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Lexi Hogden

How-to-articles from Microsoft - 0 views

  • Helping educators and school leaders connect, collaborate, create, and share
  • Access to free tools and tutorials
  • Tools to help you create innovative learning experiences
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  • Simple training on all types of technology
  • Plan for all ages preschool through high school
  • Activities to build 21st century skills
  • Free teaching tools like flashcards, worksheets, and more
  • Activities for the latest technology in your classroom
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    It helps with all of the basic social media outlits you could want to bring information to and to use. It also shows different products you can buy and use that might be helpful in your classroom. Also it gives you a lot of resources that are going to help you understand the technology and advancement of these sources with yourself and your students.
Elizabeth Dieringer

Successful Class Web Sites, Teaching Tips of the Week, Teaching Today, Glencoe Online - 0 views

  • Design your Web site wit
  • h your audience in mind. Determine the purpose of your Web site, then put yourself in the shoes of your students and their parents. How will they actually use the site; what will benefit them the most; what options can help them improve their understanding of class content? With the answers to these questions, you can begin to plan your site design.
Elizabeth Dieringer

Inspirational Teaching Videos: Covering Common Core, Math, Science, English And More - 0 views

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    Lots of videos showing ways to use technology in the classroom for many classes like the Arts, English, Math, Science and Social Studies as well as special education. They even separate it by grade level and topics for you to browse through.
Emily Johnson

AT Lab :: Classroom Devices :: Learning Disabilities: Math - 0 views

  • Classroom Assistive Technology Devices
  • Learning Disabilities: Math
  • Access to Math Company: Don Johnston, Inc. Tel #: 1-800-999-4660 Catalog #: P90 Price: $79.00 Function Domain: Learning Disabilities
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  • Big Calc Company: Don Johnston, Inc. Tel #: 1-800-999-4660 Price: $27.00 Function Domain: Learning Disabilities
  • Clock Company: Hartley Courseware, Inc. Tel #: 1-800-999-4660 Price: $ Function Domain: Learning Disabilities
  • Coin-u-Lator Company: Onion Mountain Technology Tel #:1-860-693-2683 Price: $20.00 Function Domain: Learning Disabilities
  • Money Calc Company: Onion Mountain Technology Tel #:1-860-693-2683 Price: $ 15.00 Function Domain: Learning Disabilities
  • IntelliMathics Company: IntelliTools, Inc Tel #: 1-888-285-9988 Catalog #:10581 Price: $ 139.95 Function Domain: Learning Disabilities
  • Math Blaster (In Search of Spot, Mystery, and Plus) Company: Davidson & Associates, Inc. Tel #: 1-800-556-6141 Price: $ 29.95 each Function Domain: Learning Disabilities
  • MathPad Company: IntelliTools, Inc. Tel #: 1-800-899-6687 Price: $79.95 Function Domain: Learning Disabilities
  • MathPad Plus Company: IntelliTools, Inc Tel #: 1-888-285-9988 Catalog #:10609 Price: $ 99.5 Function Domain: Learning Disabilities
  • Math Skills Collection Company: Hartley Courseware, Inc. Tel #: 1-800-999-4660 Price: $ Function Domain: Learning Disabilities
  • how Me Math Company: Davidson & Associates, Inc. Tel #: 1-800-327-4269 Catalog #: SO-07W Price: $ 99.00 Function Domain: Learning Disabilities
  • Skill Builder (Whole Number, Fractions, Perimeter, area, & Volume, Decimals) Company: Gamco Educational Software, Inc Tel #: 1-800-351-1404 Price: $ 69.95 Each Function Domain: Learning Disabilities
  • Talking Desktop Calculator Company: Independent Living Aids Phone: 800-537-2118 Model: 276968 Price: $18.95 Function Domain: Learning Disabilities, Visual Impairments
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    Math classroom Assistive Technology Devices for learners with disabilities.
Bailey Lottes

The Teacher's Guide To Using YouTube In The Classroom - Edudemic - Edudemic - 0 views

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    This website gives good ideas on how to integrate Youtube videos into your classroom as well as how to get your students interacting via Youtube. This opens up new ways of teaching and quizzing your students. It also gives alternatives to Youtube if there happens to be a problem with using it at your school.
Lexie Pellett

Ten Cool Sites: Fun & Educational Websites | Exploratorium - 0 views

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    I think this is a good link for using technology in the classroom because they give you cool links to websites suitable for children. All of the websites are both fun and educational.
Jared Denu

