research sharing. Each class has their own private group, and we have one group for all our classes.
And I belong to several groups, including Classroom 20, Diigo in Education , and EdTechTalk. I’ve created a group for the Teacher Challenges, called “ebchallenge” if you decide to join Diigo. That way, our new PLN we are building can share resources with each other.
certain topics, specific tools (like Google Apps).
Now that I’ve got you thinking, Diigo has a free and premium version — and teachers should apply for the education version. My language arts students use Diigo for research, note-taking, and writing feedback and
t that is just for Tools — Animoto, Wallwish, etc. I also may put how-to pages there, or in my How-To List. I have lists for lessons,
Comment in the webpage using the Sticky Note feature and in the description box about what you learned when you click bookmark.
Save.
Introduction to Diigo and group for sharing resources with our edublog challenge PLN
Social bookmarking; sign up for teacher account; use for organization of bookmarks, research, note-taking
Great professional development resource for teachers who need to brush up on physics. Also, many online demos of physics concepts. It can even be used as a free stand alone high school physics curriculum.