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Destinee Kafka

Technology for Teaching: 10 Ways to Improve Classroom Learning | Scott Steinberg - 0 views

  • Share Content Online - Whether it's posting videos to a private channel for class members and parents to see, using Google Docs to share materials so students can collaborate on a shared project, or posting homework assignments to a class website for everyone to access, using technology as a tool demands a base level of proficiency from students that they'll need to continue to build on.
  • Create a Class Blog or Wiki - Encourage kids to respond to in-class lessons or current events and topics, and devise a system for posting thoughts, news or impressions of them to a class blog or Wiki. Kids will love improving their creative writing skills and seeing their work appear online, and parents will love being able to feel more connected to the classroom. As the school year progresses, it's often great fun to watch a class' page fill up with posts and discussions, and see kids, parents, and educators engage in more frequent and ongoing dialogue.
  • Promote Greater Good - If there's an international, national or even local need for charitable donations or disaster relief, classrooms can use online tools to solicit and track charitable donations, or spread awareness for these causes. Sites like FirstGiving or Pledgie can help teachers use technology as a complement to cause-based learning. Helping kids create social awareness, all show how high-tech solutions can be used as a tool for kindness, understanding, and good.
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  • Embrace Connected Learning - The concept of "Connected Learning" is at the center of a new theory that champions say "is a model of learning that holds out the possibility of re-imagining the experience of education in the Information Age" that draws on "the power of today's technology to fuse young people's interests, friendships and academic achievement." According to Dr. Mizuko Ito, a leader in the field of Connected Learning and a professor at the University of California, Irvine, and cultural anthropologist of technology use, examples of Connected Learning are when a teacher may ask a student to do a report on their favorite video game, or if a kid who likes to draw on the computer creates the signs and banners for a classroom party.
    • lemaykm07
       
      Learning in a classroom is often easier with the help of technology, for the student as well as the teacher.
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    More helpful tips on improving classroom learning.
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    Technology to improve teaching.
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    This websites uses up to date applications that most children and teens are familiar with. This website uses twitter and blogging as means of teaching technology which should spark their interest in the classroom.
Kelli Hedgepath

elearn Magazine: How to Help Teachers Use Technology in the Classroom - 0 views

  • The teacher's primary role is to help students understand particular subject matter. Everything else is secondary. Therefore, the focus of any computer-related professional development should not be on the technology itself, but on how computers can improve performance in these core areas of the teacher's "job."
  • This limited use may have multiple causes: Teachers may be overwhelmed by demands of testing; they may not see the value of instructional technologies in their particular content area; they may work in environments where principals do not understand or encourage technology use; and the types of software most helpful in instruction are not always the types of applications students know how—or want—to use.
  • job-related, focused on the core competencies of the classroom, not technology just enough, emphasizing increased comfort, not proficiency, with computers and management of limited technology resources just in time, meaning teacher are provided with skills as and when needed just in case teachers need to plan for contingencies accompanied by a "just try it" attitude, wherein instructors apply both pressure and support to compel teachers to use what they've learned.
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  • Email Article To From Note Privacy & Terms How to Help Teachers Use Technology in the Classroom The 5J Approach By Mary Burns / September 2010 Print Email Share on facebook Share on twitter Share on more var addthis_config = {"data_track_clickback":true}; Comments (2) Instapaper (function() { var s = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0], rdb = document.createElement('script'); rdb.type = 'text/javascript'; rdb.async = true; rdb.src = document.location.protocol + '//www.readability.com/embed.js'; s.parentNode.insertBefore(rdb, s); })(); Recent reports (from The Chronicle of Higher Education and Walden University [PDF], for example) point to teachers' continuing difficulties integrating technology into classroom learning. Despite access to technology and despite the fact that novice teachers are entering the classroom with far more advanced technology skills than their counterparts of an earlier age, only 39 percent of teachers report "moderate" or "frequent" use of technology as an instructional tool (Grunwald Associates, 2010).
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    Approaches on how teachers should use technology in the classroom. The 5J approach.
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    " How to Help Teachers Use Technology in the Classroom The 5J Approach By Mary Burns / September 2010 Print Email Share on facebook Share on twitter Share on more Comments (2) Instapaper Recent reports (from The Chronicle of Higher Education and Walden University [PDF], for example) point to teachers' continuing difficulties integrating technology into classroom learning. Despite access to technology and despite the fact that novice teachers are entering the classroom with far more advanced technology skills than their counterparts of an earlier age, only 39 percent of teachers report "moderate" or "frequent" use of technology as an instructional tool (Grunwald Associates, 2010)."
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    " How to Help Teachers Use Technology in the Classroom The 5J Approach By Mary Burns / September 2010 Print Email Share on facebook Share on twitter Share on more Comments (2) Instapaper Recent reports (from The Chronicle of Higher Education and Walden University [PDF], for example) point to teachers' continuing difficulties integrating technology into classroom learning. Despite access to technology and despite the fact that novice teachers are entering the classroom with far more advanced technology skills than their counterparts of an earlier age, only 39 percent of teachers report "moderate" or "frequent" use of technology as an instructional tool (Grunwald Associates, 2010). This limited use may have multiple causes: Teachers may be overwhelmed by demands of testing; they may not see the value of instructional technologies in their particular content area; they may work in environments where principals do not understand or encourage technology use; and the types of software most helpful in instruction are not always the types of applications students know how-or want-to use."
kaylaweiner

