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Mark McDonough

Flowboard - Touch Publishing - 1 views

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    very cool new storytelling app. easy to use. easy to insert images, text, video. can search Google image from within the app. can UPDATE the story and keep the orignal url (huge!). drawback is that sharing via url (and facebook and twitter) are the only options - no epub, pdf, etc.
Mark McDonough

How Nearpod Brought Active Learning To My Classroom | Edudemic - 2 views

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    short article on how a teacher has used the ipad Nearpod app with elementary students. the app is installed on all Lincoln School ipad carts!
Joe Colombo

Arcademic Skill Builders: Online Educational Games - 1 views

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    Fun and free online multi-player educational math games and language arts games for students and teachers! Most work with one click meaning they are ideal for interactive white boards. Can be used with small groups or individuals.
Patricia McGonagle

Three Ring | An App for Teachers to Create Educational Portfolios of Student Work with ... - 7 views

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    This looks like a really cool app to explore. You can pull up a student's work for parent-teacher conferences, assessment, or use as exemplars. How it works: With your smartphone or ipad, you can take a photo and tag it before you upload it and organize.
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    Downloaded - I'll be giving it a try - I have used a notebook creating app for a similar purpose, but this seems to be designed for what I have been forcing the other app to do. I wish you could add voice recordings as I like to do running records, and fluency analysis after I take a picture of a page a student is reading.
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    Take a picture with our app, and it's online in seconds Three Ring is a website that allows you to securely upload photos of student work. With Three Ring, you can sort by class, student, or custom tag to easily find the artifact you're looking for.
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    joe- it looks you CAN add your own audio recording to each piece of student work. i could not find, however, any reference to an ability to upload files. so it looks like the only way to add student work it to take a picture of it.
Cindy Matthes

instaGrok | A new way to learn - 1 views

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    This is a new concept for a search engine that combines a concept map, web sites, images, videos and more in an easy to use format that you can adjust for grade level. I am going to try using it with 2nd grade when we do our continents project.
Mark McDonough

Rewards of teaching young children to blog - 0 views

  • When I first started blogging, I thought the posts would be the primary focus of the blog. I quickly realized that the comment section was where the blog came to life.
  • Many parents work but would love to volunteer in some way. Last year, I asked parents to become “virtual volunteers” for our blogs. A virtual volunteer is a person who supports the blog by commenting back to students. This type of interaction helps strengthen the home-school connection and makes the comment sections more engaging.
  • With classroom time at a premium, I look for meaningful ways to integrate curriculum; the blog has been the perfect venue. When my class read “The Great Kapok Tree” by Lynne Cherry for language arts, the students followed up their reading by researching a rain forest animal that was mentioned in the story. Each student composed a comment for the blog from the point of view of that animal.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • During our biography unit, I had each student select a famous person to study. Students submitted a creative comment pretending they were that person. George Washington got a comment from Queen Elizabeth I, Mozart and Tchaikovsky were chatting; the blog comments truly brought these historic people to life!
  • Of all the riches that blogging has brought to my class, the relationships we’ve built with other classrooms around the world have been the most rewarding.
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    good, quick overview of how a 3rd grade teacher uses blogging. includes specific examples.
sdexter67

Motivation, Management and Media: text, images, music, video | Glogster EDU - 21st cent... - 3 views

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    I really like a lot of the links on here. Take time and explore! See the Glog! Motivation, Management and Media: text, images, music, video | Glogster EDU - 21st century multimedia tool for educators, teachers and students
Patricia McGonagle

The Differentiator - 0 views

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    A system to help write or keep track of your objectives for differentiating instruction.
Patricia McGonagle

Organize your resources in an online binder - LiveBinders - 1 views

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    LiveBinders is your 3-ring binder for the web. Create binders for a unit or use them as digital portfolios. The possibilities are endless.
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    tricia, livebinders is an EXCELLENT web2.0 tool to share resources or for students to demonstrate learning.
Cathlin LaRocco

Vocabulary Spelling City app - 7 views

finally! i checked it out and it works well. I could access all of the lists I made this year for my students, play the games, etc.

apps PreK GrK Gr1 Gr2 Gr3 Gr4 Gr5 Gr6 Gr7 Gr8 ela math science socialstudies art music ell foreignlanguage wellness web2.0

Patricia McGonagle

Doceri - The Interactive Whiteboard for iPad. - 0 views

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    Doceri is a scalable suite of products that allows a teacher or presenter to control a computer's desktop, to control audiovisual technology, and to annotate any presentation in real time with the Apple™ iPad™. Doceri is an intuitive interface that can replace interactive whiteboards and expensive AV touch panels.
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    tricia, have you used the ShowMe app? if so, how does it compare to Doceri?
Mark McDonough

