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Connor Oelfke

Effects of Technology on Classrooms and Students - 0 views

  • When students are using technology as a tool or a support for communicating with others, they are in an active role rather than the passive role of recipient of information transmitted by a teacher, textbook, or broadcast. The student is actively making choices about how to generate, obtain, manipulate, or display information. Technology use allows many more students to be actively thinking about information, making choices, and executing skills than is typical in teacher-led lessons. Moreover, when technology is used as a tool to support students in performing authentic tasks, the students are in the position of defining their goals, making design decisions, and evaluating their progress. The teacher's role changes as well. The teacher is no longer the center of attention as the dispenser of information, but rather plays the role of facilitator, setting project goals and providing guidelines and resources, moving from student to student or group to group, providing suggestions and support for student activity. As students work on their technology-supported products, the teacher rotates through the room, looking over shoulders, asking about the reasons for various design choices, and suggesting resources that might be used
Tara Hodgson

Classroom Management and Discipline - 0 views

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    A more specific search into classroom management
Jaymi Watson

Illuminations: Welcome to Illuminations - 0 views

shared by Jaymi Watson on 22 Feb 13 - Cached
  • Highlighted Lesson Game On!
  • Highlighted Activity
Tabitha Wold

Teacher's iPad Experiment Shows Possibilities for Classroom Technology | Education on GOOD - 0 views

  • Teacher's iPad Experiment Shows Possibilities for Classroom Technology
  • The sample size may have been small, but the finding was promising because of how Harmon went about integrating the iPads. "Students wrote their journal entries on the class Moodle, accessed on the iPads" Harmon wrote in his report. They also used the devices to collaborate "on the retelling of works of drama with apps," and to take tests. Students were also more eager to write on the devices and composed longer essays than when writing in a notebook.
  • The teachers also reported that the devices made their lessons more engaging and helped them connect with students.
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    This article is about the effects Ipads can have on a classroom. This is a study done that shows promising effects when used in a classrooms with all different types of students.
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. 
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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. 
Danielle Hucker

Proven Teaching Strategies & Ideas for Teachers: Strategy, Lesson Planning, Classroom M... - 0 views

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    This has different blogs from teachers giving different strategies in their classrooms.
Paige Thompson

SMARTBoard Activities - 0 views

  • Ways to use your SMARTBoard™ in your classroom
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    Fun Smart board activities.
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    This site will be useful for teachers because it gives explanation of what the Smartboard is and what it does.  It also has things on the page that may be useful in the future when actually being in the classroom.
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    This presents activities that can be done in the classroom for kids. It is a fun learning tool for kids at the elementary level.
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    Various SMARTBoard activities based on subject and grade
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
Liz Rodriguez

Wisconsin Standards - Teacher Development and Licensure - 0 views

  • Wisconsin Educator Standards - Teachers Ten Standards for Teacher Development and Licensure To receive a license to teach in Wisconsin, an applicant shall complete an approved program and demonstrate proficient performance under all of the following standards: Teachers know the subjects they are teaching. The teacher understands the central concepts, tools of inquiry, and structures of the disciplines she or he teaches and can create learning experiences that make these aspects of subject matter meaningful for pupils. Teachers know how children grow. The teacher understands how children with broad ranges of ability learn and provides instruction that supports their intellectual, social, and personal development. Teachers understand that children learn differently. The teacher understands how pupils differ in their approaches to learning and the barriers that impede learning and can adapt instruction to meet the diverse needs of pupils, including those with disabilities and exceptionalities. Teachers know how to teach. The teacher understands and uses a variety of instructional strategies, including the use of technology, to encourage children's development of critical thinking, problem solving, and performance skills. Teachers know how to manage a classroom. The teacher uses an understanding of individual and group motivation and behavior to create a learning environment that encourages positive social interaction, active engagement in learning, and self-motivation. Teachers communicate well. The teacher uses effective verbal and nonverbal communication techniques as well as instructional media and technology to foster active inquiry, collaboration, and supportive interaction in the classroom. Teachers are able to plan different kinds of lessons. The teacher organizes and plans systematic instruction based upon knowledge of subject matter, pupils, the community, and curriculum goals. Teachers know how to test for student progress. The teacher understands and uses formal and informal assessment strategies to evaluate and ensure the continuous intellectual, social, and physical development of the pupil. Teachers are able to evaluate themselves. The teacher is a reflective practitioner who continually evaluates the effects of his or her choices and actions on pupils, parents, professionals in the learning community and others and who actively seeks out opportunities to grow professionally. Teachers are connected with other teachers and the community. The teacher fosters relationships with school colleagues, parents, and agencies in the larger community to support pupil learning and well-being and acts with integrity, fairness and in an ethical manner.
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    Wisconsin Teaching Standards
Mikayla Severson

Sample Lesson Plans to Teach Common Core State Standards | inspiration.com - 0 views

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    Read Later
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    Read Later
Corrin Meyer

Counting Money - Coins - Elementary Math Lessons & Tests - My Schoolhouse - Online Lear... - 0 views

    • Corrin Meyer
       
      Try out the problems at the bottom!
  • 1 penny, 1 cent, or 1¢
  • 1 nickel, 5 cents, or 5¢
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  • 1 dime, 10 cents, or 10¢
  • 1 quarter, 25 cents, or 25¢
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    This will help you count the coins and tell you the value. Try out the problems at the bottom. Try them all!
Bridgette Black

