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Tim Hankes

Archived: Effects of Technology on Classrooms and Students - 1 views

  • Effects of Technology on Classrooms and Students
  • Change in Student and Teacher Roles
  • Increased Motivation and Self Esteem
  • ...27 more annotations...
  • Technical Skills
  • Accomplishment of More Complex Tasks
  • More Collaboration with Peers
  • Increased Use of Outside Resources
  • Improved Design Skills/Attention to Audience
  • 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.
  • nges as well. The teacher is
  • logy-supported
  • ys the role of facilitator, setting project
  • teachers note an increased frequency of students helping each other.
  • Another effect of technology cited by a great majority of teachers is an increased inclination on the part of students to work cooperatively and to provide peer tutoring.
  • The kids that don't necessarily star can become the stars. [with technology]. My favorite is this boy . . . who had major problems at home. He figured out a way to make music by getting the computer to play certain letters by certain powers and it changed the musical tone of the note and he actually wrote a piece. He stayed in every recess. . . . When I asked him what he was working on, he wouldn't tell me. Then he asked if he could put his HyperCard stack on my computer because it was hooked up to speakers. I said "sure" and at recess. . . he put it on my computer and played his music and literally stopped the room. And for months he had kids begging him at recess, every recess, to teach them how to make music. And for that particular kid it was the world because he really was not successful academically and was having lots of problems. . . . This really changed him for that school year. -Elementary school teacher
  • Students, even at the elementary school level, are able to acquire an impressive level of skill with a broad range of computer software
  • y. This effect was most obvious in classrooms that had incorporated telecommunications activities (see examples), but other classes used technologies such as satellite broadcasts, telefacsimiles, and the telephone to help bring in outside resources.
  • Teachers from 10 out of 17 classrooms observed at length cited increased use of outside resources as a benefit of using technolog
  • er than trying to explain it verbally).
  • Students clearly take pride in being able to use the same computer-based tools employed by professionals. As one teacher expressed it, "Students gain a sense of empowerment from learning to control the computer and to use it in ways they associate with the real world." Technology is valued within our culture. It is something that costs money and that bestows the power to add value. By giving students technology tools, we are implicitly giving weight to their school activities. Students are very sensitive to this message that they, and their work, are important.
  • n many of these classes, students choose to work on their technology-based projects during recess or lunch periods. Teachers also frequently cite technology's motivational advantages in providing a venue in which a wider range of students can excel. Compared to conventional classrooms with their stress on verbal knowledge and multiple-choice test performance, technology provides a very different set of challenges and different ways in which students can demonstrate what they understand (e.g., by programming a simulation to demonstrate a concept rath
  • While most teachers were positive about the design consciousness that technology fosters, a potential downside was also noted by a few teachers. It is possible for students to get so caught up in issues such as type font or audio clips that they pay less attention to the substantive content of their product.
  • Experiences in developing the kinds of rich, multimedia products that can be produced with technology, particularly when the design is done collaboratively so that students experience their peers' reactions to their presentations, appear to support a greater awareness of audience needs and perspectives. Multiple media give students choices about how best to convey a given idea (e.g., through text, video, animation).
  • Kids like the immediate results
  • However, tool uses of technology are highly compatible with this new teacher role, since they stimulate so much active mental work on the part of students. Moreover, when the venue for work is technology, the teacher often finds him or herself joined by many peer coaches--students who are technology savvy and eager to share their knowledge with others.
  • A related technology effect stressed by many te
  • The teacher's role cha
  • rs, it's a multitude of things, but they can do things on the computers that most of their parents can't do and that's very empowering and exciting for them. It's "I can sit down and make this machine pretty much do what I want to," and there's something about that that gives them an extra little boost of, "Wow, I'm a pretty special person." --Elementary school teacher
  • achers was enhancement of student self esteem. Both the increased competence they feel after mastering technology-based tasks and their awareness of the value placed upon technology within our culture, led to increases in students' (and often teachers') sense of self worth. I see more confidence in the kids here. . . . I think it's not just compute
  • Change in Student and Teacher Roles
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    This shows the actual effects technology has on the classroom.
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    This website show how technology changes the way that students learn and how teachers teach while in the classroom.
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    Teachers are talking about making effective choices students make, and how they can learn easier and better by the use of technology.  There was also an increase in student motivation with the use of technology.
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    Students role with technology help them play an more active role in learning.
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    Technology plays a big part in education today. This website explains how technology can effect the classroom and the students in it. Also help improve skills and outside resources.
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    Teachers can learn the effects of technology on students in their classroom. They will see benefits of students using technology
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    This site is useful for teachers in the classroom because it gives them an easy outlook on the website and how to find things that they may be looking for. It breaks all the different areas in the site up very easy for you to find exactly what someone is looking for.
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    This website is useful because it shows the effects technology has on its students 
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    This site talks about how sites are changing and technology is being used in classrooms all over America. This site gives the effects it has in the classroom
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    Why technology is good for not only the students, but for the teacher as well and in what ways.
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    This website offers information about how students and teachers benefit or suffer from the technology used in the classroom.
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    A great website for student collaboration using technology. It also has a good section about technical skills for use.
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    This site has a lot of really cool quotes from teachers that show how the use of technology has helped their students. It talks about how students have more motivation and are more helpful towards one another.
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    In education Technology will always be changing and is becoming more and more a part of the classroom
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    I think that this article was relevant because technology has become to big in our society.
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    Technology has become too big in our society and should be watched when used in an educational setting.
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    Using Technology in class is getting students more active in classrooms. Also it gives students motivation and increases self-esteem. 
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    This is a great resource for teachers to look at when they are having a hard time using technology in the classroom. It gives them motivational quotes on why they should use it, and who and why technology is really beneficial to. (the students and themselves) 
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    This website explains why technology is important in the classroom. There is a change in student and an increased in motivation to learn. Students also gain self esteem.
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    Great advice for teachers' and students' with technology.
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    Effects that technology has on students and teachers.
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    Information on Technology in the Classroom 
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    This website shows the positive effects of having technology in the classroom
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    This website explains particularly how students are able to acquire a broad range of skills from using technology in the classroom. Also, using outside resources truly benefit a classroom in a way that will advance the students. 
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    This website gives information on the effects of technology in classrooms on the students.
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    This information is helpful because is gives ideas on how to make technology interesting and it seems to be very up to date. While also giving reasons about why updated technology will help your students in the classroom.
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    This website will give readers a brief idea of how technology can have effects on classrooms and students.
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    This website explains how it is good to have technology is the class room because it helps them more actively think. Also it has many examples about why it is good.
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    Includes both positive and drawbacks to implementing technology in the classroom, that teachers have to be aware of beforehand.
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    This site gives a multifarious amount of reasons why technology effects students in a positive way.
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    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.
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    This website talks about the effects of technology on classrooms and students
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    The article talked about how technology can help children. For example, there is one little boy where he was always causing trouble at home. At school, during recess he stays inside and works on the computer by creating music. this helps him concentrate throughout the day. Technology can be very helpful for students in their academics and other behaviors. The students also like how they get immediate grades back, instead of having to wait until the teacher grades them.
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    This website talks about the benefits that technology has on the students communication skills and self esteem and confidence in making choices about how to present the information.
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    This article describes what using technology in the classroom can do for children. It shows how it can change the personality of students and increase their skills.
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    This is helpful because you will be able to get more info on the effects of technology on students and teachers.
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    This is helpful because you will be able to get more info on the effects of technology on students and teachers.
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    This website talks about the positive things that can happen with students using technology. It talks about what students can accomplish with using technology.
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    Shows the benefits of technology in the classroom. Technology has been shown to increase motivation and self esteem. 
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    The change in student and teacher roles with the use of technology in the class room
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    The different classroom effect that tech. has on the classroom not just academically but, self-esteem, motivation, and behavior.
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    very helpful site in explaining the benefits of using technology
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    The Effects of Technology on Classrooms and Students
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    This site will help students gain motivation and self esteem while using technology. It will help them acquire more technical skills and accomplish more complex tasks.
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    It discusses the teachers changing role in society. Now we must be the middleman between technology and the students. It also shows us how to convey meanings and messages using technology.
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    It discusses the teachers changing role in society. Now we must be the middleman between technology and the students. It also shows us how to convey meanings and messages using technology.
Jackie Melbye

