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Jennifer Martinez

Social Studies Apps for Middle School | TBR Elearning Initiative - 0 views

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    Social Studies apps
Pedro Aparicio

Civility, Social Justice, Empathy & Social Networking in the 21st Century Classroom | P... - 0 views

    • Pedro Aparicio
       
      I really like this blog. It is another challenging project I would like to do with my kids in the next school year. Can you imagine to work with your own iCitizens?
Carolina Montes

The pros and cons of social media classrooms | ZDNet - 0 views

  • It is a familiar tool.
  • u are making yourself more aware of issues surrounding students today.
  • Resource availability.
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  • Improvement of research skills.
  • rmation online is a skill that is now important in the workplac
  • improvement of communication.
  • or students and teachers to communicate effectively.
  • ocial medi
  • Relevant, real-life learning.
  • The promotion of digital citizenship.
  • tudents have to learn about how to conduct themselves appropriately online.
  • Engaging your students.
  • he ability to share learning material.
  • The potential to appeal to different learning styles.
  • create a Facebook group dedicated to your class, or set a task to research something across these networks?
  • Ease of access.
  • Social networking requires no expensive equipment or modern upgrades
  • Assisting shy students.
  • Distractions.
  • Unless teachers properly supervise their students
  • The risk of cyberbullying.
  • imiting face-to-face communicat
  • The need for schools to research, understand and implement.
  • Continual social media change.
  • There are constant changes to platforms themselves and their security settings — of which schools and teachers must keep up to date with and act accordingly.
  • The need to manage multiple sites and keep updated.
  • he possibility of malware infections or phishing scams.
  • The need to filter and plan.
  • Inappropriate content sharing or exposure.
  • Controlling device use in class.
  • Exposing the ‘haves’ and ‘have nots’.
Charmaine Weatherbee

Facebook and Edutopia Help Teachers Adopt Social Media Tools - 0 views

    • Charmaine Weatherbee
       
      This guidelines promote the use of mobile devices by incorporating social media tools (such as facebook) into the curriculum.  These social media guidelines for the school will promote proper used of this resource.
Vicky Solorzano

Google Reader (101) - 0 views

  • Social Professional Learning is a method of developing in teachers the confidence and process they may need to connect with others professionally online.
  • You can create professional learning that is all about you and your students, and not about devotion to a series of systems and protocols
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    Use of social networking to develop professionally
Debora Gomez

Social Media Guidelines | Edutopia - 0 views

  • The Age of Personalization
  • Yet when many of our students reach the schoolhouse door, it's like the Internet and social media don't exist
  • We tell students to turn off their cell phones and put away their tablets.
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  • Standards of Professional Conduct
  • Protecting your own privacy Being honest Respecting copyright laws Disclaimers Thinking about consequences
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    guidelines for tech integration
RODRIGO PRIEGO RAMIREZ

Teaching like it's 2999: The Price is Right & QR Codes - 0 views

    • RODRIGO PRIEGO RAMIREZ
       
      Math and Social Science made connected with the students' life through the use of technology
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    Math and Social Science with the use of technology
Catherine Short

Socializing Mobile Learning in the Enterprise by Adam Smith : Learning Solutions Magazine - 0 views

  • Talking about the potential of mobile learning may not be enough to get the ball rolling
  • tablets in the hands of people are great symbols of progress.
    • Catherine Short
       
      It would be great if we could have some guinea pigs to test things out in their classrooms!  I'll volunteer!!
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  • negative reaction is still a sign of engagement – at least the person has an opinion
    • Catherine Short
       
      It's just good that people are thinking about it.
Gretchen Dillon

Welcoming Mobile: More Districts Are Rewriting Acceptable Use Policies, Embracing Smart... - 1 views

  • “The advantages of digital media now greatly outweigh the disadvantages and require that schools update their thinking and policies to provide guidance on the use of these tools to improve student learning and achievement,” the paper says.
  • “Digital responsibility is big.” Rankin said. “We’re teaching students how to operate in this new world. We wanted to change the wording in our guidelines because we don’t want students to accept them; we want students to be responsible for them.”
  • “The depth of thought and level of discourse gets much deeper when you add an online environment,” Wells said. The teacher can present information in class, and then the students are free to explore it online – they can look at other students’ work, or check out videos on YouTube. Time constraints are no longer a factor, the process becomes more individualized, and school becomes more relevant, Wells said.
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    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      Great discussion of mobile learning policies in schools.
    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      I find it interesting that some schools are now lessening internet filters.
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    No longer afraid of giving kids access to the internet and using mobile technologies for learning, a growing number of school districts across the country are developing digital media policies that emphasize responsibility over fear.
Isabel Fernandez

http://reg.accelacomm.com/servlet/Frs.FrsGetContent?id=40137124 - 0 views

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    Social Media in educaion
veronica occelli

Introducing School-Wide Digital Citizenship Practices with iPads « EdApps.ca - 0 views

