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Michelle Krill

Stixy: For Flexible Online Creation Collaboration and Sharing - 0 views

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    Think of Stixy as your online bulletin board. Create as many Stixyboards as you like, one for each project. Use Stixy to easily organize and share: * Your family's schedule * Projects at work * An upcoming holiday with your friends * Your photos from your last bike trip * Or share a file or two with a friend Only you set the limitations for how you want to use Stixy.
Michelle Krill

ClassChatter | Safe and Effective Web Tools For the Classroom - 0 views

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    Welcome! ClassChatter offers free blogging and web tools for teachers at all levels of education. Our first goal is to provide a safe haven for teachers and students on the web. You will find a secure and private environment, free of any advertising directed at your students. We hope that you will discover useful tools that will help move your students more rapidly into 21st century communications and collaboration!
Michelle Krill

25 Tips for Students & Teachers Using Google Wave - 1 views

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    "List of twenty-five tips, ideas and resources that may galvanize educational uses for the Wave."
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    This looks very interesting and I have bookmarked it for when I have time to check in out more.
anonymous

Fair Use | Center for Social Media - 0 views

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    Nice site for understanding copyright. Thanks to Kristin for sharing this on Twitter tonight
L Butler

Schools should embrace cell phones - 0 views

    • L Butler
       
      In my district, the bigger issue is bandwidth. We are moving towards 1 to 1 - however, the connecting to the internet is what is getting in the way. But I would agree, most high schools do not have enough computers for everyone to use.
  • most high schools in the United States do not have enough computers for all students to use at once. By allowing cell phone usage, the ability to access the Internet will become much easier and will help schools save money. Since a cell phone uses a separate network to access the Internet, wireless networks will be spared the rugged strain all school wireless networks undergo. With a less stressed wireless network, fewer repairs will need to be made, thus relieving the IT staffs at schools.
    • L Butler
       
      I agree with this. My district is attempting to move towards 1 to 1 classrooms, but they have found that access to the internet is the big issue. It is easier to add computers, it is more of a challenge to increase the bandwidth. I think it could cut back on the school wireless network.
    • L Butler
       
      80% have cell phones - but many of the examples that are given for how students could benefit from having cell phones would require a cell phone and a data plan. Personally, I have been unwilling to spend $120 a month to have a data plan, and I imagine many parents would feel the same way.
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  • Many critics argue that kids will become distracted if cell phones are allowed in class. Cell phones, however, potentially create the same distraction that comes along with sitting next to a classmate.
    • L Butler
       
      Great quote ... however if the teachers management style is not strong enough, the cell phones could be another reason students are off task. If they are not connected to a school network, there is no way to track to see if they are on task.
  • Homework alerts and project directions can be sent via text message
  • One of the many missions of the educational system in the United States is to prepare students for life as adults so they can be productive citizens in a vastly changing world. Technology has been around for decades and is only growing and advancing. So why are schools not informing students on how to use it safely and effectively?
  • 80 percent of high school students in the United States have cell phones.
anonymous

State's graduation exam passes latest test - 1 views

  • The regulation calls for the state to provide 10 end-of-course exams, beginning with English literature, Algebra 1 and biology in 2010-11, with other English, math, science and social studies subjects being phased in through 2016-17.
    • anonymous
       
      I'm wonderfing what the other subjects will be.
  • School districts would be required to count the exams for at least one-third of a student's final grade or districts could use other options, including validated local assessments or Advanced Placement exams instead. Districts also could set up a project for students who failed exams.
    • anonymous
       
      So, someone at the state level will create a test that every student must pass, or they fail the course. Is there ANY DOUBT WHATSOEVER that teachers will now be teaching to that test? ALL curriculum around the state will have to change to match those tests.
  • Opponents of the exams told the regulatory commission that the testing program would cost too much to administer and be unfair to otherwise good students who perform poorly on standardized tests.
    • anonymous
       