Archived: Effects of Technology on Classrooms and Students - 0 views

  • Technology use allows many more students to be actively thinking about information, making choices, and executing skills than is typical in teacher-led lessons.
  • The student is actively making choices about how to generate, obtain, manipulate, or display information.
  • 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.
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  • Another effect of technology cited by a great majority of teachers is an increased inclination on the part of students to work cooperatively and to provide peer tutoring. While many of the classrooms we observed assigned technology-based projects to small groups of students, as discussed above, there was al
  • so considerable tutoring going on around the use of technology itself.
  • Increased Use of Outside Resources Teachers from 10 out of 17 classrooms observed at length cited increased use of outside resources as a benefit of using technology. This effect was most obvious in classrooms that had incorporated telecommunications activities (see examples), but other classes used technologies such as satellite broadcasts, telefacsimiles, and the telephone to help bring in outside resources.
  • Increased Motivation and Self Esteem
  • The most common--and in fact, nearly universal--teacher-reported effect on students was an increase in motivation. Teachers and students are sometimes surprised at the level of technology-based accomplishment displayed by students who have shown much less initiative or facility with more conventional academic tasks:
  • student self esteem.
  • Change in Student and Teacher Roles
  • Improved Design Skills/Attention to Audience
  • Project-based work (such as the City Building Project and the Student-Run Manufacturing Company) and cooperative learning approaches prompt this change in roles, whether technology is used or not. However, tool uses of technology are highly compatible with this new teacher role, since they stimulate so much active mental work on the part of students. Moreover, when the venue for work is technology, the teacher often finds him or herself joined by many peer coaches--students who are technology savvy and eager to share their knowledge with others.
  • The kids that don't necessarily star can become the stars. [with technology]. My favorite is this boy . . . who had major problems at home. He figured out a way to make music by getting the computer to play certain letters by certain powers and it changed the musical tone of the note and he actually wrote a piece. He stayed in every recess. . . . When I asked him what he was working on, he wouldn't tell me. Then he asked if he could put his HyperCard stack on my computer because it was hooked up to speakers. I said "sure" and at recess. . . he put it on my computer and played his music and literally stopped the room. And for months he had kids begging him at recess, every recess, to teach them how to make music. And for that particular kid it was the world because he really was not successful academically and was having lots of problems. . . . This really changed him for that school year. -Elementary school teacher
  • More Collaboration with Peers
    • Haylee Lininger
       