Technology Trends for Teachers to Try in 2014 - US News - 0 views

  • 1. 3-D printing: Once considered a far-fetched
  • 2. Personalized lessons
  • . Social lesson sharing
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    More trends to expect to gain popularity in 2014.
Kristen Delano

Technology in the Classroom: Resources for Teachers (Grades K-12) - TeacherVision.com - 0 views

  • Find basic computer skills, Internet research tips, Internet safety resources, lessons, and worksheets to help integrate technology across the curriculum. Learn the history of the Internet; get help with using computer word processors; find out how to create PowerPoint presentations; understand the difference between a podcast and a blog; research interesting science projects online; use the computer to extend a literature activity; and other fascinating activities.
  • Encourage your students to use technology in school and out.
  • The possibilities are endless, when it comes to how the Internet, computers, and other forms of modern technology can benefit your classroom instruction.
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    This website helps with how to use other sources of technology. I shows how to use things like powerpoint. It also shows to plan lesson plan with using technology in the lesson plan.
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    It gives plenty of reliable resources for helping put teachers. There's help for various types of technology as well so it gives plenty of options.
Alyssa Kuhl

National Math + Science Initiative Blog | Technology in the Classroom: The Benefits of ... - 0 views

  • It can keep students focused for longer periods of time.
  • time saver,
  • keep students focused on a project much longer than they would with books and paper resources
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  • better learning through exploration and research.
  • It makes students more excited to learn.
  • students will learn the critical thinking and workplace skills
  • It enables students to learn at their own pace.
  • gives the teacher more time to accomplish classroom objectives
  • It prepares students for the future.
  • students are able to get direct, individualized instruction from the computer
  • It makes students more excited to learn. When technology is integrated into school lessons, learners are more likely to be interested in, focused on, and excited about the subjects they are studying. Subjects that might be monotonous for some – like math and science – can be much more engaging with virtual lessons, tutoring, and the streaming of educational videos. Check out our free lessons page! We just updated it with brand new content that we believe will be a tremendous benefit to you and your students.
  • It can keep students focused for longer periods of time.
  • Internet
  • time-saving aspect can keep students focused on a project
  • It makes students more excited to learn
  • It enables students to learn at their own pace.
  • get direct, individualized instruction from the computer
  • allows them to engage
  • gives the teacher more time to accomplish
  • classroom objectives
  • It prepares students for the future.
  • both teachers
  • and students will develop skills essential for the 21st century.
  • Education
  • about collaborating with others, solving complex problems, developing different forms of communication and leadership skills, and improving motivation and productivity.
  • prepare our students for the elaborate world they will face going forward
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    This site explains why having technology in the classroom in beneficial to the students and teacher.
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    Benefits of having technology in the classroom.
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    Shows benefits of blended learning.
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    This website offers good insight as to possible benefits of technology in the classroom. It talks directly about how the students will benefit from having technology in the classroom by describing how it will positively impact their learning. It also talks about how technology in the classroom will prepare students for the future.
thomasrk11

5 Examples of SMART Boards in the Classroom - 1 views

    • thomasrk11
       
      This site gives 5 ways to use SMART boards in the classroom. 
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    This site will be useful because it explains some benefits to having a smartboard in the classroom.
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    This site is useful for teachers because it explains 5 ways SMART Boards are a good choice in the classroom.
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    Ways a smartboard can enhance learning in the classroom.
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    Basic information on how using a SMART Board is helpful in a classroom. 
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    This site can allow teachers the opportunity to give young students the chance to become more familiar with the use of smartboards.
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    This is a great site of 5 smart ways to use SMART boards in the classroom to keep students on task.
Jessica Dziubla

Project Tomorrow | Speak Up - 0 views

  • rom Chalkboards to Tablets: The Digital Conversion of the K-12 Classroom is the first in a two part series to document the key national findings from Speak Up 2012. For the past few years, Project Tomorrow has used the Speak Up survey to diligently document the growth in educators’ access to emerging technology devices, tools and services, and how that increased familiarity has resulted in greater interest in digital learning. The Speak Up survey data has also highlighted the growing expectations of parents each year for interactive and collaborative digital learning environments that they believe are essential for preparing their child to compete in the global information society. And, we have shared information and research over several years about the widespread national interest in enhanced college and career readiness for all K-12 students. Given all of those positive conditions, why is there so much new fervor around digital conversions today? What makes today’s education landscape different than last year, the year before or five years ago? What is different?
  • Do you know? Ten Things Everyone Should Know about K-12 Students’ Views on Digital Learning Do you know? Ten Things Everyone Should Know about K-12 Administrators’ Views on Digital Learning
sara collins