Mr. Wylie's Educational Games Site - Mr. Wylie's Educational Games: Online Fun For All - 0 views

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    links to many (good) online educational games in most subject areas
Patricia McGonagle

Behavior Management Software - ClassDojo - 0 views

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    Improve Behavior Improve specific student behaviors and engagement by awarding and recording real-time feedback. Share Data Print or email beautiful behavior reports to easily engage parents and staff. Save Time Save time by recording behaviors and accomplishments right in class, with just one click: NO extra data entry required.
Mark McDonough

Family Diversity Projects :: Frequently Asked Questions About Our Rental Exhibits - 0 views

  • the photos and text are ready to hang with wires on the back. If you have wallspace, you just hang the photos and text as you would any art show, using nails or pushpins. Photographs are framed with plexiglas covers and measure 16' x 20" (some vertical, some horizontal). Each exhibit consists of approximately 20 photographs. Then there are laminated text panels (thick lamination like a credit card) which measure ll" wide x 17" long. In addition there are quotes that are 11" wide and 8" long (hung horizontally) which you may want to use, too (but may not depending on space and situation). We can tell you exactly what to expect with your exhibit as each one is slightly different but the sizes are the same. Ideally, you would have at least 60 linear feet, but this isn't a requirement. You could double hang the photographs. Some groups divide up the 20 photographs and put them in different areas of a building as well. If you use tables, you will need small table easels to hold the photographs and you can put the text right on the tables. Floor easels can also work, and we've even seen music stands used. Some folks rent or borrow room dividers/portable bulletin boards and hang the exhibit on both the back and front of them. (They must have wood backs, not corkboard, as the photos weigh about 2 pounds and you need the nail to go in solidly). We are happy to talk to you about your individual situation and make suggestions, as we've seen it all!
    • Mark McDonough
       
      They've done our work for us! They describe all the material we need!
  • we often encourage groups to sponsor panel discussions, or a speaker, when the photo-text rental exhibit is at a particular location, or to use a diversity education trainer to prepare a group or school staff for an upcoming exhibition period.
Mark McDonough

Family Diversity Projects :: Technical Specifications for Our Exhibits - 0 views

  • Physical description Each exhibit comes with approximately 20 photographs. They are all museum quality framed with plexiglas covering, wires on back to hang. Size of each photograph framed is 16 inches by 20 inches and they weigh approximately 2 pounds. They can be hung on walls or portable room dividers, or placed on tables with bookstands (or table easels) or on floor easels. You can use all of them in one place, divide them into separate showings, or whatever works for your space needs. We can talk to you specifically about your individual situation. Each exhibit has different configurations of text, but generally each photograph has one or two pieces of long interview text 11 inches by l7 inches (vertical). They are thickly laminated and have string on the back to hang them on walls under or alongside their matching photograph. They can also be placed flat on a table if you use tabletop easels for the photographs, or hung off of floor easels. Many exhibits have additional "quotes" that are 11 inches (wide) by 8 inches (hung horizontally) and are written in larger fonts. These can be used in addition to the longer text, for people who might not read the full text, or in place of the longer text depending on the venue and situation (i.e. a conference). For schools, you might not need to use the quotes. It is up to each venue to decide how to use the text. In Our Family exhibit also has a K-2 text, which is also 11 x 8 inches and has a simple description of the family structure in age-appropriate language. Nothing To Hide just has 2-3 quotes per family, rather than a long text. For complete texts, the accompanying books have the longer interviews available. How to display the exhibits It's actually quite simple and doesn't take long to do. With all our photo-text rental exhibits, the photos and text are ready to hang with wires on the back. If you have wallspace, you just hang the photos and text as you would any art show, using nails or pushpins. Ideally, if you have a gallery space, you would have at least 60 linear feet, but this isn't a requirement at all. You could double hang the photographs. Some groups divide up the 20 photographs and put them in different areas of a building as well. If you use tables, you will need small table easels to hold the photographs and you can put the text right on the tables. Floor easels can also work, and we've even seen music stands used. Some folks rent or borrow room dividers/portable bulletin boards and hang the exhibit on both the back and front of them. (They must have wood backs, not corkboard, as the photos weigh about 2 pounds and you need the nail to go in solidly). We are happy to talk to you about your individual situation and make suggestions, as we've seen it all!
    • Mark McDonough
       
      even more specs
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    More specs on materials needed for project
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