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Mary Furco

Teaching with Technology - 0 views

  • offer instructors step-by-step instructions for using some campus-wide available technologies (such as Blackboard and PowerPoint), offer suggestions for how instructors might initiate and guide particular technology-supported learning activities, present the different roles technology might play in a classroom, and promote thinking and reflection about the best uses of technology in the classroom.
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    This site would be useful because gives many ways to use technology as a teacher. 
Emma Gorski

Using Technology in the Early Childhood Classroom - 3 views

  • Modern technologies are very powerful because they rely on one of the most powerful genetic biases we do have — the preference for visually presented information. The human brain has a tremendous bias for visually presented information. Television, movies, videos, and most computer programs are very visually oriented and therefore attract and maintain the attention of young children.
  • Children need real-life experiences with real people to truly benefit from available technologies. Technologies should be used to enhance curriculum and experiences for children. Children have to have an integrated and well-balanced set of experiences to help them grow into capable adults that can handle social-emotional interactions as well as develop their intellectual abilities.
  • Unfortunately, technology is often used to replace social situations and I would rather see it used to enhance human interactions. And I think that can happen.
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    This would be a good website for technology in a classroom because it states how you can integrate technology in the classroom and how to create a website.
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    This website gives valid reasons as to why teachers should use technology in early childhood classrooms. It does give the negative effects of technology on young children but unlike television and video games, computers being used in the classroom are active and not passive which stimulates children to learn.
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    Explains the pros and cons of the use of technology in an Early Childhood setting.
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    Talks about how visually presented information such as, television, movies, videos, and most computer programs are able to maintain and attract the attention of children.
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    This site describes if technology should be used in the early childhood classrooms. And if they should what types of technologies should be used and what shouldn't.
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    Using technology in the Early Childhood Classrooms
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    Why technology can be helpful to students
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    This site explains why technology is important for early childhood classrooms. I think it would be useful for elementary classrooms too.
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    This is useful because it has the thoughts of two professionals in regards to education and children.
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    "Children need real-life experiences with real people to truly benefit from available technologies. Technologies should be used to enhance curriculum and experiences for children. Children have to have an integrated and well-balanced set of experiences to help them grow into capable adults that can handle social-emotional interactions as well as develop their intellectual abilities."
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.
Danielle Blank

Using Technology to Enhance Teaching & Learning - SMU - 0 views

    • Danielle Blank
       
      Good intro to different types of technology and why they are useful
  • Technology provides numerous tools that teachers can use in and out of the classroom to enhance student learning.
  • Flipping" doesn't have to use technology, but tools such as videos, podcasts, online quizzes and the like can help in and out of class activity work together. These resources explain the theory underlying this teaching method and provide practical suggestions for making it work.
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  • an Online Course
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    intro to technology teachers can use in their everyday classrooms
garreltsgm

Plants for kids - sunflowers / RHS Gardening - 0 views

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    Easy plants for kids to grow. Find out the best plants for children to grow, like these sunflowers. Get them growing today!
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    Easy plants for kids to grow. Find out the best plants for children to grow, like these sunflowers. Get them growing today!
fosterhm19

Ways to Use Technology in an Elementary Classroom | eHow.com - 0 views

  • There are many different group and individual activities that your students can complete on a variety of Web sites.
  • Using the Web, you can take your class on a virtual field trip anywhere they want to go. Attach a projector to your laptop and select your destination.
Ellie Force

Interactive Whiteboard Games for Classroom Review Activities - 0 views

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    This website talked about the many SMARTBoard accessible interactive games that a teacher can play with his/her students. This can help review material at the end of a unit in a fun and interactive way. They also are based on popular T.V. Shows like "Who Wants To Be a Millionaire" which is a definite fun way of reviewing material.
ELLEN BUCHERT

Teaching English with Technology - 0 views

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    This site has a lot of useful information on how to engage students in reading through the use of electronic devices. It also has pre- set up games and activities to practice using technology in English classrooms.
Kaitlin Zasada