100 Ways To Use Google Drive In The Classroom - 0 views

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    by onlineuniversities.com Students and educators have a wealth of learning and productivity tools available to them online. Google offers some of the highest-quality resources on the web to meet all your study and teaching needs, and all you need to access them is an internet connection.
lexigroberski

Common Core Standards Explorer - 0 views

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    This website provides the Common Core Standards for teaching and is organized by grade and subject. This makes it easier for teachers to find standards that need to be used for lessons, as well as where the students should be standing educationally based on their grade level.
testerlv11

30 Photos of Wisconsin That Will Make You Want to Move There - 0 views

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    Even though the winters can be brutal and by the end of them I am in desperate need of some sun, Wisconsin will always be home and these pictures really show why!
Nicole Mottl

10 Reasons Today's Students NEED Technology in the Classroom - 0 views

  • help prepare students for their future careers
  • reach diversity in learning styles
  • encouraging collaboration.
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  • Technology helps the teachers prepare students for the real world environment.
  • helps students stay engaged
  • 7) When mobile technology is readily available in the classroom, students are able to access the most up-to-date information quicker and easier than ever before.
  • 9) Students become more responsible. Technology helps students take more control over their own learning. They learn how to make their own decisions and actually think for themselves.
  • 10) Student can have access to digital textbooks that are constantly updated and often more vivid, helpful, creative, and a lot cheaper than those old heavy books.
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    Great explanations on why integrating technology into the classroom is helpful. 
lopezma14

Cool Math - 0 views

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    Could use some of the math games to work into your lesson plans as needed.
Ashley Bullock

10 Ways to Help Reduce Bullying in Schools | CPI - 0 views

  • 1. Have a Clear Definition of Bullying.
  • schools need to have a common definition of bullying.
  • Bullying, on the other hand, is an imbalance of power
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  • Ensure that the person who is doing the bulling knows what behavior is wrong, why it’s wrong, and what the consequences are for engaging in the behavior.
  • 2. Remove Labels: Address Behaviors.
  • Cyberbullying is the “use of any electronic device to harass, intimidate, or bully another”
  • 6. Engage Parents.
  • State rules in positive terms, Keep the number of rules to a minimum (3–5 depending upon age), Set rules that cover multiple situations, Make sure rules are age appropriate, Teach your students the rules, Set an example for rule-following behavior, and Be consistent in enforcing the rules
  • Rules need to enforce respect, responsibility, and safety
  • 4. Reward Positive Behavior.
  • reinforce good behavior
  • 5. Have Open Communication
  • A school can also provide nonverbal cues. These can include interior decorations like signs, it can include teachers and staff, and it can include the exterior of the school.
  • 3. Set Clear and Enforceable Rules and Expectations.
  • Keeping parents informed about their child’s grades, friends, behavior, and even attitudes in school is an important tool when addressing behaviors.
  • 7. Look for Warning Signs.
  • Are you constantly breaking up the same kids? Do you get to the bottom of what goes on? Have there been changes in these children’s attitudes?
  • 8. When Bullying Occurs, Clear the Scene.
  • Bullying is not going to end right away.
  • Be persistent and consistent about stopping i
  • 9. Monitor Hot Spots.
  • areas like hallways, bathrooms, playgrounds, and busses.
  • 47.2% of bullying occurs in a hallway or stairwell and 33.6% of bullying happens in the classroom (Mahoney, 2012). 20% of bullying situations occur on school grounds
  • 10. Know Your State Law and District Policies.
  • That’s why 49 out of 50 states currently have bullying laws in place
  • Bullying can be reduced.
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    Here are 10 ways to help reduce Bullying in a school near you. 
Jeremy Harnack