      Technology benefits a classroom greatly.
  • Increased Motivation and Self Esteem The most common--and in fact, nearly universal--teacher-reported effect on students was an increase in motivation. Teachers and students are sometimes surprised at the level of technology-based accomplishment displayed by students who have shown much less initiative or facility with more conventional academic tasks: The kids that don't necessarily star can become the stars. [with technology]. My favorite is this boy . . . who had major problems at home. He figured out a way to make music by getting the computer to play certain letters by certain powers and it changed the musical tone of the note and he actually wrote a piece. He stayed in every recess. . . . When I asked him what he was working on, he wouldn't tell me. Then he asked if he could put his HyperCard stack on my computer because it was hooked up to speakers. I said "sure" and at recess. . . he put it on my computer and played his music and literally stopped the room. And for months he had kids begging him at recess, every recess, to teach them how to make music. And for that particular kid it was the world because he really was not successful academically and was having lots of problems. . . . This really changed him for that school year. -Elementary school teacher Teachers talked about motivation from a number of different perspectives. Some mentioned motivation with respect to working in a specific subject area, for example, a greater willingness to write or to work on computational skills. Others spoke in terms of more general motivational effects--student satisfaction with the immediate feedback provided by the computer and the sense of accomplishment and power gained in working with technology:
  • . It is possible for students to get so caught up in issues such as type font or audio clips that they pay less attention to the substantive content of their product.
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    This article talks about some of the benefits and effects that technology has on the classroom, students, and teachers.
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    A article describing how technology has changed the teacher/student relationship. Also how technology has helped change learning. 
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    This site is to show how important technology is in the classroom for the students to learn.
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    This site describes the effects that technology has on the students within the classroom.
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    This article shows how technology helps with student motivation.
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    Some downfalls to technology in the classroom. 
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    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
Hallie Rhode

How Technology Trends Have Influenced the Classroom - 0 views

  • The Increase of Interactivity One only need to look at the gaming market to see the evolution of how our brains crave interaction. We went from Backgammon to Atari and realized that with some simple interaction, like a yellow circle eating dots, our brains could stay occupied for hours. The recent shift to touch screen and even motion-based interaction means that we now involve our whole body when interacting with games. Classroom Outcome: We might notice that our students seem more “antsy,” but in reality, sitting still in a seat for several hours has never been ideal for learning. Research is now becoming more abundant to back that statement. Incorporating regular brain breaks or mini-activities that require kids to move every 15-30 minutes re-invigorate the brain and get them refocused in the tasks at hand. On-Demand Living Most of us grew up in an era of either three basic television channels or the privilege of many via paid cable. With the digital era, television and movies have seen an exponential change in how they are distributed and accessed.  You no longer have to wait for that favorite re-run of Moonlighting; today, you can just pull it up on your phone. Better yet, you can pause it on one device and then watch it on another when you choose.  If you really get hooked on a show, why wait a week when you can just binge view it? Classroom Outcome: Flipped-teaching comes to mind when thinking of the “on-demand” model of learning. Not everyone has the time or energy for a full-fledged flipped-teaching model (not to mention at-home access for all students), but recording some lessons or concepts for later viewing, even in class, would be one way to let students have access to information when they want it. Wouldn’t it be nice if kids wanted to binge learn? Self-Publishing the World As We See It They ways we viewed and read the news was previously distributed to us through a filter.  Publisher, editor, advertisers, and corporations decided what we should watch and read when it came to content. In some ways, the classroom has followed a similar path. Look at the world now when it comes to news. We are all publishing to the world around us in blogs, tweets, posts and…yes…even Instagram selfies. Our brains are no longer designed to sit back and take what is given to us. We want to create and share what we see and learn too. Classroom Outcome:  This is one area where I feel that education has excelled, but there is still room for improvement. We’ve always encouraged students to write and report on what they think or believe. As students, we learned to play the game of “know your audience” when it came to writing a paper for a certain professor. Our purpose was writing for writing’s sake. Now we no longer have to limit ourselves to one recipient. Our students have access to a global audience and don’t have to write just to please one teacher. They can write based on what they see and believe to be true. Everything is Mobile (and Instant) As fast as the internet took the world by storm, the mobile revolution dropped a bomb of societal change and practice. People can now have all of their media in the palm of their hand. They can connect with anyone, anywhere. While there isn’t always value to why we use our devices, having that instant access means our brains can now outsource menial facts and focus on application and creation rather than retention. Classroom Outcome: One of the greatest challenges to the classrooms of today is mobile technology. Do we fund a 1:1 program? Allow a Bring Your Own Device policy? Won’t this just add the distraction of the outside world into a classroom? Rather than avoid or ban the use of mobile devices, some are embracing it as a way to not only engage learners, but also dig deeper into learning. This isn’t without its pitfalls, and can be quite messy, but setting expectations of use can be a powerful way to model how our kids use these in the non-school setting.  Maybe instead of whipping out their phones when at a restaurant, kids will actually sit and have a conversation with the grown-ups around them.  Of course, this is assuming the grown-ups have put down their devices too. Embracing the Digital Brain As we can see from these few examples, the world around us is changing.  This change affects the way we think, learn, and connect. In education, we have three options when dealing with these changes: avoid it, struggle with it, or embrace it. Technology would seem to be the panacea for solving all of these issues when it comes to engaging the digital brain. However, while it does have an impact in the classroom, the greatest impact still lies within the teacher and the content that they are trying to get their students to learn.  Until the pedagogy and purpose align with this new world, we are all left fighting a battle rather than embracing it.
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    Teachers all over America are faced with this challenge of keeping students engaged in the classroom when their world outside of school is one of constant engagement and stimulation. Knowing the world outside of our institutional walls is only one step in addressing modern learning styles.
Kendra Larson