      I think it's sad that their concern was first about the cost and not what it would do to teaching and learning in the state.
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  • We understand the system now,
  • Some have said that the exams would discourage students who have a hard time taking tests and would prompt them to drop out.
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    Ready or not, here it comes.
Beth Hartranft

Top 10 Back to School iPhone Apps Gallery - 0 views

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    Useful apps for back to school
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    Useful apps for back to school... for all of the iTouch and iphone users out there.
anonymous

ALA | AASL Best Web sites for Teaching and Learning Top 25 Award - 0 views

  • Tip: Sticky notes are an effective way to start a virtual conversation among teams of students on the merits of a website.
    • anonymous
       
      I REALLY agree with this. Maybe not so much for elementary, but for junior and senior high I think this is a must-do. Your thoughts?
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    Check out this list of tools for learning from the ALA.
anonymous

The Edurati Review: 10 Principles for the Future of Learning - 0 views

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    A must-read for any grad student in the IT program
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    A must-read for any grad student in the IT program.
anonymous

100 Best Social Sites for Students, Academics and Educators | Associate Degree - Facts ... - 0 views

  • Educators Social networking has certainly made students’ lives easier. Students share homework, notes and test information before teachers and school administrators even know about it. Grade books and lesson plans have been digital for a while but teachers (much like older people in general) have been slower to visit social sites. These social sites for teachers are going to change some outdated thinking.
    • anonymous
       
      A great list of sites designed to connect teachers. Check this out. Don't forget to sign up for Classroom 2.0 ning, too.
diane foose

26 Learning Games for Change | Serious Games for Social Change - 0 views

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    Here's a list of links and descriptions for a wide range of serious games aimed at sparking social change.
anonymous

The Best Online Sources For Images | Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day... - 0 views

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    Just what it says - the best sources for online images.
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    Just what it says - the best sources for online images. I don't like how his links appear in his blog, but you can find them.
anonymous

Summer Professional Development Programs for Teachers - 0 views

  • Summer Professional Development Programs for Teachers Teachers: The following FREE opportunities for earning ACT 48 credit hours are available from EconomicsPennsylvania: 
    • anonymous
       
      Practice using the sticky notes.
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    Wealth of free information and workshops to promote financial literacy for Grades K-12
L Butler

The Chapter 18 Project | Thomas L. Friedman - 0 views

  • As I put it in the book: “In some ways, the subprime mortgage mess and housing crisis are metaphors for what has come over America in recent years: A certain connection between hard work, achievement, and accountability has been broken. We’ve become a subprime nation that thinks it can just borrow its way to prosperity..."
    • L Butler
       
      You see evidence of this all the times - just watch TV commercials. Companies always offer interest free, until ... or no down payments ... this is encouraging to "buy" things they have not worked hard for. For something like a house, borrowing money is reasonable, as long as your taste in homes matches what you can pay off. It is not economically responsible to buy thousands of dollars of new furniture just because you don't have to pay until 2012, knowing that you will not be able to pay it off in time.
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    The author of "Flat, hot, and crowded" continues his discussion with the readers in what is titled 'Chapter 18.' In true web 2.0 fashion he encourages the readers to become the writers with frequent posts requesting response. He plans on using the best posts to create the real Chapter 18 for the second edition of his book.
anonymous

The Stock Market for the Rest of Us - WeSeed - 0 views

shared by anonymous on 15 Jul 09 - Cached
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    This is a good web site that students can play the stock market. Students can research companies, trade, etc. and it allows them to build a portfolio. It also has videos to use for teaching the stock market and some fun games. It also allows for blogging with others who are playing the game. I used this with my General Business class while studying stocks. I did have to get special permission from Tech. to allow students to set up a gmail account.
anonymous

Audacity Tutorial for Podcasters - 0 views

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    Another excellent tutorial for Audacity - especially for Podcasters
Mrs Huber