Do2Learn: Educational Resources for Special Needs - 0 views

  • Feelings Game 4 graduated lessons for learning about emotions. Faceland Build skills in facial recognition of emotion
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    Games and tools for students in special education
lopezma14

The Future Is Now | TIME For Kids - 0 views

  • A Treasured Time Machine Set in 1985, the movie begins with Marty and his girlfriend, Jennifer, in front of Marty’s home. All of a sudden, Doc Brown appears and franticly warns Marty that something has gone wrong and they urgently need to travel to the future to fix it.  The three hop into a trash-powered car, called the DeLorean, and blast off.  “Where we’re going we don’t need roads,” Doc tells Marty as they burst into the sky. When they arrive in 2015, they find themselves in a futuristic town with hoverboards, 3D movie advertisements, hand-held computers, and people wearing strange clothing with self-lacing shoes. People across the country are celebrating Back to the Future Day with movie screenings and more. In New York City, a special fleet of DeLoreans will give taxi rides. Technology company Arx Pax will release a new hover board, a technology made famous by the movie. And the town of Reston, Virginia, will ceremonially change its name to Hill Valley, Marty’s fictional hometown, from October 21-25.
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    A TIME For Kids article.
Kayla Kilps

How it works - Kahoot! - 0 views

  • Zero setup time, no player accounts required and one-click gameplay.
  • Create a fun learning game in minutes or choose from millions ready to play or adapt.
  • It’s free to create and play – and always will be!
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    Kahoot is a way to quiz students using their own technology. This allows teachers to understand what they need to cover more. 
Kayla Fischer

Study: Emerging Technology Has Positive Impact in Classroom - US News - 0 views

  • Study: Emerging Technology Has Positive Impact in C
  • lassroo
  • a screen recording and video editing program, Roshan uploaded her lectures to iTunes and assigned them as homework.
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  • according to a recent study by CompTIA—which surveyed 500 K-12 and college instructors across the country. The report, IT Opportunities in the Education Market, revealed that 78 percent of K-12 teachers and administrators believe technology has positively impacted the classroom and the productivity of students. Roughly 65 percent of educators surveyed also believe that students are more productive today than they were three years ago due to the increased reliance on technology in the classroom.
  • Taught with the video lectures, Roshan's students in the 2010-11 school year scored an average of 4.11 on the AP calculus test, compared to the 3.59 average
  • "We were able to offer our students a library that was anywhere on campus where they were,"
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    Using technology in the classroom is proven to keep students engaged. More teachers need to become active participants in learning how to enhance their skills.
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    This article would be helpful for teachers because it shows positive ways to use technology to increase student understanding. For example, a "reversed classroom" in which students watch lectures at home and then do related problems the next day in class.
Brady Wrigtht

The Learning Shop School Starts SOON ! We have what You Need ! - 0 views

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    This is a cite that you can use for getting ideas on what you can do in your class. Along with that you can purchases it here.
Jenna Steinich

Improving Parent-Teacher Communication Through Technology - Yahoo! Voices - voices.yaho... - 0 views

  • Recently, technology has made parent-teacher communication easier and more time-efficient than ever before. Telephones, voicemail, and internet technology all allow fast communication about such things as homework assignments, behavior problems, and classroom highlights. The internet is the most recent tool being used for school communication. With some training, teachers can set up class websites with information that the parents are able to view at any time. E-mail communication is beneficial because messages can be sent at any time and the other person does not need to be available to respond immediately (Graham-Clay, 2005). However, in 2004, only 74.9% of U.S. households with a phone line had access to the internet (Merkley, Schmidt, Dirksen, & Fuhler, 2006). While the internet has proven useful in parent-teacher communication, schools must keep in mind that not all families have internet access and must offer less technologically advanced forms of communication such as written notes and telephone calls as well (Graham-Clay, 2005). For schools and families with internet access, e-mail messages are quickly beginning to replace traditional written notes. E-mail messages are more immediate and efficient than written notes. Some parents are able to check their e-mail during the day at work and know immediately how their child's day at school is progressing. E-mail messages are also more likely to reach parents because students cannot "accidentally" forget to deliver or misplace them. E-mail can increase the ease and frequency of communication because it allows teachers to write one message and send it simultaneously to all of the parents in the class (Patton, Jayanthi, & Polloway, 2001). Websites have been created to help parents assist their children with their homework assignments. Homework Central (www.homeworkcentral.com) is a popular, comprehensive site that provides students and parents with study skills and homework assistance for a variety of subjects. Some schools have begun to develop similar websites of their own. These websites increase parents' confidence in their homework assisting skills which makes it more likely that they will become involved at homework time (Patton et al., 2001).
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    This article talks about parents communicating effectively with parents through technology.
brittany vassios