Why is Education So Important in Our Life? | EdLab - 0 views

  • rst thing that strikes me about education is knowledge gain. Education gives us a knowledge of the world around us and changes it into something better. It develops in us a perspective of looking at life. It helps us build opinions and have points of view on things in life. People debate over the subject of whether education is the only thing that gives knowledge. Some say education is the process of gaining information about the surrounding world while knowledge is something very different. They are right. But then again, information cannot be converted into knowledge without education. Education makes us capable of interpreting things, among other things. It is not just about lessons in textbooks. It is about the lessons of life. One thing I wish I can do is, to provide education for all: no child left behind and change the world for good!! Posted in Public | Kafoumba Doumbia's blog | login or register to post comments »
  • It helps us build opinions and have points of view on things in life. People debate over the subject of whether education is the only thing that gives knowledge. Some say education is the process of gaining information about the surrounding world while knowledge is something very different. They are right. But then again, information cannot be converted into knowledge without education. Education makes us capable of interpreting things, among other things. It is not just about lessons in textbooks. It is about the lessons of life. One thing I wish I can do is, to provide education for all: no child left behind and change the world for good!! Posted in Public | Kafoumba Doumbia's blog | login or register to post comments »
  • r. It develops in us a perspective of looking at life. It helps us build opinions and have points of view on things in life. People debate over the subject of whether education is the only thing that gives knowledge. Some say education is the process of gaining information about the surrounding world while knowledge is something very different. They are right. But then again, information cannot be converted into knowledge without education. Education makes us capable of interpreting things, among other things. It is not just about lessons in textbooks. It is about the lessons of life. One thing I wish I can do is, to provide education for all: no child left behind and change the world for good!! Posted in Public | Kafoumba Doumbia's blog | login or register to post comments »
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  • The first thing that strikes me about education is knowledge gain. Education gives us a knowledge of the world around us and changes it into something better. It develops in us a perspective of looking at life. It helps us build opinions and have points of view on things in life. People debate over the subject of whether education is the only thing that gives knowledge. Some say education is the process of gaining information about the surrounding world while knowledge is something very different. They are right. But then again, information cannot be converted into knowledge without education. Education makes us capable of interpreting things, among other things. It is not just about lessons in textbooks. It is about the lessons of life. One thing I wish I can do is, to provide education for all: no child left behind and change the world for good!!
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    Gives a basic answer to why Education is important
Margaret O'Malley

