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J.Randolph Radney

Videos Posted by English Whirled Wide: English Problems | Facebook - 5 views

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    For those who teach English, show this to your students and ask who's talking normally.
Emilie Bouvrand

.edu: Moodle pour les professeurs d'anglais Présentation PPT - 0 views

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    Moodle for english teachers, presentation.
J.Randolph Radney

English Learning Online, ESL EFL,ESOL Resources - Englishpond.com - 3 views

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    Some resources for those in ESL teaching
J.Randolph Radney

ESL Video :: Free ESL/EFL Video Activities for English Students - 3 views

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    ESL videos with quizzes
J.Randolph Radney

YouTube - Google Docs in Plain English - 2 views

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    This is a short introduction to google docs.
J.Randolph Radney

Simply Speaking - Teaching and Learning with Technology - 3 views

  • Simply Speaking is a series of brief videos created by Teaching and Learning with Technology that explain technology topics in everyday language and with a little humor. They are modeled after the "... in plain english" videos that explain more general technologies such as Google Docs.
Janet Bianchini

English Raven: Moodle Tutorial: Using the book module - 7 views

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    Great tutorial and tips on using the Moodle "Book module"
J.Randolph Radney

Digital Domain - Computers at Home - Educational Hope vs. Teenage Reality - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • MIDDLE SCHOOL students are champion time-wasters. And the personal computer may be the ultimate time-wasting appliance. Put the two together at home, without hovering supervision, and logic suggests that you won’t witness a miraculous educational transformation.
  • Economists are trying to measure a home computer’s educational impact on schoolchildren in low-income households. Taking widely varying routes, they are arriving at similar conclusions: little or no educational benefit is found. Worse, computers seem to have further separated children in low-income households, whose test scores often decline after the machine arrives, from their more privileged counterparts.
  • At that time, most Romanian households were not yet connected to the Internet. But few children whose families obtained computers said they used the machines for homework. What they were used for — daily — was playing games.
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  • Catherine Maloney, director of the Texas center, said the schools did their best to mandate that the computers would be used strictly for educational purposes. Most schools configured the machines to block e-mail, chat, games and Web sites reached by searching on objectionable key words. The key-word blocks worked fine for English-language sites but not for Spanish ones. “Kids were adept at getting around the blocks,” she said. How disappointing to read in the Texas study that “there was no evidence linking technology immersion with student self-directed learning or their general satisfaction with schoolwork.” When devising ways to beat school policing software, students showed an exemplary capacity for self-directed learning. Too bad that capacity didn’t expand in academic directions, too.
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    This article was referenced in the M4T intermediate course recently.
J.Randolph Radney

Homework Help from Cramster | Math, Algebra, Physics, Chemistry, Science, History, Acco... - 2 views

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    A student in one of my classes mentioned this site; I'm sure many teachers who view education as primarily about the management of information as a protected resource would be quite upset about the site.
J.Randolph Radney

YouTube - Seth Godin on Education - 2 views

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    I was rather amazed at the implications of this video in terms of where public education came from. Then, I was discussing this with a friend who said they had been exposed to the same ideas when he was in a course on the history and philosophy of education at the Univ. of Ariz. in 1970. I find it disturbing not just that the philosophy of education has such roots, but that it has been known for such a long time. It seems that this would provide some sort of imperative for improvement and change. What do you think?
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    I have been a critical observer of the educational system since kindergarten. I am amazed that I became a teacher in the public school system as that was the last thing I had considered. I had initially wanted to be a dancer but left for Europe to study art. I left Toronto right after high school when life stepped in. I became an English language teacher to adults in a foreign country due to unforeseen circumstances. How strange! But, I never gave up. I have been doing all I can to break the public school system from the inside. It has been quite challenging, but with some terrific personal rewards.
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