Teachers Pay Teachers - 0 views

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    This website has awesome resources that one of the teachers I worked with in my field studies class told me about
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    With a FREE account you can find and download free and for purchase materials created and used by teachers. You can even find find Smart Board templates to use.
Taylor Torrens

Technology's Effect on Education | Classroom Teaching Tips - 0 views

  • Why Technology Benefits Students Studies show that computer-trained teachers maintain classrooms that score higher in math than their peers who did not have such training. When teachers have a positive attitude about using technology, they often excite students’ interest in technology as well. Students are able to learn skills that are related to technology which will add to their utilizable skills in the future.
Mary Bopp

SmartBoard Changes Classroom - ABC News - 0 views

shared by Mary Bopp on 20 Feb 14 - No Cached
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    This site would be useful for a classroom because it gives a lot of positive reasons as to why SmartBoards will be helpful. It is also on a reliable news site which makes it even better.
caitschroeder

Social Networking Can be a Vital Classroom Tool | Concordia University - Portland Online - 0 views

  • teachers are
  • teachers are engaging students who are shy about participating in traditional classroom discussions, but who enjoy communicating online
  • the Internet is teaming with alternative programs, many of which are free, and tailored for classroom use.
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  • SchoolTube: A moderated video sharing site designed for K-12 students and teachers Twiducate: A secure microblogging site similar to Twitter, but aimed at elementary and secondary school students Collaborize Classroom: An app that allows teachers to create a password-protected website to post and update classroom curriculums, and add multimedia, documents and charts. Gaggle Apps: Social learning tools designed for K-12 students that include discussion boards, blogs, email, and even a “learning wall” that can all be customized by a teacher.
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    Technology can be vital in the classroom, even social media sites
Kate Kelley

NEA - Can Tweeting Help Your Teaching? - 0 views

  • By following other educators’ tweets, teachers can keep up with the latest trends, news, and happenings in education, as well as communicate with fellow educators. "Twitter,” Bergeron says, “is like the ticker at the bottom of CNN -- only a ticker populated with information about those people or things you care about, want to learn from, or want to know about.” By using Twitter’s direct message (private message) feature or the @reply function to publicly reply to another's tweet, explains Bergeron, “I am able to learn what my counterparts are working on, what is working, what is not working.” Inside the classroom, Twitter can be used to review lessons and remind students what is going to be covered in class that day or the next.  Teachers say tweeting a few quick review questions and some good Web sites add depth to their lessons. In turn, students can tweet their own questions and observations. "Twitter is a great way to keep your students thinking after class,” says Chris O’Neal, an instructional technology coordinator in Charlottesville, VA. “You can tweet a quick provocative question about a social studies lesson, for example, that will keep their brains active.”
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    Ways that Twitter may be beneficial to teachers. Examples from educators who have used Twitter.
Megan Manne

My Top 10 Tools for Elementary Educators - 0 views

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    This site has great resources for how elementary teachers can use technology in their classrooms.
Amanda Mogensen

How Teachers Are Using Technology at Home and in Their Classrooms | Pew Research Center... - 1 views

