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Tracy Varner

Building Good Search Skills: What Students Need to Know | MindShift - 0 views

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    "The Internet has made researching subjects deceptively effortless for students - or so it may seem to them at first. Truth is, students who haven't been taught the skills to conduct good research will invariably come up short."
Trisha Underwood

TeachThought11 Essential Tools For Better Project-Based Learning - 0 views

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    Browser-based tools and several apps used in education are especially useful for researching, storytelling and collaborative video making. These tools' aim is to encourage students to approach a task by asking open-ended questions and develop a concept of a task. They also enhance personalized learning, where students discover their own strengths, whether it is analysing and mapping out ideas, research or even editing.
Trisha Underwood

NBC Learn - 0 views

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    NBC Learn, in partnership with the National Science Foundation (NSF), has released five new videos in the "Science behind the News" series.  These programs feature interviews with NSF-funded scientists and researchers and illuminate the STEM concepts behind unique topics related to issues in the news.  
Trisha Underwood

Shelfster - Capture information from everywhere and create useful documents. - 1 views

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    The easiest way to capture information and create useful documents.
Tracy Varner

12 Ways To Use Google Search In School, By Degree Of Difficulty | Edudemic - 0 views

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    Great ideas/lessons for teaching students how to search efficiently!
Trisha Underwood

Do Students Know Enough Smart Learning Strategies? - 0 views

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    Do Students Know Enough Smart Learning Strategies? Lenny Gonzales What's the key to effective learning? One intriguing body of research suggests a rather gnomic answer: It's not just what you know. It's what you know about what you know.
Tracy Varner

As American as Modern Architecture - 0 views

    • Tracy Varner
       
      Is this good info for our paper?
  • 20th century's greatest architects, including Eliel Saarinen, Eero Saarinen, Cesar Pelli, Charles Gwathmey and Robert Siegel, Richard Meier, Robert Venturi, Kevin Roche and I.M. Pei.
  • The Republic, founded, owned and operated by five generations of a local family, the Browns, is Columbus, Indiana's hometown daily. Columbus is a city of about 44,000 people, an hour south of Indianapolis.
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  • Miller started with a building, one that no one would ignore -- an elementary school.
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    "Harry McCawley looks and sounds like a small-town character, in the best tradition. "It billed itself as the world's fastest growing newspaper," he recalled of his employer, The Republic, when he was hired 49 years ago. McCawley, 71, now associate editor, with a head of white hair and wearing a blue button-down shirt open at the collar, tilted back in his seat, a touch of Mark Twain, Frank Capra and Thornton Wilder in his story. "I got there, and realized that they came by that because they'd only been in business a couple of days," he said."
Tracy Varner

A is for ACER SACCHARUM (sugar maple) - 0 views

    • Tracy Varner
       
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  • Our maple has been a good friend to our family over the years, and perhaps especially to me. How many hours, weeks, seasons have I spent looking out my window at this tree? I don't know; I can't count that hig
  • My window maple is an unremarkable specimen. It's probably 60 feet tall, maybe 75 years old. I can estimate its age with some confidence from the size of its base, and also because it has been a part of the setting here for not that much longer than I have.
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  • To be sure, the sugar maple has uses beyond furnishing matter for meditation to the easily distracted. No tree in New England works harder on man's behalf. It is by no means the biggest tree in our woods; the oldest pines and hemlocks regularly grow taller. It's not the longest-lived; those same pines and hemlocks, and some oaks, go back further. Nor is it our most celebrated, or storied, tree, an honor that must go to the American elm, decimated by disease in recent decades, but whose survivors recall the beloved elms, of which every New England village formerly seemed to have had one, under which George Washington must surely have stopped to refresh himself once upon a time.
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    "Because rural New England is a well-watered and well-wooded region, people here live much with trees -- trees not only as a natural resource, but for other purposes, as well. Every country place has on it one or more trees that are more than large, unmoving elements of the landscape. They are familiar spirits -- proprietary trees, so to speak -- domesticated trees, trees that owing to their beauty, their history, their location, seem to have a special connection to the place and the people on it."
Trisha Underwood

How to Identify Mysterious Images Online | MindShift - 0 views

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    A Google Tool that allows you to use an image as a search term.
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