Teaching with Technology - Tools of Engagement - 0 views

  • Videoconfere
  • Using Clickers (Personal Response Systems) to Facilitate Active Learning in the Classroom Clickers allow instructors to assess students’ understanding of the subject matter, receive immediate feedback and reinforcement for what is being learned, get shy and under-prepared students to participate, poll students’ opinions and preferences instantly, observe student misconceptions, and encourage peer instruction.
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  • ers allow instructors to as
  • . Videoconfere
  • Videoconfere
  • e class sessio
  • d for instructors
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    Clickers to me is a great way to engage the students in learning. They will not just be sitting listening to a teacher talk if they are engaged in the lesson as well. It also seems to be a great way to study for tests and quizzes. I could not figure out how to undo the highlighting in the next paragraph... I was just playing around with it so ignore the random highlights(:
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. 
Leah Kennedy

Technology in the Classroom: Embrace the Bumpy Ride! - 0 views

  • Technology should help us to teach better and in more meaningful ways.
  • It should not be something that you do in addition to everything else you already do in your classroom.
  • Children already know how to use technology for entertainment. They need to learn how technology can help them to learn.
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  • Focus on just that one technology-enhanced activity until you feel very comfortable with it. Then, when that feels good, try adding something else.
  • I model, model, model it and then we practice it together until the students can do it independently.
  • Flexibility and a backup plan are important ingredients in any classroom,
  • Students are comfortable using these devices to communicate and to find information. To them, tools and apps are just another part of the world they inhabit.
  • Students need to be shown how to use them to learn.
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    This article gives tips for successfully integrating technology into the classroom.
Bethany Johnson

The Teacher's Guides To Technology And Learning | Edudemic - 0 views

  • Most students are familiar with and active users of mobile technology.
  • By this I mean students using their smartphones (or dumbphones, for that matter) to share things they would never normally share. From inappropriate comments to sexting, it’s a dangerous minefield.
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    A teachers guide to many technological resources including twitter, flipped classrooms, google class, keeping students safe online, pintrest, and many more.
Alli Grover

Glenda's Assistive Technology Information and more...: iDevices in the Special Educatio... - 0 views

  • Assistive technology is any kind of technology and/or tool that can be used to enhance the functional independence of a person with a disability.
  • can be a challenge
  • iDevices in the Special Education Classroom
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  • Students learn in different ways
  • The iPad can provide visual, audio and tactile learning; reaching many students’ learning styles.
  • The iPad is often used as an individual tool in isolation
  • But please, don't put the child in a quiet place and just hand them an iPad without a true purpose. Let's get creative with its use. How to use an iPad in the classroom with a group? A couple of thoughts - Teacher directs, students watch.  Teacher directs, with iPad in the middle of the group and students touch with instruction.   Teacher instructs and iPad is passed between students. Use as part of your lesson, part of your center activity.   Teacher instructs and the students use, independently or in a team situation.    Team learning situations. Hand a group of students an iPad with a purpose. 
  • Most of us will not have enough for all our students for a while.
  • ideas
  • ideas
  • be careful to not have the iPad become what we have seen so many computers become in education: a glorified toy.
  • What are some of the benefits we are seeing? We are seeing that the iPad often encourages interactivity. Students will share a lot of what they're doing, ask each other "How did you do that?" or, "Oh, look what I did!"  They want to problem solve together. It encourages group discussions between the students. They tend to help each other a lot more.  It is affordable, comparatively speaking (see below.)  
  • For special education students, some are saying it is the best tool that has ever been designed. Here are a few reasons why we might prefer an iPad over a desktop computer: Ease of access – no need to be able to operate a mouse, a switch or to need to sit a certain way. The iPad can easily come to the student, be placed where they need it and the touch required is extremely friendly. (Not for all!! Remember, this is very individual.) Simplicity of programs – from very basic to more complex, many apps are design to be user friendly. For the moderate to severe population of students the amount of simple apps is huge, plus they are extremely inexpensive and visually draw students in. Simplicity of use - many who cannot understand how to operate a computer, can understand how to operate an iPad. (Even your grandmother!) Low cost of programs – compared to the cost of software programs for a computer, there really is no comparison (unless you consider the abundant amount of free programs available on the Internet. And yes, please continue using those!). There are apps designed specifically for our population (see other postings to right). Designing apps for education has become quite the market. The amount of apps designed specifically for special education has grown so much that there is now a category for it that stands alone in the iTunes Store. Assistive Technology and Communication Apps are available that help to make this a tool for access support, not just a tool for learning (i.e. audio books, word prediction, visual prompts, etc.) It can be loaded with many adaptive technology gadgets and programs, thereby reducing the need for multiple devices. Talk about UDL (Universal Design for Learning)! This is a tool that can level the playing field for many. There are apps that are inexpensive and exciting to increase vocabulary, sight words, math facts, reading comprehension, organizational skills, and drawing skills, just to name a few.It can be very educational and in the classroom, this is what we want: exciting, fresh, innovative teaching tools. Built-in accessibility tools such as zoom and high contrast display make this a tool to support visually impaired. The built-in VoiceOver screen reader works as well on the iPad as on the iPhone. For our VI population, the options are growing and growing. (However, it may be the iPhone that is the best solution for those with significant vision impairments.) Programs such as Dragon Dictation is free, no paper and pencil needed if one can speak clearly, for writing text messages, e-mail, maybe documents. (Must have Internet/WiFi connection for this to work however and it is not the best option for longer texts.) The brilliant screen of the iPad which creates and supports visual interest - with the ever improving HD colors which are bright and the HD video and/or camera- tools at our fingertips that can be pulled into our educational artillery in so many new and innovative ways.  The right case can make it much less indestructible. More and more tools are being developed to help with access. (Mounts, switch access, adaptive styluses, etc.) Light weight (iPad = 1.5 lbs.) Instant Response/Instant On/Fast Processor. Consider this: Combine the touch screen, ease of use, and cool factor of the iPad and you have a pretty interesting format for communication device
  • AT is intended to enhance performance of an individual with a disability.  It is why we have to carefully match what we recommend to the user's strengths and needs.  The iPad cannot do that on its own, it is the recommendation of the appropriate Apps that ultimately improve the performance of a student.  Thus, the iPad itself is not the Assistive Technology it is the Settings and the Apps, the case, the special stylus, that offer enhanced performance. Improving performance of a student with a disability through AT (Apps or otherwise) means looking at the student, identifying the task that needs to be performed and identifying where the student will use the AT - i.e. the environment, effects of time etc
  • This is a list of iPad pros, from a student’s point of view (wish I knew the student’s name so I could reference her. My apologies!):
  • iPads with Moderate to Severe Students:
  • Videos worth watching:
  • Articles worth reviewing:
  • Now go out and make this tool a wonderful addition to our educational world!
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    This website is a great if you are looking for some fresh tips on how to use the latest iPad tools for students in a Special Education classroom. On this site lists benefits of iPad and has real life SpecEd students' opinions, also this page lists videos and articles for extra guidance and opinion on iPad.
Savanah Smith