3 Tips on Integrating Technology in the Classroom - US News - 1 views

  • . Plan ahead: There has to be a comprehensive strategy in place to implement technology into the school system, Wise says, and the teachers have to be involved in the planning stages.
  • 2. Try something new: The Digital Learning Day website includes a number of teacher "toolkits" with lesson ideas and devices for enhancing lessons with technology. One tool mentioned is the website Animoto, which allows students to create and upload videos, such as oral book reports. There are also lists of ideas for digital learning, which have been submitted by other teachers.
  • Become an educational designer:
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  • ntegrating technology into a high school classroom isn't a one-step process. "You can't just slap a netbook [computer] on top of a textbook and say, 'Great, now we have technology,"
  • digital learning starts with teachers,
  • performance is enhanced by technology
  • he first annual Digital Learning Day falls on February 1 and will celebrate innovative K-12 instructors who successfully bring technology into the classroom by assigning online course content,
  • When a school says, 'OK, we want to use technology better,' you have to develop your goals and what learning outcomes you're trying to reach,"
  • As technology evolves, so must the teachers. "For the last 100 years, teachers have essentially been the sage on the stage," Wise says. "They're the only access point of knowledge."
  • 1. Plan ahead: There has to be a comprehensive strategy in place to implement technology into the school system, Wise says, and the teachers have to be involved in the planning stages."When a school says, 'OK, we want to use technology better,' you have to develop your goals and what learning outcomes you're trying to reach," Wise says. School leaders and teachers must then think about the "three T's," he adds, which ask how teaching can be improved, what technology will be used, and how time will be used more efficiently.
  • Login Welcome, {{name}} Logout Rankings & Advice Education Health Money Travel Cars Law Firms News U.S. News Home education Facebook Twitter Education Rankings & Advice Home Colleges Grad Schools High Schools National Rankings State Rankings High School Notes Blog (function ($) { "use strict"; $(function () { var $metaCurrentState = $('meta[name=current_state_abbreviation]'), $headerSearch = $('#headerSearch-highSchools'), $headerState = $('select[name=bhs-school-state]', $headerSearch), $headerStates = $('option', $headerStates), currentStateAbbreviation = ''; if ($metaCurrentState.length > 0) { currentStateAbbreviation = $metaCurrentState.attr('content'); $headerStates.each(function () { var $state = $(this), text = $state.text(), value = $state.val(); if (text === currentStateAbbreviation) { $headerState.val(value); } }); } }); }(jQuery)); (function($) { $(document).ready(function() { function autocomplete_school_name_widget() { var state = $("#bhs-header-state option:selected").val(), url = 'http://' + window.location.hostname + '/education/best-high-schools/' + state + '/name-autocomplete?timestamp=0&limit=10', redirect_url = 'http://' + window.location.hostname + '/education/best-high-schools/search-bounce'; if ($.fn.usnAutocomplete) { $('#bhs-header-school').usnAutocomplete({ responseFormat: 'newlineList', autocompleteOptions: { serviceUrl: url, paramName: 'q', onSelect: function() { window.location.href = r
  • Login Welcome, {{name}} Logout Rankings & Advice Education Health Money Travel Cars Law Firms News U.S. News Home education Facebook Twitter Education Rankings & Advice Home Colleges Grad Schools High Schools National Rankings State Rankings High School Notes Blog (function ($) { "use strict"; $(function () { var $metaCurrentState = $('meta[name=current_state_abbreviation]'), $headerSearch = $('#headerSearch-highSchools'), $headerState = $('select[name=bhs-school-state]', $headerSearch), $headerStates = $('option', $headerStates), currentStateAbbreviation = ''; if ($metaCurrentState.length > 0) { currentStateAbbreviation = $metaCurrentState.attr('content'); $headerStates.each(function () { var $state = $(this), text = $state.text(), value = $state.val(); if (text === currentStateAbbreviation) { $headerState.val(value); } }); } }); }(jQuery)); (function($) { $(document).ready(function() { function autocomplete_school_name_widget() { var state = $("#bhs-header-state option:selected").val(), url = 'http://' + window.location.hostname + '/education/best-high-schools/' + state + '/name-autocomplete?timestamp=0&limit=10', redirect_url = 'http://' + window.location.hostname + '/education/best-high-schools/search-bounce'; if ($.fn.usnAutocomplete) { $('#bhs-header-school').usnAutocomplete({ responseFormat: 'newlineList', autocompleteOptions: { serviceUrl: url, paramName: 'q', onSelect: function() { window.location.href = r
  • 2. Try something new: The Digital Learning Day website includes a number of teacher "toolkits" with lesson ideas and devices for enhancing lessons with technology. One tool mentioned is the website Animoto, which allows students to create and upload videos, such as oral book reports. There are also lists of ideas for digital learning, which have been submitted by other teachers.[Experts give parents tech tips on embracing digital education.]One idea that has seen great results, say Wise and Hall, is the "flipped classroom." With this setup, they explain, the lectures and homework are reversed. Students will listen to a webcast or recording of the teacher's lecture at home, and then they will come to class and work on projects and problem-solving activities related to the lecture with the teachers.
  • 3. Become an educational designer: As technology evolves, so must the teachers. "For the last 100 years, teachers have essentially been the sage on the stage," Wise says. "They're the only access point of knowledge."But now, Wise says, teachers are more like designers, who get to choose and develop what kinds of content their students access and which technologies they use. Wise says that with new content technologies, too, teachers can quickly see assessment results of their students."They have tools so that instead of seeing 25 students sitting in front of them looking the same," Wise says, "they now know that this student needs this particular assistance, and this student needs that something else."
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    3 Tips to Adding technology in the classroom
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    A great site on giving tips on how to use technology in the classroom.
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    Three tips to make sure the classroom uses effective technology
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    This website gives great tips on ways to integrate technology into the classroom.
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    Integrating Technology into the classroom
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    This site is useful because it helps in understanding how to bring technology into the classroom in an appropriate non-forceful manor.
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    Tips on how your students can benefit from tech. in the classroom.
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    There are tips on how to successfully use technology in your classroom.
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    This article talks about how integrating technology into the classroom is a process instead of a one-step action. It gives three pieces of advice on ways to transition into having a technology based classroom.
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    3 Tips on Integrating Technology in the Classroom
Jeana Johnson

SmartBoard Changes Classroom - ABC News - 0 views

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    this is useful for teachers because it gives changes in the smart boards that are often used in classrooms.
Kari Schoenike

