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Christine Wolla

kinderchatplay - Google Earth Projects - 0 views

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    Classroom landmark projects
jsproductionsnd

How To Make A Potato Battery | Tips For Potato Battery Science Fair Project - 0 views

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    How to make a potato battery and measure its voltage. Some ideas on a potato battery science fair project.
Angie Saxlund

Monster Exchange Project, English Writing Project - 0 views

shared by Angie Saxlund on 02 Feb 10 - Cached
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    The project is designed to teach reading and descriptive writing through art.
Tyler Hancock

Word Dynamo - Free Study Guides, Quizzes, Games, and Flashcards - 0 views

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    Something I'm using right now for a vocab project in class. Mostly just fun, but educational! Funducational!
Donalee Strand

"One Good Thing" by Jillee: Recycled T-shirt Tote Bag - 0 views

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    This site taken from a pin on pintrist could be used in the classroom as an art project gift for parents!
KiMar Gartman

Activities for Kids | Education.com - 0 views

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    For those looking for classroom craft projects, this might be a good resource.
Craig Nansen

"Use backchanneling in your classroom" published in the February 2010 NJEA Reporter! | ... - 0 views

  • “Use backchanneling in your classroom” published in the February 2010 NJEA Reporter!
  • The inspiration for this project came from a blog post by Chris Webb of Minot Public Schools in Minot, North Dakota. He wrote about how his colleague, Pat Gerding, used TodaysMeet.com in his middle school social studies classroom.
  • You can view the article right here (on the web) entire issue here online (it’s pretty slick – a ‘virtual PDF’ that gives you tons of viewing options) or just read our article here (4.4 mb .PDF).
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    "Use backchanneling in your classroom"
Lisa Ouradnik

HGTV - Decorating, Home Improvement, Landscaping Ideas, Kitchen and Bathroom Design : H... - 0 views

shared by Lisa Ouradnik on 20 Jan 10 - Cached
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    Transform your home with inspiration and instruction from HGTV for your home design, decorating, home improvement or landscaping project.
tami doppler

Brain Rules: 12 Principles for Surviving and Thriving at Work, Home, and School | Brain... - 0 views

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    Brain Rules by John J. Medina is a multimedia project explaining how the brain works. It includes a book, a feature-length documentary film, and a series of interactive tutorials.
terriduchsherer

Puzzles.COM:  Logic Problems  -  GridWorks™  -  Strimko™ - 0 views

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    great for "I'm done - what can I do?"
Craig Nansen

Amazon: Reinventing the Book - 0 views

  • Bounding to a whiteboard in the conference room, he ticks off a number of attributes that a book-reading device
  • First, it must project an aura of bookishness
  • But then comes the features that your mom's copy of "Gone With the Wind" can't match. E-book devices like the Kindle allow you to change the font size: aging baby boomers will appreciate that every book can instantly be a large-type edition. The handheld device can also hold several shelves' worth of books: 200 of them onboard, hundreds more on a memory card and a limitless amount in virtual library stacks maintained by Amazon. Also, the Kindle allows you to search within the book for a phrase or name.
Allison Johnson

The Future of Reading | Print Article | Newsweek.com - 33 views

  • "If you're going to do something like this, you have to be as good as the book in a lot of respects," says Bezos. "But we also have to look for things that ordinary books can't do."
  • First, it must project an aura of bookishness;
    • Amy Engelhard
       
      I do actually think this is important; there's something about reading a book and I like that Kindle has some "bookishness" to it.
    • Laura Untz
       
      I agree, there is nothing like sitting down in a big comfy chair and reading. I'm not sure I would like using a hand held device instead of the actual book.
    • Aaron Frana
       
      I don't think it's important for the Kindle to look like a book. I'm pretty ok with reading something non-bookish.
  • E-book devices like the Kindle allow you to change the font size: aging baby boomers will appreciate that every book can instantly be a large-type edition. The handheld device can also hold several shelves' worth of books: 200 of them onboard, hundreds more on a memory card and a limitless amount in virtual library stacks maintained by Amazon. Also, the Kindle allows you to search within the book for a phrase or name.
    • Kim Amick
       
      this is one feature that I really do like, the changing of the font size!
    • Amy Armstrong
       
      These are important features for making things more available in alternative formats. Electronic versions offer instant large print and ways to have it read aloud. These features can be helpful for many people with disabilities.
    • Karen Schelling
       
      A kindle will be a great gift for my dad. Larger font and less clutter of book will be great for him!
    • Christine Erickson
       
      I have heard about ebook devices that allow the reader to adjust the font size. I have gotten to the age where that is a great selling feature for me.
    • Sarah Wisthoff
       
      I tried to get one of these for my visually impaired student last year but was unsuccessful. I think it would be a great tool for her to use in and out of school.
    • Allison Johnson
       
      I love the search option! I am always paging back to remind myself how characters are related or other facts I've forgotten. This would make it so much faster.
  • ...21 more annotations...
    • John Groves
       
      Its still not a book!!!!
    • Kim Amick
       
      I see your point, I don't know that I want to curl up with a blanket and a "machine" to relax
    • Amy Armstrong
       
      I have heard from Kindle (is that what it is called?) users that reading on them is actually easy on the eyes. I'd have to try it to believe it.
    • Amy Engelhard
       
      Oh John...of course you want the traditional real deal. "I'll tell you when you are sixth grader!"
    • Tara Jordan
       