  • 73% of AP and NWP teachers say that they and/or their students use their mobile phones in the classroom or to complete assignments 45% report they or their students use e-readers and 43% use tablet computers in the classroom or to complete assignments
  • 76% of AP and NWP teachers “strongly agree that “search engines have conditioned students to expect to be able to find information quickly and easily” 83% agree that “the amount of information available online today is overwhelming for most students” 71% agree that “today’s digital technologies discourage students from finding and using a wide range of sources for their research” 60% agree with the notion that “today’s digital technologies make it harder for students to find and use credible sources of information”
  • 70% of teachers working in the highest income areas say their school does a “good job” providing teachers the resources and support they need to incorporate digital tools in the classroom, compared with 50% of teachers working in the lowest income areas 73% of teachers of high income students receive formal training in this area, compared with 60% of teachers of low income students 56% of teachers of students from higher income households say they or their students use tablet computers in the learning process, compared with 37% of teachers of the lowest income students 55% of teachers of higher income students say they or their students use e-readers in the classroom, compared with 41%  teaching in low income areas 52% of teachers of upper and upper-middle income students say their students use cell phones to look up information in class, compared with 35% of teachers of the lowest income students 39% of AP and NWP teachers of low income students say their school is “behind the curve” when it comes to effectively using digital tools in the learning process; just 15% of teachers of higher income students rate their schools poorly in this area 56% of teachers of the lowest income students say that a lack of resources among students to access digital technologies is a “major challenge” to incorporating more digital tools into their teaching; 21% of teachers of the highest income students report that problem 49% of teachers of students living in low income households say their school’s use of internet filters has a major impact on their teaching, compared with 24% of those who teach better off students who say that 33% of teachers of lower income students say their school’s rules about classroom cell phone use by students have a major impact on their teaching, compared with 15% of those who teach students from the highest income households
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  • Teachers under age 35 are more likely than teachers age 55 and older to describe themselves as “very confident” when it comes to using new digital technologies (64% vs. 44%) Conversely, the oldest teachers (age 55 and older) are more than twice as likely as their colleagues under age 35 to say their students know more than they do about using the newest digital tools (59% vs. 23%) 45% of teachers under age 35 have their students develop or share work on a website, wiki or blog, compared with 34% of teachers ages 55 and older Younger teachers are also more likely than the oldest teachers to have students participate in online discussions (45% v. 32%) and use collaborative web-based tools such as GoogleDocs to edit their work (41% v. 34%) Younger teachers are more likely to “very often” draw on colleagues for ideas about how to use new technologies in the classroom (22% of teachers under age 35 do this), when compared with teachers age 35-54 (16%) and teachers age 55 and older (13%)
  • 94% of AP and NWP teachers own a cell phone, slightly higher than the national figure of 88% for all U.S. adults 58% of these teachers (68% of teachers under age 35) have a smartphone, compared with 45% of all adults 93% of teachers own a laptop computer vs. 61% of all adults 87% own a desktop computer vs. 58% of all adults 39% own a tablet vs. 24% of all adults 47% own an e-book reader vs. 19% of all adults 78% use social networking sites such as Facebook, LinkedIn or Google+, compared with 69% of adult internet users and 59% of all adults 26% use Twitter vs. 16% of adult internet users and 14% of all adults
  • 99% of AP and NWP teachers use search engines to find information online 90% name Google as the search tool they use most often Virtually all AP and NWP teachers (99%) use the internet “to do work or research for their job” Almost three-quarters (73%) of AP and NWP teachers are “very confident” in their online search abilities
  • 80% of AP and NWP teachers report getting email alerts or updates at least weekly that allow them to follow developments in their field 84% report using the internet at least weekly to find content that will engage students 80% report using the internet at least weekly to help them create lesson plans
  • 92% of these teachers say the internet has a “major impact” on their ability to access content, resources, and materials for their teaching 69% say the internet has a “major impact” on their ability to share ideas with other teachers 67% say the internet has a “major impact” on their ability to interact with parents and 57% say it has had such an impact on enabling their interaction with students
  • A survey of 2,462 Advanced Placement (AP) and National Writing Project (NWP) teachers finds that digital technologies have helped them in teaching their middle school and high school students in many ways.
  • t the same time, the internet, mobile phones, and social media have brought new challenges to teachers.
  • Teachers most commonly use digital tools to have students conduct research online, which was the focus of an earlier report based on these data.1 It is also common for these teachers to have students access (79%) and submit (76%) assignments online. 
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    The site explains the importance of technology and how its useful in teaching.
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    It is a recent article from 2013, contains relevant information about current teachers and what has been working well with students.
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    A survey was taken to see how well technology is working with students that are in middle school and high school. It talks about the different kinds of programs that are being brought into schools in recent years. 
Katelyn Frievalt

Use of Technology in Teaching and Learning | U.S. Department of Education - 0 views

  •  
    Website explains the governments view on using technology in teaching methods for all sorts of ages and abilities
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    "Virtual or online learning: 48 states and the District of Columbia currently support online learning opportunities that range from supplementing classroom instruction on an occasional basis to enrolling students in full-time programs. These opportunities include dual enrollment, credit recovery, and summer school programs, and can make courses such as Advanced Placement and honors, or remediation classes available to students. Both core subjects and electives can be taken online, many supported by online learning materials. While some online schools or programs are homegrown, many others contract with private providers or other states to provide online learning opportunities."
Rose Reible

My Library for http://www.usnews.com/education/technology-in-the-classroom - 0 views

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    This website has many links to other possible resources. It allows for many different sites to be used to enhance knowledge of technology, and its uses in the classroom.
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