Web 2.0 in the classroom by Ryan McCallum on Prezi - 0 views

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    An interactive prezi on meeting learners in their world and changing the education system to best meet their changing brains
Rebecca Behling

Technology Is Changing How Students Learn, Teachers Say - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    technology is changing how students today are learning in the classroom according to teachers who spend hours a day observing their students.
Kataryna Altobelli

Education World: Using Technology In The Classroom - 1 views

  • This archive compiles many of the features we have done on the subject of using technology in the classroom. Many of these articles have been updated many times or even rewritten as technology changes. That said, due to the ever-changing nature of technology, there will be articles on this list that are a little past their prime period of usefullness.
  • podcasts describing their favorite books
  • their ideas become posts to classroom blogs
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  • school districts can use social media tools to connect with the global audience
  • When schools use less energy by effectively using technology, they can have a huge cumulative effect in conserving energy
  • Ten Things Everyone Needs to Learn Your school will try to teach you the facts you'll need to pass their tests, but schools won't teach you the things you really need to learn to be successful. What are they? Stephen Downes offers a list of his top ten things you need to learn.
  • ecurity officer Joe Sullivan. Its educational and safe -- if you follow the rules.
  • Who Is They? Theres no simple resolution to the conflicting priorities between techs and educators, but I know this about making better policy decisions: the best rules and guidelines are those developed collaboratively.
  • Sites to See: Parent Conferences These ten sites, filled with advice, tips, and practical resources, can help ensure that your parent-teacher conferences are a pleasant and positive collaborative experience for all.
  • Seven Brilliant Things Teachers Do With Technology Here are seven technology practices that just make me marvel and feel proud to be a part of the profession. Which do you do?
  • Lets consider eight risks involved in integrating the Internet into the K-12 curriculum -- and some solutions and resources to help you minimize those risks.
  • Things Id Do Differently the Second Time Around I had a woeful initial understanding of the state of technology-readiness of my new students at Sri Padmavathi Womens University in Tirupati, India. I know now I should have spent at least the first couple of weeks in the computer lab going over the basics.
  • Creating Your Own Web Site
  • Teaching? Learning? There's an "App" for That!
  • iPods for online research, to define words, listen to music of historical periods, and more.
  • 11 easy-to-read handouts
    • rosendahch02
       
      I think the iPod thing is really cool, i job shadowed my aunts classroom over spring break and they used iPads and the students loved it(: 
  • Technology
  • Learning 2.0 solutions reverse the e-learning model in which content is produced by publishers and consumed by students. Instead, Web 2.0 tools allow information to be integrated immediately into a standing curriculum, engaging students and providing innovative, collaborative solutions for instructors.
  • nology has always been a
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    This website has different games students can use to help learn. This website also has different articles on what technologies are useful in the classroom and which are not as helpful.
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    This website would be useful because not only does this site provide different resources and examples of how technology is used in classrooms, it also provides articles that are constantly being updated... as the technology changes so do the articles so they can accurately reflect what is currently going on with technology. It also offers newsletters and even templates/worksheets to apply the concepts that are being learned.
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    Helpful tips on how to use technology in the classroom. The site would be useful for teachers because it gives a lot of information on how to use technology with students as well as giving examples from other teachers of how these things went with their classes and the "dos and don'ts." 
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    I think this website would be useful because it has a lot of different information on tools, planning, safety, etc.
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    This site gives helpful articles that discusses different technology tools to use in the classroom. A lot of the articles update as technology evolves.
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    Great things that are happening from technology being incorporated in the classroom
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    Different Technology you can use in a class room, tips on the different technology
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    Using technology wisely in the classroom.
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    Give tips and information on how teachers use technology in a classroom. Give ideas for teaching technology and lesson plans.
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    Ways to use technology in the classroom. Tips of the week. The latest and greatest technology tools for the classroom and classroom teacher.
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    This article talks about how teachers can use technology in the classroom.
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    This website could be very useful for teachers because it provides a lot of information about different ways to effectively use technology in the classroom. It is a very well organized website that allows teachers to get several different ideas based on the grade level that they teach.
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    Articles relevant to technology use in the classroom, covering a wide variety of topics. 
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    This site would be useful for teachers because there is a wide variety  of tips and information on technology use in classrooms. This information is also updated as technology changes.
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    How to Use Technology in Classrooms
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    this site gives a brief description and different technologies and why they are useful and provides links for more in depth information
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    This website can instruct educators on how to incorporate technology into their classroom in a variety of ways. It gives a lot of great tips and ideas.
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    This website is useful as it talks about social media and how it can actually be integrated into the classroom.
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    This is a good place to start in order to find information on how to incorporate technology into the classroom. It's also a good way to search for ideas.
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    Education world is a website that offers links to articles and information on how to integrate technology into the classroom. It has many good articles including some on the dangers of technology.
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    Different ways to help you understand the use of technology
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    Many tips and tricks of using technology in the classroom.  Most of these tips include those related to the technology many children these days are familiar with.
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    This article shows how using technology is helpful not only to the children but also to make it easier for the parents and guardians to get involved in their child's learning.
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    This site has so many links in it for teachers to go to and check out. 
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    Information and tips for teachers on technology. How to improve the classroom with technology and getting the students involved.
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    how to use technology in the classroom
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    Technology has always been a major focus on EducationWorld.com. This archive compiles many of the features we have done on the subject of using technology in the classroom. Give tips to the everyday teacher on how to apply certain technolgy
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    Technology has always been a major focus on EducationWorld.com. This archive compiles many of the features we have done on the subject of using technology in the classroom.
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    Archive with links involving technology in classrooms.  Discusses the benefits of integrating technology and how to do so properly.  
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    This site will help you with technology in the class room. You can find out if there is an app for that! You could also lean how to create you'r web site! 
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    this website talks about different examples of using technology in the classroom. 
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    Articles on usefulness of certain technologies in the classroom
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    This is ways that technology is being used in the classroom. 
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    This website is useful because it provides teachers with basic technology information they could use in the classroom. It provides ideas of what you can do with the technology you have. It also provides some risks with having technology and allows teachers to be aware of some of these.
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    This is a lesson to teachers on how to use and teach their students with technology.
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. 
Shelby Mahr