  • Introducing School-Wide Digital Citizenship Practices with iPads 8Share An elementary school in our district recently got 30 iPads and asked for some advice implementing them with students and teachers. In addition to suggesting some starter apps, I recommended that we have conversations with kids around the appropriate use of these devices. While almost every child has used an iPad, iPod Touch, or iPhone, the exciting learning opportunities these mobile, Internet-connected, media creation devices create also open the door to new challenges. Cyberbullying or inappropriate web publishing happens more through the camera than regular computer use does; the mobility of the device combined with the reality that multiple users are using the device with no personalized, password-protected, network-tracked accounts makes it more challenging to keep track of who is doing what with the device or that the device itself is safe. R
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    We need to read this before we start taking our own videos and photos of students for the class!
Tracey Ugalde

TerraClues - Google Maps scavenger hunt game | Mark Brumley - 0 views

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    I could see this being used in a Social Studies lesson as well as to keep up with locations in a novel.
RODRIGO PRIEGO RAMIREZ

Arts Programs Foster More Than Creativity - 0 views

  • She argues that for children to become successful adults, they need to know more than just how to read, write and multiply. They need to learn fundamental social skills, such as the ability to “persist in goal-oriented activity, to seek help when needed, and to participate in and benefit from relationships.” The arts are an invaluable teaching tool in this regard, in that they “naturally and frequently involve group tasks,” she notes. “Activities such as dramatic play or dancing in unison provide a venue for learning collaboration and cooperation.”
    • RODRIGO PRIEGO RAMIREZ
       
      Arts are an efficient way of engaging students in collaborative assignments, learning different skills through the exploration of their emotions.
  • “If all teacher certification programs at the elementary level were to equip teacher candidates with arts-based techniques for supporting the social-emotional development of children,” she writes, “this would not only benefit students but also create a broader base of support for the ar
Michelle Munoz

A Training Proposal for e-Learning Teachers - 0 views

  • able to make appropriate use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) either as a teacher who uses ICT in the classroom, or as an e-teacher or e-moderator of open and distance learning.
  • adapt to new educational changes without compromising the quality of education
  • Facilitating is providing technical, pedagogical, managerial, and social activities that maintain sustained and authentic communication between and among instructors and students.
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  • Mentoring is a one-to-one relationship
  • between an expert and a novice in which the expert guides the novice by behavioural and cognitive modelling, academic and career counselling, emotional and scholarly support, advice, professional networking, and assessment.
  • Coaching is observing learners' performance and providing encouragement, diagnosis, directions, feedback, motivational prompts, monitoring and regulating learner performance, provoking reflection, and perturbing learners' models.
  • functions
  • Technical:
  • Management Function:
  • Intellectual Function:
  • Social Function:
  • In order to perform these teaching functions, teacher training should focus on how to develop a series of abilities and strategies
  • Professional:
  • e-teacher who plays the role of mentor, coach (Volman, 2005) and facilitator, (that is the so called 'e-moderator'
  • Personal:
  • advantage of e-training is that it permits the achievement of really autonomous learning, for its convenience in time and space.
  • motivator and guide of the students.
  • The primary function is that of orientator,
    • Michelle Munoz
       
      All what I need to know about elearning and preparing to be able to teach applying elearning.
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    It explains step by step in very clear way what is e-learning and what should we as teachers know to be able to teach it. 
anonymous

10 Social Media Tips for Bloggers - 0 views

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    Good idea on improving hits on your blogs
Kate Spilseth

Changing culture of learning: Mobility, Informality, and connectivity - mLearning re-fr... - 0 views

  • How can we use technologies to make learning more connected, more mobile? In Knowledge building students work in a community, investigate a topic, ask questions, conduct research, and self-assess progress. They also engage in face-to-face and online discussions to share, critique, build on, and synthesise ideas that are new to the community. It is a way of advancing personal and community knowledge.
    • Kate Spilseth
       
      This article shows the need to use technology in the classroom and recognize the skills that students develop using social networking.
  • Many teachers do not see informal learning as they domain. But there is a semiotic relationship between formal and informal learning "The emphasis is on sharing, working together, and using a wide range of cultural references and knowledge..."
  • Knowledge is not fixed, not transmitted by authority, and we are constantly creating knowledge. There is a shift in control via ubiquitous access to learning resources, and in turn, the learners produce knowledge. This person is a mobile learner...and the whole world is mobile...the whole world is our curriculum.
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    Recognizing technology and "soft skills" in the classroom will lead to more learning.
Kate Spilseth

Education 3.0: Mobile & Social - 0 views

    • Kate Spilseth
       
      This is why teachers need to incorporate informal learning into their teaching and recognize its power.
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    Why education needs to change to suit the needs of learners by incorporating technology.
Stephanie Cummings

Increase Student Engagement by Getting Rid of Textbooks | Edutopia - 0 views

  • My students learn better when they take the active role in finding and choosing texts, asking their own questions, and creating their own projects. In my 9th grade West Civ class, this means students learn directly from primary sources (see the Internet History Sourcebook, the Perseus Project, the Library of Congress's 'Teaching with Primary Sources' project, and the Internet Archive) without the filter of a textbook middleman.
  • As for "keeping on the same page"... One of the most exciting things to have come out of the textbookless experience among my West Civ social studies colleagues has been the way in which each of us have the opportunity to share what we know and what we really care about with one another in the active creation of our own courses of study --
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    Out with textbooks, in with with mobile devices for learning!
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