The Teacher's Corner - Lesson Plans, Worksheets and Activities - 0 views

  • Today Tomorrow
  • ONLINE COLLABORATION PROJECTS
  • PRINTABLES FROM THE TEACHER'S CORNER!
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  • Here is a great science resource. Be sure to check back each week for the new experiment. This week's experiment: Microwave Ice       These experiments are brought to you by The Teacher's Corner and Robert Krampf's Experiment of the Week.
  • TEACHER FORUM - CHAT
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    This website allows teachers to collaborate online with each other.  There are lesson plans for every grade level and subject area available to anyone.  There are also printable assignments and handouts for class.  There's also a live chat where teachers from all over can talk about resources and plans that have worked for them and what they recommend.
Bryce Rudebeck

use ofSmartboard k-8 - Google Custom Search | Diigo - 0 views

  • Smart Ways to Use the SMARTBoard ... Lessons & Activities Designed for the SMARTBoard
  • Smartboard Help
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    Websites that give teachers ideas on how using a smartboard in class would help the students in the grade levels of K-8
amelia bakke

For Educators | crayola.com - 0 views

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    Crayola teaming up with Education
Jordan Ott

Elementary Games, Online Elementary Teaching Tools - Time4Learning - 0 views

  • Time4Learning helps your child succeed at school by: Providing highly motivating daily lessons Teaching a full elementary reading and math curriculum, not just spots of information Establishing good study habits by teaching a pattern of first lessons, then playtime Providing elementary games online to reinforce educational activities Closing the information loop by providing reports on student progress Deploying multiple teaching styles to address the different learning styles of different students and providing multimodal learning for the best understanding and retention. A balance of progress and reinforcement, making sure children master elementary fundamentals before moving them on to more advanced reading and math concepts Time4Learning gives your children the help they need to succeed at school. Our elementary teaching tools can be used as a supplement to school work, as core curriculum for homeschool elementary, or as an enhancement to elementary homeschool programs.
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    Tips for helping children succeed in school
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