iPads in the Classroom are Changing the Face of Education | Mac|Life - 0 views

  • Whether the tablet is used to teach reading and arithmetic basics to kindergartners, or to create a presentation for teenagers, the iPad is a chameleon in the classroom with the flexibility to adapt to any kind of curriculum.
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    How iPads are changing education in the classrom
Julie K

Mobile Learning in Education: Platforms, Apps & More - Teachability Community - 0 views

  • Overview All Content (85) Questions and Breakthroughs (27) Resources (5) Blog Polls Set as default tab Technology has allowed teaching and learning to go beyond the traditional classroom. How are you integrating mobile learning in your classroom? Manage categories Add a new category Edit category Close Create and manage categories in Mobile Learning. Removing a category will not remove content. Categories in Mobile Learning Add a new category (0 remaining) Only categories are allowed, right now there are too many. Name Tag suggestions (optional) Use tags to recommend this category to content authors. A matching tag will display a hint next to the category name when creating content. Popular tags in Mobile Learning: Apply this new category to all content using the suggested tags? if (dwr == null) var dwr = {}; if (dwr.engine == null) dwr.engine = {}; if (DWREngine == null) var DWREngine = dwr.engine; dwr.engine._origScriptSessionId = "8EC617F5FEFD11BE846DF7A9A0B29706"; dwr.engine._sessionCookieName = "JSESSIONID"; // JSESSIONID dwr.engine._allowGetForSafariButMakeForgeryEasier = "true"; dwr.engine._scriptTagProtection = "throw 'allowScriptTagRemoting is false.';"; dwr.engine._defaultPath = "/dwr/interface"; dwr.engine._pollWithXhr = "false"; var communityID = 2013; var containerID = 2013; var containerType = 14; function closeCustomizeWidgetMessageProperty() { $j('#jive-overview-customize-info').hide(); CommunityUtils.closeCustomizeWidgetMessageProperty(); } function setUserDefaultTab() { $j('#jive-set-default-tab').hide(); CommunityUtils.setUserDefaultTab(communityID, 'overview'); } function startFollowing() { FollowingActionBean.followContainer(14, communityID, true, { callback:function() { $j('#jive-link-community-startFollowing').hide(); $j('#jive-link-community-stopFollowing').show(); Jive.AlertMessage('thread.watch.notify', { beforeStart:function() { $j('[id=thread.watch.notify]').html('' + 'You are now following this community, which will appear in the Places widget. To remove, click "Stop following this community".' + ''); } }); }, errorHandler:function(msg, e) { alert("An internal error occurred while following the project or community."); } }); } function stopFollowing() { FollowingActionBean.followContainer(14, communityID, false, { callback:function() { $j('#jive-link-community-startFollowing').show(); $j('#jive-link-community-stopFollowing').hide(); Jive.AlertMessage('thread.watch.notify', { beforeStart:function() { $j('[id=thread.watch.notify]').html('' + 'You have stopped following this community. To view this community in the Places widget, click "Follow this community" below.' + ''); } }); }, errorHandler:function(msg, e) { alert("An internal error occurred while following the project or community."); } }); } var containerID = 2013; var containerType = 14; var popularTags = new Array(); var tagSets = new Array(); var container = { ID: containerID, objectType: containerType}; var maxTagSetCount = 25 if(typeof(Community) == 'undefined'){ Community = {}; Community.feed = {}; } function manageCategories(){ $j(".jive-modal-title-add-category").hide(); $j(".jive-modal-add-category").hide(); $j(".jive-modal-title-edit-category").hide(); $j(".jive-modal-edit-category").hide(); $j(".jive-modal-title-manage-categories").show(); $j(".jive-modal-categories-listing").show(); $j("#jive-modal-categories").lightbox_me(); $j("#saveButton").unbind("click"); $j("#saveButton").click(function(event) { $j("#saveButton").tri
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    You can post questions or breakthroughs you have relating to technology in school
Angela Lazzeretti