Tech Literacy: Making It Relevant Through Content Learning | Edutopia - 0 views

  • Make Technology Applicable to Other Class Assignments Instead of teaching only computer and web skills, as in their first year, Meyer Elementary has been embedding the classroom curriculum from other content areas into technology instruction.
  • Collaborate With Other Teachers
  • A big part of Meyer's tech integration program boils down to collaboration and communication. The teachers need to communicate and collaborate effectively so that Dahl can supplement their lessons in his class.
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  • Embrace Discomfort
  • Before Meyer integrated learning technology with content, the school's technology focus was on the how-tos of learning a program or an app. Now, with the current approach to tech integration, students must call upon their critical thinking skills.
  • Apply the SAMR Model When Meyer Elementary first introduced technology, they focused on using it to teach technology separated from content, and on remediation for differentiation in the classrooms. Since then, they've adopted the SAMR model, created by Dr. Ruben Puentedura (PDF). Defined by Puentedura, the four levels are: Substitution: Technology acts as a direct tool substitute, with no functional change. Augmentation: Technology acts as a direct tool substitute, with functional improvement. Modification: Technology allows for significant task redesign. Redefinition: Technology allows for the creation of new tasks, previously inconceivable.
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    In this article it goes through how to incorporate technology in the classroom by making it fun and educational. It also touches on points of what teachers need to do to help them understand technology in the classroom.   
Tyler Hurdis

SMART Exchange - USA - Search lessons by keyword - 0 views

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    Smart Board activities that can be used to increase comprehension.
Ashley Kitzerow

Behind the Scenes With Cinderella - ReadWriteThink - 0 views

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    Cinderella without castles, coaches, or ball gowns? Students use versions of Cinderella to explore how the setting of a story—time, place, and culture—affects the characters and plot.
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    Cinderella without castles, coaches, or ball gowns? Students use versions of Cinderella to explore how the setting of a story—time, place, and culture—affects the characters and plot.
gredebl02

Seasons - Teacher Resources - 1 views

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    Earth Day Kids love hearing about the Earth and ways we can be better to our environment! We've gathered some great resources to help you celebrate Earth Day (April 22) with your class. Some of our most popular activities include this Pollution Matching Worksheet, Recycling Videos and Activities, and Renewable and Non-renewable Energy Worksheet, Recycled Art Lesson Plan, and a Trash & Climate Change Activities Packet!
Ellie Force

What Tech Tools Do Your Teachers Use? - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • “clickers”
  • engaging students in class
  • one —
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  • through a device as familiar to them as a cellph
  • increases their understanding of material that may otherwise be conveyed in traditional lectures.
  • Teachers should be provided the necessary training in order to make full use of the SMART boards or it is just going to be a waste of space.
    • Ellie Force
       
      It is useful that we are learning these technologies based on the comments of students like this one.
  • great commodity
  • iven up the lesson
  • SMART board
  • Yes these do make class more engaging and efficient because they make you want to interact and participate with the class.
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    This article briefly asks for student input on the usefulness of technologies in the classroom from children in elementary school to college students. They had kids comment how effective they were yielding interesting results when their teachers used them.
Sydney Cox

7 Ways Teachers Use Social Media in the Classroom - 0 views

  • 1. Encourage students to share work socially.
  • Edmodo helps you create a social, digital classroom. On Edmodo, you can vote, post assignments, create a class assignments calendar, and upload photos and messages to students. With more 17 million users, Edmodo has been a highly successful endeavor. It allows students to get real-time feedback by taking quizzes online. Teachers can also engage socially with one another by sharing lesson plans online and asking questions to their online communities. Edmodo's Global Read Aloud program encourages students to practice their reading and public speaking skills with other students from around the world
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    Social Media in the Classroom
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    This article is very useful for teachers, the article gives you helpful hints to use technology in the classroom, as well as telling you when it is appropriate or inappropriate to use technology in the classroom.
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    Using Edmodo in the classroom
Lauren Corlett

Integrating the Internet into the Classroom, Teaching Tips of the Week, Teaching Today,... - 0 views

  • Use the Internet with a Unit of Study (Monday)
  • ind a Web site with the information needed for one component of the unit. Post the Internet address and clear directions for the assignment near the computer. As students work independently or in small groups, they can rotate through the computer learning center. Continue to monitor com
  • puter use as you move throughout the classroom.
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  • Manage Time on the Internet (Tuesday)
  • Before class, bookmark the sites that should be used with the lesson. This allows students to focus on content, rather than undertaking a time-consuming search. Bookmarking also eliminates the simple errors that are frequently made when typing in Web addresses.
  • Organize Information on the Internet (Wednesday)
  • The Internet provides such a wealth of information that students frequently find it difficult to limit their research. A graphic organizer helps learners choose concepts and facts that fit the assigned topic. Students whose learning styles are more global and visual will also find these organizers helpful.
  • Use Computer Software with the Internet (Thursday)
  • ave students create a database of organized information. This could consist of countries of the world in social studies, various polygons in math, animals in science, or short stories in English. Students can learn that the Internet is a tool we can use to enhance our presentations.
  • Teach Students to Cite Internet Sources (Friday)
  • o cite an online source, have students consistently adhere to a recognized style, such as that established by the Modern Language Association (MLA). Students can also cite video clips, sounds, images, and e-mail.
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    This is explaining to a teacher, how they can integrate the internet into their classroom in one week.
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
Megan Gill

Elementary Tools - Technology Resources for Teachers - 0 views

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    This website would be useful for teachers because it has a lot of examples of computer programs that would help with lessons and it also shows how to sign up for each program and gives examples how to use them.
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    This website gives you a variety of options from digital storytelling to keyboarding activities.  This website allows you to get ideas for how to connect your classroom to technology.  You are given resources and strategies for how to navigate on google, as well. 
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