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monarchlibrary » home - 0 views

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    Great Librarian Wiki
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Sharing Places Information - Google Earth User Guide - 0 views

  • Sharing Data Over a Network In addition to saving placemarks or folders to your local computer, you can also save place data to a web server or network server. Other Google Earth users who have access to the server can then use the data. As with other documents, you can create links or references to KMZ files for easy access. Storing a placemark file on the network or on a web server offers the following advantages: Accessibility - If your place data is stored on a network or the Web, you can access it from any computer anywhere, provided the location is either publicly available or you have log in access. Ease in Distribution - You can develop an extensive presentation folder for Google Earth software and make that presentation available to everyone who has access to your network storage location or web server. This is more convenient than sending the data via email when you want to make it persistently available to a large number of people. Automatic Updates/Network Link Access - Any new information or changes you make to network-based KMZ information is automatically available to all users who access the KML data via a network link. Backup - If for some reason the data on your local computer is corrupt or lost, you can open any of the KMZ files that you have saved to a network location, and if so desired, save it as a local file again. Note: Before you can create a network link to an item in Google Earth, you must first store that place data on a server. This section covers the following topics: Saving Data to a Server Opening Data from a Network Server About Network Links Creating a Network Link
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    In addition to saving placemarks or folders to your local computer, you can also save place data to a web server or network server. Other Google Earth users who have access to the server can then use the data. As with other documents, you can create links or references to KMZ files for easy access. Storing a placemark file on the network or on a web server offers the following advantages: * Accessibility - If your place data is stored on a network or the Web, you can access it from any computer anywhere, provided the location is either publicly available or you have log in access. * Ease in Distribution - You can develop an extensive presentation folder for Google Earth software and make that presentation available to everyone who has access to your network storage location or web server. This is more convenient than sending the data via email when you want to make it persistently available to a large number of people. * Automatic Updates/Network Link Access - Any new information or changes you make to network-based KMZ information is automatically available to all users who access the KML data via a network link. * Backup - If for some reason the data on your local computer is corrupt or lost, you can open any of the KMZ files that you have saved to a network location, and if so desired, save it as a local file again.
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Chatzy - Podcasting for the Absolute Beginner - 0 views

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    Chatzy is a free private chat service which you can use to communicate with people you already know or people who visits your blog or website. With Chatzy you can create a chatroom and send out email invitations very quickly and easily. No registration is required.
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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
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NEA: Podcast Powerhouse - 0 views

  • fifth graders struggle with reading and have poor oral language. While working toward her master's degree in instructional technology, Beebe learned to create podcasts with the software GarageBand. Combining her newfound skill at making podcasts with her desire to provide an authentic way to address reading fluency, Beebe began recording her students?
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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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staysafe.org Toolbox In the News Week of June 8, 2008 - 0 views

  • Mimi Ito, one of the principal investigators of the Digital Youth project. Of particular interest to parents concerned about teen social networkers' safety are findings by C.J. Pascoe mentioned by Dr. Ito, for example that: "Contrary to common fears, flirting and dating are almost always initiated offline in the traditional settings where teens get together and extended online. Her work clearly shows there's a strong social norm among teens that the online space isn't a place to find new romantic partners, but a place to deepen and explore existing offline relationships." Exceptions: marginalized teens "whose romantic partners are restricted for cultural or religious reasons" and gay and lesbian teens (the latter are "not reaching out online for random social encounters but using the expanded possibilities online selectively to overcome limitations they're facing" in their offline social networks); and the very small percentage of teens most at risk of sexual exploitation
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    Good questions/topics for PD on Internet Safety?
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newsobserver.com | Easley takes hits for primary performance - 0 views

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    Interesting database. I can tell them why they leave: it is spelled M.O.N.E.Y and R.E.S.P.E.C.T.
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