How the iPad Can Transform Classroom Learning | Edutopia - 0 views

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    This page would be helpful to teachers because IPads are becoming a more useful tools in classrooms and teachers need to know why. Some teachers are old fashion and like to use paper and pen but times are changing.
Kylie Fischer

12 Easy Ways to Use Technology in the Classroom, Even for Technophobic Teachers | TeachHUB - 0 views

shared by Kylie Fischer on 15 Mar 16 - No Cached
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    This is some easy ways we could implement technology without changing a lot of the curriculum.
Maryrose Langoehr

The History of the Mexican Flag Video - 0 views

  • exican FlagThe Mexican flag, a symbol of Mexico’s culture and history, has slowly evolved from era to era.The first, unofficial Mexican flag, the banner of the Virgin of Guadalupe, was carried by the priest and rebel leader Miguel Hidalgo during the War of Independence. It is still a powerful symbol in Mexican culture. Mexico adopted a flag very close to the flag of today when it won independence in 1821.Meaning of Mexican Flag ColorsThe vertical green, white and red stripes symbolized independence, religion, and the unity of Europe and the Americas. In the center is Mexico’s coat of arms, which tells the Aztec legend of the founding of the city of Tenochtitlan.The Aztecs said that the God Huitzilopochtli’ directed the Aztecs to rename themselves the Mexicas, and to settle at the site where they found a golden eagle, perched on a prickly pear cactus, clutching a serpent. While the site was in fact an unappealing swamp, that is where Mexico City stands to this day.Symbolic Changes in the Mexican FlagThe flag has changed 3 times since. Mexico adopted today’s flag in 1968. It has a 4:7 ratio. As Mexico modernized, the colors of the flag took on new meanings. Now, the green stands for hope, the white stands for unity, and the red stands for the blood of national heroes. Mexicans salute the flag with their right arm over their chest, palm to the ground.Mexicans celebrate Flag Day on February 24th, paying tribute to this symbol of Mexico’s political and cultural history.
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    Sometmes you just gotta know about Mexico's Flag...
cgrothey

Technology Is Changing How Students Learn, Teachers Say - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • use of digital technology is hampering their attention spans
  • media use among children and teenagers ages 8 to 18 has grown so fast that they on average spend twice as much time with screens each year as they spend in school.
  • But there is mounting indirect evidence that constant use of technology can affect behavior, particularly in developing brains, because of heavy stimulation and rapid shifts in attention.
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  • accustomed to getting quick answers with a few keystrokes that they are more likely to give up when an easy answer eludes them.
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    an interesting article about technology 
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    This article talks about how students are starting to have shorter attention spans with the increase in technology. If they do not find an answer to a question right away online they are likely to give up. Teachers have to learn to be more engaging with their students.
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    This article talks about how students are starting to have shorter attention spans with the increase in technology. If they do not find an answer to a question right away online they are likely to give up. Teachers have to learn to be more engaging with their students.
Abigail Schmidt

Technology in schools: Future changes in classrooms - BBC News - 0 views

  •  
    Well this site specifically is good for teachers because it describes the changes in technology that are coming into education. It is also relevant because I, as a teacher have the students complete a current event every day as morning work. They are allowed to use any site. This is one that is approved.
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    Technology  in schools
Angela Ravanesi

Illinois Response to Intervention (RtI) - 0 views

  • The I-RtI Network is a State Personnel Development Grant (SPDG) initiative of ISBE and is administered under a multi-year grant awarded to Lee/Ogle Regional Office of Education 47 in June 2011. The overarching goal of this initiative is to: Improve the learning and performance of all students in grades K-12 by building the capacity of Illinois public school districts and schools to develop, use, and sustain a multi-tiered system of research-based curricula, instruction, intervention, and assessment. The services of the Network primarily involve the delivery of high quality professional development based on adult learning principles and consisting of training, technical assistance, and coaching. For more information and to access numerous RtI-related resources, including a schedule of regional Networking Meetings that are open to all school and district teams, please go to http://www.illinoisrti.org/i-rti-network.
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    Illinois State Board of Education website. I can check up on all the changes in Illinois. 
grothsm11

5 Innovations From The Past Decade That Aim To Change The American Classroom - 0 views

  • Some schools are cutting down on snow days, thanks to technology. Rather than giving kids the day off when weather conditions are too dangerous for commuting, these schools are asking students to follow classroom lessons online. Although kids hoping for a snow day may not particularly appreciate these advancements in digital learning, house- or hospital-bound students do -- online lessons allow these kids to complete their coursework and still interact with peers. Some students with medical conditions can "go" to school via video conferencing or even with the help of robots enabled with video chat that they can control remotel
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    This article explains an alternative to canceling class when the weather is bad. This very helpful for Wisconsin since our weather is so unpredictable. 
Amber Dorman

Education World: Pillars of Successful Tech Implementation - 0 views

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    Explains 10 key pillars you need to implement technology into a classroom. The article addresses key pillars like everyone needs to be on board, train teachers, technology changes, and more.
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