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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?
Sarah Hanawald

wiki on web 2.0 - 0 views

  • we thought it would be interesting to write something collaboratively using our collective intelligence. It was also pointed out that it is kind of an oxymoron to write a Web2.0 book.
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    Liz Davis's wiki asking people to create a "collective intelligence" of their thoughts on Web 2.0.
anonymous

Singing Science Records - 2 views

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    When I was a kid my parents got this six-LP set of science-themed folk songs for my sister and me. They were produced in the late 1950s / early 1960s by Hy Zaret and Lou Singer. Zaret's main claim to fame is writing the lyrics to the classic "Unchained >Melody" for the 1955 movie "Unchained", later recorded by the Righteous Brothers and more recently used in "Ghost". Three of the albums (the best three in my opinion) were performed by Tom Glazer, semi-famous 1940s folk musician and somewhat of a lyricist himself (he wrote "On Top of Spaghetti"). The Singing Science lyrics were very Atomic Age, while the tunes were generally riffs on popular or genre music of the time. We played them incessantly. In February 1998 I found the LPs in my parents' basement. I cleaned them up, played them one last time on an old turntable, and burned them onto a set of three CD-R discs. In December 1999 I read the songs back off the CDs and encoded them into MP3, so now you can hear them on the web. They are available at either 32 Kbps (about half a megabyte each) or 160 Kbps (about two megabytes each). The higher-quality MP3 versions were encoded by Ron Hipschman.
Lucas Gillispie

bubbl.us - free web application for brainstorming online - 0 views

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    Online brainstorming tool that can be embedded in your website.
Lucas Gillispie

Poems Out Loud - 0 views

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    Listen to poems read aloud on your computer.
Lucas Gillispie

aMap - 0 views

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    Create arguments and debate guidelines online.
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