Assistive technology for kids with learning disabilities: An overview - Assistive techn... - 0 views

  • The use of technology to enhance learning is an effective approach for many children. Additionally, students with LD often experience greater success when they are allowed to use their abilities (strengths) to work around their disabilities (challenges). AT tools combine the best of both of these practices.
  • googletag.display("adSponsor_610x30"); GS = GS || {}; GS.FB = GS.FB || {}; GS.FB.subscribes = function() { FB.Event.subscribe('edge.create', function(response) { omnitureEventNotifier.clear(); omnitureEventNotifier.successEvents = "event36;"; omnitureEventNotifier.send(); }); FB.Event.subscribe('message.send', function(response) { omnitureEventNotifier.clear(); omnitureEventNotifier.successEvents = "event38;"; omnitureEventNotifier.send(); }); }; window.fbAsyncInit = function() { FB.init({appId: "112862918759431", status: true, cookie: true, xfbml: true}); GS.FB.subscribes(); }; (function() { var e = document.createElement('script'); e.async = true; e.src = document.location.protocol + '//connect.facebook.net/en_US/all.js'; document.getElementById('fb-root').appendChild(e); }()); jQuery(window).load(function() { jQuery.getScript("//assets.pinterest.com/js/pinit.js"); }); GS = GS || {}; GS.twttr = GS.twttr || {}; twttr.events.bind('tweet', function(event) { omnitureEventNotifier.clear(); omnitureEventNotifier.successEvents = "event39;"; omnitureEventNotifier.send(); }); var GS_googlePlusOneClicked = function() { //requires /res/js/omnitureEventNotifier.js omnitureEventNotifier.clear(); omnitureEventNotifier.successEvents = "event50;"; omnitureEventNotifier.send(); } (function() { var po = document.createElement('script'); po.type = 'text/javascript'; po.async = true; po.src = 'https://apis.google.com/js/plusone.js'; var s = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(po, s); })(); 13 commentsEmailPrintEn españolRelated articlesE-ssential tips: A parent's guide to assistive technologyAccommodations, Modifications, and Alternate Assessments: How They Affect Instruction and AssessmentConsumer Tips for Evaluating Assistive Technology ProductsBy Marshall Raskind, Ph.D. , Kristin Stanberry
  • AT for kids with LD is defined as any device, piece of equipment or system that helps bypass, work around or compensate for an individual's specific learning deficits. Over the past decade, a number of studies have demonstrated the efficacy of AT for individuals with LD. 1 AT doesn't cure or eliminate learning difficulties, but it can help your child reach her potential because it allows her to capitalize on her strengths and bypass areas of difficulty. For example, a student who struggles with reading but who has good listening skills might benefit from listening to audio books. In general, AT compensates for a student's skills deficits or area(s) of disability. However, utilizing AT does not mean that a child can't also receive remedial instruction aimed at alleviating deficits (such as software designed to improve poor phonic skills). A student could use remedial reading software as well as listen to audio books. In fact, research has shown that AT can improve certain skill deficits (e.g., reading and spelling).2,3 AT can increase a child's self-reliance and sense of independence. Kids who struggle in school are often overly dependent on parents, siblings, friends and teachers for help with assignments. By using AT, kids can experience success with working independently
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    Using technology to assist children with special needs.
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    This is an article describing the overview of technology use with students with learning disabilities.
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    This site explains how assistive technology can aide in a child's learning who has a certain disability.
Rachael Teklics

Technology Integration Strategies, Teaching Today, Glencoe Online - 0 views

  • Reasons for Integrating Technology When done effectively, technology has a positive impact on student learning. It can: Increase student motivation for learning Improve communication of learning goals Facilitate higher-order thinking skills Build valuable skills that students will use in college and in the workplace Expand students' understanding from novice to mastery There is no denying that computer technology has become as commonplace as the telephone in American society. To make learning relevant to students, this reality needs to be acknowledged in the form of technology-based lessons.
hansends21