Netvibes (682) - 0 views

  • A term like web 2.0 begets the notion that there will imminently be a 3.0, 4.0, and beyond.  The convention serves those within a specific group much more than it does those who need to understand the concept the most.  The term serves as a layer- an immediately unnecessary layer at that.  The convention allows those inside the realm of understanding to point to those outside and express how much the outsiders need the insiders in order to understand and be enlightened.  I’d rather we just all moved forward together in a way that makes sense and promotes progress rather than bifurcates.
    • Mr. R Riter
       
      We need to call it something, don't we? Web 2.0 does imply that a 2.1 or 3.0 is coming, but perhaps we need to think of it in another way. Let's say that Web 2.0 was a typo. Maybe the coiner of the term meant Web 2,0 and didn't finish the complete term. It could really be Web 2,000 for the millenium, and now we can use it for the next 1000 years(or 991). Just a thought!!
  • netbooks in hand in the next few months. There seems to be a growing commitment here to put technology in the hands of kids (instead of spending huge sums on stuff that students can’t use outside of the classroom) and to thinking about
  • The most noticeable observation I can make is the comparison of experiences from last year’s NECC to this year’s.  Last year was my first, and it was quite honestly an incredibly overwhelming experience.  I felt rather detached and fatigued as I flew out of San Antonio, and I can directly attribute that to how disconnected I was to this community.  I hadn’t yet started my blog, I was only faintly invested in Twitter, and I knew a total of about five people at the conference.  How a year can change everything.
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  • Popular crustaceans like lobster, crabs and prawns owe their success to a unique colour control system, according to a new genetic study.
  • Programming -OK, on the programming thing, here are my thoughts.In our curriculum our objective is not as much a specific LANGUAGE. One year I may use HTML with Javascript, this past year I used LSL — what I want kids to know that when they encounter programming and coding that there are certain conventions. Some are case sensitive, some are not. How do you find out how to add to what you know about programming? Do you know where to go to find prewritten code? Can you hack it to make it work to do what you want it to do?We spend about a week – two weeks but I require they know how to handcode hyperlinks and images – they are just too important.But to take 12 weeks or 6 weeks to learn a whole language – yes maybe some value – but to me the value is HOW is the language constructed or built. What are the conventions and how do I educate myself if I am interested in pursuing. What comes out of this time is kids who say either “I never want to do that” or “this is really cool, I love coding.”They are doing very simplistic work (although the LSL object languages were pretty advanced) but since we don’t have a full course nor time in our curriculum, I do see this as an essential part of what I teach.I’m not teaching it for the language sake but for the sake of understanding the whole body of how languages work – we talk about the different languages and what they are used for as part of Intro to Computer science and have an immersive experience.To me, this is somewhat a comprimise between leaving it out entirely or forcing everyone to take 12 weeks of it. I just don’t know where 12 weeks would go in the curriculum.
  • It’s a step backward. A 1:1 classroom done at least fairly well becomes a an intense learning environment. Students are engaged, empowered, active learners instead of sitting learning to be taught. It is an active process a far greater amount of the time (and this is one area I need to improve, is getting that and letting that happen more) and the feel of the classroom changes. People that visit pick up on that. It changes from a 1:1 laptop classroom into a learning environment that uses laptops and other tools to leverage learning.
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    a tech teacher discusses the benefits of teaching a program language.
Lisa Keeley

Safe Games For Kids - 0 views

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    Safe games for kids...Internet safe games for kids that test your skills and knowledge - KidsCom.com.
Denise Nichols

Learn It In 5 - Students demo wiki and Diigo use in classroom - 5 views

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    Great resource for teaching students how to use the tools. Students would rather watch a video instead of listen to the teacher talk, and why not watch a video created by another student?
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    WOW! You could get lost in this site rather quickly. I'm often looking for "activating strategies" and usually discoverystreaming is my "go to" source for video clips. Now this site will be another resource for me to use!
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    Agree with Rich why not use other students to explain how to use the tool. I only think of the endless possibilities you could use to collaborate on different readings or assignments using the tool.
Michelle Krill

ClassBadges | Home - 2 views

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    "ClassBadges is a free, online tool where teachers can award badges for student accomplishments. Through your teacher account, you can award badges customized for your classroom or school. "
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