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Katy Vance

How we read online. - Slate Magazine - 0 views

  • And it's not you who has to change. It's me, the writer: One idea per paragraphHalf the word count of "conventional writing"! (Ouch!) Other stuff along these lines
    • Katy Vance
       
      Augh! I gotta cut down...
  • If you want to beat the Internet, you're not going to do it by blogging (since even OK thinkers occasionally write a great blog post) but by offering a comprehensive take on a subject (thus saving the reader time from searching many sites) and supplying original thinking (offering trusted insight that cannot be easily duplicated by the nonexpert).
  • When we're really engaged in a text, it's like being in an effortless trance.
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  • I suppose ludic readers would be the little sloths hiding in the jungle while everyone else is out rampaging around for fresh meat.
  • We'll do more and more reading on screens, but they won't replace paper—never mind what your friend with a Kindle tells you. Rather, paper seems to be the new Prozac. A balm for the distracted mind. It's contained, offline, tactile.
  • Moby Dick has become a spa
Katy Vance

Connected Learning | HS Humanities - 0 views

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    @katyvance this is a page I'm putting together to intro Diigo and Reader (not done yet - need to make some vids) http://t.co/fuqr5nY4 Great example of a teacher putting GoogleReader & Diigo into practice in a Year 9 Humanities classroom.
donovanhallnz

WPBeginner - Beginner's Guide for WordPress - 0 views

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    Word Press help
donovanhallnz

Graffiti - 0 views

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    Padlet...the old Wallwisher.
Katy Vance

The Sister Classroom Project | Connecting classrooms and engaging readers. - 0 views

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    Here's an example of global collaboration and literacy!!!
Katy Vance

YALSA » Five Tech Trends for 2013 that Every School/YA Librarian Should Know ... - 0 views

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    Tech Trends to watch out for in 2013. Some of these are quite obvious, but it's still a good reminder.
Juliana Garcia

3 key learninGs from one To one program - 0 views

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    Kim Cofino on implementing one to one programs
Katy Vance

BPS Educational Technology Team: Burlington Public Schools Educational Technology Team - 0 views

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    Ridiculous district in the States- using amazing edtech
Katy Vance

Teaching kids to be 'digital citizens' (not just 'digital natives') - The Answer Sheet ... - 0 views

  • 2. Students could use their smart phones’ cameras to map their own neighborhoods, documenting (for example) the number of trash cans on street corners. That information could be plotted and shared city-wide, and the data could be examined for patterns and anomalies. Are there more trash cans in wealthy areas? If so, ask the mayor, the Department of Sanitation and the City Council for an explanation. Again, students will be turning information into knowledge. I wrote about this a while ago in more detail.
    • Katy Vance
       
      This is awesome.  How could we replicate this in Luanda with trash?
  • 3. Why not measure water quality? A hand-held monitor/tester of Ph costs under $100, and the instrument that tests conductivity (ion levels, which relates to purity) is available for under $100. Turbidity — how cloudy the water is — is important to measure as well, and that can be done with an inexpensive instrument and a formula. Students could also measure the speed of the current and keep track of detritus. Then share all the data with other science classes around the city, region and state. Everyone could dig into the information looking for patterns. If one river’s water seems relatively pure until it passes point X, students could endeavor to find out why.
    • Katy Vance
       
      What about asking everyone at school (teachers, students, assistants, cleaners, maintenance, guards, gardeners) to bring in water samples and test those?
  • Work like this is, well, real work. Students are creating knowledge; they are designing projects and seeing them through from beginning to end. These projects have to meet real-world standards because the results are in public view.
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  • And here are two final benefits: the time they spend doing projects like these (and there are many more good ideas out there) is time they cannot spend playing games or otherwise consuming technology. And because they are using technology to create and are enjoying the fruits of their labor, they will be, I believe, less likely to use technology’s power negatively. Strong in their own sense of self, they are less likely to feel the need to bully and cyber-bully others.
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    Great ideas for how to implement technology in transformative ways
Katy Vance

When Dad Banned Text Messaging - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Then the school called. She was caught texting in class. Trouble was, it was with me. I had texted her to let her know I needed her to babysit after school. But she was given in-school suspension anyway. As it turned out, she had been texting more than just me, but I still feel partly responsible for putting her in that position.
    • Katy Vance
       
      I think this is a ridiculous consequence.
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