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Sarah Hanawald

Technology Integration Matrix - 0 views

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    Vicki Davis tweeted this. I think it could really help in promoting teacher self evaluation.
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    The Technology Integration Matrix (TIM) illustrates how teachers can use technology to enhance learning for K-12 students. The TIM incorporates five interdependent characteristics of meaningful learning environments: active, constructive, goal directed (i.e., reflective), authentic, and collaborative (Jonassen, Howland, Moore, & Marra, 2003). The TIM associates five levels of technology integration (i.e., entry, adoption, adaptation, infusion, and transformation) with each of the five characteristics of meaningful learning environments. Together, the five levels of technology integration and the five characteristics of meaningful learning environments create a matrix of 25 cells as illustrated below.
Brad Fountain

Top 100 Education Blogs | OEDb - 0 views

  • 2 Cents Worth abject learning Informal Learning Blog Learning Curves Learnlets McGee's Musings Random Walk in Learning The Stingy Scholar Library and Research
  • Stephen's Web
  • Internet Time Blog elearnspace E-Learning Queen
Sarah Hanawald

My Music Tech: My Music Tech Launches Podcast - 0 views

  • episodes about music education technology and will specifically feature podcasts by music students as they learn about various aspects of music, podcasting and digital audio technologies.This podcast will be of benefit to school music teachers, technology teachers and anyone interested in learning the basics of podcasting and it's application in an educational setting.
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    This is the site for a podcast by a music educator interested in composing using technology and "found" sounds.
Sarah Hanawald

Why Good Teachers Aren't Thinking About the Global Economy - 0 views

shared by Sarah Hanawald on 26 Apr 08 - Cached
  • “…good teachers “refuse to see their pupils as . . . pint-sized deficits or assets for America’s economy into whom they are expected to pump ‘added value.’” Jonathan Kozol, as quoted by Kohn
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    I'd like to put this quote at the front of every powerpoint I give on 21st century learning.
Sarah Hanawald

25 Tools for teachers - 0 views

  • 25 Tools every Learning Professional should have in their Toolbox - and all for FREE!
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    List of free tools with educational value explained
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    25 free tools, with a brief explanation of each one.
Sarah Hanawald

YouTube - cwwkids's Channel - 0 views

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    This is why even the kindergarten teachers need to learn about social networking.
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    This is the video to accompany the report on young children's (3-8) experiences online.
Sarah Hanawald

Tryangulation: My part of the world is not flat - 0 views

  • The YouTube Wars Prof. Akalın was probably pleased last week when, for a few days at least, we lost our access to that Eurovision winning song. In response to a satirical video that was offensive to the memory of Atatürk, the founder of modern Turkey, a Turkish court shut down any access to YouTube.com. The offending video was uploaded supposedly by Greeks wanting to antagonize their neighbors, and it prompted a war of offensive and counter offensive videos and endless (and pointless) comments.  It is against the law here to insult Atatürk, but since the offenders were "out there" somewhere beyond prosecution on the Internet, punishment was levied on Turkish Internet users instead. The story is even sadder as I remember attending a conference in Athens last fall with several Turkish colleagues, and we were pleasantly surprised at the warmth of so many Greeks, including several who spoke with us in Turkish.
    • Sarah Hanawald
       
      Even nations can behave like adolescents. I sat in class last night with a middle school teacher who had broken up a fight at school that day among 4 cheerleaders. What started the fight? "Mean girl" type posts on MySpace and YouTube about each other and friends. The teacher has a bruise on her arm and a bigger one on her heart.
Sarah Hanawald

Halve your attention - 0 views

  • See, when you're at the front of a wired classroom, you get to watch students peck at laptops, skitter their eyes over screens and, every now and then, toss a glance in your direction. Some of them are taking notes, some are chatting with friends or cruising sports sites. Few are giving their instructor undivided attention. It's crazy making.
  • one of the things we ported over to new media from traditional media was the notion of the passive audience.
  • that chittering back channel itself isn't the problem. The problem is, as instructors, we haven't given it anything useful to do. "Students are telling us they want to be engaged. So, we need to find a way to give them specific focus for that back channel. If they're doing stuff that's on-task we're going to get engaged learning and ownership," she says.
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    Good article about kids attention in a wired classroom. Instead of saying it's awful, says it is true, now figure out how to deal with it.
Sarah Hanawald

Flexknowlogy » Defining "Creepy Treehouse" - 0 views

  • This article is an attempt to objectively define the phrase “creepy treehouse” as coined by Chris Lott, and in current usage by ed tech folks such as Scott Leslie, Marc Hugentobler, John Krutsch, and others
  • In the field of educational technology a creepy treehouse is an institutionally controlled technology/tool that emulates or mimics pre-existing technologies or tools that may already be in use by the learners, or by learners’ peer groups.
  • nstructors push down hot Web 2.0 technologies, while students push back with vocal objections or passive resistance.
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    When adults coopt what the kids see as "theirs" for schooling purposes.
anonymous

How To: Get Students to Use New Skills | Edutopia - 0 views

  • let students create their own labs to test hypotheses
  • Integrate lots of interviewing into a history curriculum and have students compare stories they hear. Add a five-minute reading component to journal-writing time, emphasizing to students that real authors share their writing and need to have a sense of their audience.
  • Performances, presentations, displays, publications, and entries into contests are essential for student buy-in. ULS's hula class spends the semester gearing up for a final performance, and Hamilton's seventh graders forget how hard they're working on their writing when they focus on creating podcasts. "When I tell students they are going to create a podcast of their own stories, they get excited," she says. "This buy-in from the students gives them a purpose to learn new skills and a reason to come to school."
    • anonymous
       
      podcasting helps generate student buy-in...if it is their own stories- that could be interesting: if their stories are not off topic. ;-)
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    Core Questions are these what we call essential questions?
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