      Yes...you can..hours and hours...living proof right here!!
    • Carrie Varty
       
      I totally agree with you guys!! A nice book is just the great end to an evening!! Meaning an actuall book. I am opening up to the idea of the Kindle though. I like how you can just quickly order a book and it is there in like 2 seconds!!
    • Britni Schmalz
       
      I see both of your points.....but then I think of my weekend and I do curl up with a banket and my "machine" (my laptop) and do work...
    • Whitney Spah
       
      Yes this is true.....but I have curled up and read my computer so it is doable....but not really in a car or airplane.
  • once said, "is anything that was invented after you were born." So it's not surprising, when making mental lists of the most whiz-bangy technological creations in our lives, that we may overlook an object that is superbly designed, wickedly
    • Tracey Schmitz
       
      I like that you can subscribe to newspapers through kindle
  • Amazon has designed the Kindle to operate totally independent of a computer: you can use it to go to the store, browse for books, check out your personalized recommendations, and read reader reviews and post new ones, tapping out the words on a thumb-friendly keyboard.
  • The vision is that you should be able to get any book—not just any book in print, but any book that's ever been in print—on this device in less than a minute," says Bezos.
  • "Books are the last bastion of analog,"
    • Jon Krantz
       
      Classic quote! Analog is going away quickly.
    • Britni Schmalz
       
      This is a great quote!! Analog is pretty much extinct!
  • Long before there was cyberspace, books led us to a magical nether-zone. "Books are all the dreams we would most like to have, and like dreams they have the power to change consciousness," wrote Victor Nell in a 1988 tome called "Lost in a Book."
    • Nathan Johnson
       
      I think that this statement is very true, and something that I have witnessed first hand in my lifetime.
  • 550 years of technological
    • terriduchsherer
       
      Wow!!! 550 years of technology! Awesome!!!!!!!!!!!!
    • Holly Perrin
       
      I have a Kindle and I agree all it takes is a few twitches and walla! I like the fact that when I am done with a book and am itchy to read another I don't have to go to the store... I can just download!
  • "But the next-gen people, in their 20s and below, do everything on a screen.")
    • Britni Schmalz
       
      This is me! I do everything on the web and do not go many places with my computer or my smartphone! I love the e-book idea!
    • tami doppler
       
      This is NOT me but I hope it will be someday I think it will be ALL of us someday!
  • What we love is the words and ideas."
    • Anna Hansen
       
      I just love to read. I've never read on the Kindle, but may want to try it some day.
  • And once you buy, the Kindle does its neatest trick: it downloads the book and installs it in your library, ready to be devoured.
    • Tracey Schmitz
       
      I like kindle and the subscription to newpapers
  • electile dysfunction
    • tami doppler
       
      I would agree that it would be terrible to getting to a readable moment and lose battery.
  • The Kindle is not just for books. Via the Amazon store, you can subscribe to newspapers (the Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Le Monde) and magazines (The Atlantic). When issues go to press, the virtual publications are automatically beamed into your Kindle. (It's much closer to a virtual newsboy tossing the publication on your doorstep than accessing the contents a piece at a time on the Web.) You can also subscribe to selected blogs, which cost either 99 cents or $1.99 a month per blog.
    • Joelle Garcia
       
      This would be very convenient especially when you still want your newspaper or magazine subscription while out of town.
    • clare rodriguez
       
      that is sooooooo cool cuz then my husband could read while we travel in a small space instead of with that bulky paper
    • Laura Untz
       
      So true!
  • he Kindle, shipping as you read this, costs $399.
    • Ashley Griffey
       
      Yes, they are expensive but well worth the money if you are an avid reader.
  • it downloads the book and installs it in your library, ready to be devoured. "The vision is that you should be able to get any book—not just any book in print, but any book that's ever been in print—on this device in less than a minute
    • Joan Hansen
       
      I love the fact it downloads the book and installs it AND it an be ANY book that's ever been in print!!! All, in less than a minute. LOVE it!!
  • Google has already scanned a million books from its partner libraries like the University of Michigan and the New York Public Library, and they are available in its database. (Last week my wife searched for information about the first English edition of the journals of Pehr Kalm, a Swedish naturalist traveling in Colonial America. In less than two seconds, Google delivered the full text of the book, as published in 1771.
    • Joan Hansen
       
      This is very impressive - research takes on a whole new meaning.
  • "Do you really believe that we'll be doing that in 50 years?"
    • jsproductionsnd
       
      I am so happy that I won't be around in 50 years to see the end of books. I just can't imagine my world without them. Sherry
  • The first chapter of almost any book is available as a free sample.
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    What we love is the words and ideas."
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    "Technology," computer pioneer Alan Kay once said, "is anything that was invented after you were born
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    But if all goes well for Amazon, several years from now we'll see revamped Kindles, equipped with color screens and other features, selling for much less. I'll wait for the bigger and better Kindle. :)
Craig Nansen

Student video 'Gotta Keep Reading' inspires nation - 2 views

  • The video began when the school’s reading coach, Janet Bergh, thought it might be fun to do something like The Oprah Winfrey Show’s “flash mob” video in Chicago last year. Winfrey and her producers elected to kick off the 2009 season with a live open-air version of the
    • Craig Nansen
       
      This tells how the project got started.
  • hours before the show began the approximately 21,000 audience members were taught choreographed steps to the piece to create a flash mob dance
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