Best Practices for Using Technology in the Classroom | CIDDE - 3 views

  • Technology should be used for a purpose—not for the sake of being flashy and not as a distraction from other forms of pedagogy
  • Be sure that the technology that you intend to use is accessible to your students
  • do consider whether or not your students have access to technology that you want them to use
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  • Assessment
  • be clear about how you will grade their online contributions
  • Technology should be used as reinforcement of and supplement to your teaching, but it should not be a simple reiteration of exactly what you have done in another format
  • Reinforcement:
  • Carefully consider the ways in which video or other media that you share with your class are aligned with your learning objectives.
  • consider your own access to technology: make sure that you are familiar with all of the technology that you use and that media technology in your classroom is functioning correctly before the class.
  • PowerPoint presentations can be useful in structuring a lesson, but your slides should not match your lecture word-for-word, such that you are simply reading from the slides.
  • Consider giving them a short assignment to be filled out as they are watching it, for example, to structure their interaction with the media and to assess their learning at the end of it.
  • If you are going to show a film, for example, don't wait until you walk into class to find out if the player in your classroom supports your DVD's regional format, or you will find yourself scrambling to come up with a lesson plan that does not include the film. By checking the regional format in advance, you will be able to have a matching-format DVD player delivered to the classroom by Technology Services.
  • Consider the technology that is most closely in alignment with your teaching skills and the needs of your students—if you don't like to teach with Power Point, consider giving students a handout outlining the main points of your lecture and listing major concepts to assist them in note-taking.
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    Four helpful things to consider when using technology in the classroom.
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    This site reminds you as a teacher how to properly use technology in the classroom. If you are just using it for show, it will not help the students learn.
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    Best Practices
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    This article describes four basic practices that all teachers should keep in mind when using technology in the classroom. It gives good tips on how to use technology without it creating too much of a distraction in the learning environment.
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    Ways of using technology in the classroom. 
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    Using Technology within the classroom
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    I think this would be helpful because it takes on an approach to help teachers with technology in the classroom in an easy way.
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    Best ways to use technology int the class. 
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    This websites gives the four basic principles to be aware of when using technology for teaching. Teachers, sometimes, just use the technology just to be flashy or up to date with everyone else, when the teachers do not actually know anything about the technology they are using. These 4 basic principles will assist you when using different types of technology.
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    Best Practices
kirsten hammer

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

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

The Tech-Driven Classroom Is Here, But Grades Are Mixed - Forbes - 0 views

  • Enter education technology (or “ed tech”), the much-touted panacea for all that befalls the American teacher. Hailed as the “great equalizer” for its ability to provide universal access to information via the Internet, ed tech has been, in practice, more hype than reality. The problem is that, historically, education technology added more maintenance, upgrade, and teaching burdens to an already overburdened — and often technologically under-prepared and un-enthused — teaching cohort, while failing to meet the specific needs of highly particular, and easily distracted students.
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    This article is helpful to learn about tech-driven classrooms.
Danielle Hucker

100 Classroom Organizing Tricks | Scholastic.com - 0 views

  • RETHINK YOUR ROOM  22. Instant Math CenterSo you don't have the cash for Cuisenaire rods and other math tools, but you do have kitchen cabinets. Pantry staples like pasta shells and lima beans are perfect for hands-on math work and patterning. 23. ReflectionsIs your room gloomy? Hanging  mirrors or even reflective wrapping paper opposite the windows can really brighten things up! -Frankie Frasure  24. Shower Gallery SpaceHave an ugly wall? Hang a couple of sheets of shower paneling from a home store and let the kids write or draw! Invite the kids to be creative on a theme you are studying in class, whether it's oceans or Pilgrims. -Christina Vrba  25. Hide It AwayUgly storage area? Hit the fabric store and look for a bright fabric or remnant. Use safety pins to hang kids' work or to make it into a word wall. -Robin Shaw  26. Color Your WorldEvery interior designer knows the quickest (and the cheapest) way to overhaul a room is a can of paint. You could  ask parents or teens to volunteer to help! -Peggy Collrin  27. That Holiday Glow I repurposed extra Christmas tree lights by running them along the window sill and around the bookcases in my classroom. I don't light them all the time, but it's always a pick-me-up for the kids when I do! -Mary Jo Pick 
  • FREE (OR ALMOST FREE) SUPPLIES 35-37 Too many teachers spend their own hard-earned cash to outfit their rooms. Here are a few websites you can count on.- Freecycle.org: A nonprofit site where you can give (and get) stuff free in your own town. Great for kids' books, extra furniture, even a DVD player. Be sure to let people know you are a teacher!- Donorschoose.org: A well-respected organization connects donors with classrooms in need. Any teacher can sign up!- Bookins.com: Refresh your library with this book swap site. Give away books that aren't working for ones that will!
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    This sites has tons of organizing ideas for the classroom. These could help out in the future
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