least one form of media access. There is extensive multi-tasking associated with media use (instant messaging while doing homework and listening to music on an mp3 player, for example). Of particular concern is the amount of TV kids consume. From 2004 to 2009, television and video use averaged three to five hours per day, peaking between the ages of 11 and 14, a crucial period for kids' social development. Fifty-four percent of teens send text messages, and one third of teens send more than 100 text messages per day. One third talk face-to-face with friends, around the same percentage that talk on cell phones (38 percent) and land lines (30 percent). Twenty-four percent communicate with friends via instant messages. Twenty-five percent contact friends via social networking sites. Eleven percent use e-mail.
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    How much time do children really spend using social media? This website explains the effects of social media on classroom engagement. 
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