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Steve Fulton

StoryToolz : Resources for Authors - 1 views

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    StoryToolz has three tools that you can use to get story ideas; Random Conflicts, Half Title Generator, and Story Idea Generator. To use any of these three tools just select the tool from the main menu then look at the randomly generated idea. If you don't like the options, run the tool again until you get options that you like.
Lacy Manship

ECF Writing Center: Student Survey - 1 views

    • Lacy Manship
       
      Are you thinking of using something like survey monkey?
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    I did use survey monkey for a faculty survey! I then printed it out so I wouldn't be overloading you all with links---and because it doesn't really fit on our google site---since it's for faculty. I'll go ahead and send you the monkey link. The student survey I'm going to have the tutors help me create---and then use survey monkey. Thanks for the comments! What a great idea to use this to comment---makes me think of some many possibilities.
Sally Summey

Writing, Technology and Teens - Pew Research Center - 0 views

  • Overall, nearly two-thirds of teens (64%) say they incorporate some informal styles from their text-based communications into their writing at school.
  • Teens are motivated to write by relevant topics, high expectations, an interested audience and opportunities to write creatively.
  • eens who communicate frequently with friends, and teens who own more technology tools such as computers or cell phones do not write more for school or for themselves than less communicative and less gadget-rich teens.
  • ...13 more annotations...
  • Most teens feel that additional instruction and focus on writing in school would help improve their writing even further.
  • verall, 82% of teens feel that additional in-class writing time would improve their writing abilities and 78% feel the same way about their teachers using computer-based writing tools.
  • All teens write for school, and 93% of teens say they write for their own pleasure.
  • Teens generally do not believe that technology negatively influences the quality of their writing, but they do acknowledge that the informal styles of writing that mark the use of these text-based technologies for many teens do occasionally filter into their school work. Overall, nearly two-thirds of teens (64%) say they incorporate some informal styles from their text-based communications into their writing at school.
  • Parents believe that their children write more as teens than they did at that age.
  • Teenagers' lives are filled with writing.
  • At its core, the digital age presents a paradox. Most teenagers spend a considerable amount of their life composing texts, but they do not think that a lot of the material they create electronically is real writing. The act of exchanging emails, instant messages, texts, and social network posts is communication that carries the same weight to teens as phone calls and between-class hallway greetings.
  • At the same time that teens disassociate e-communication with "writing," they also strongly believe that good writing is a critical skill to achieving success -- and their parents agree.
  • While the debate about the relationship between e-communication and formal writing is on-going, few have systematically talked to teens to see what they have to say about the state of writing in their lives.
  • The internet is also a primary source for research done at or for school. 94% of teens use the internet at least occasionally to do research for school, and nearly half (48%) report doing so once a week or more often.
  • Teens believe that the writing instruction they receive in school could be improved.
  • Overall, 82% of teens feel that additional in-class writing time would improve their writing abilities and 78% feel the same way about their teachers using computer-based writing tools.
  • 47% of black teens write in a journal, compared with 31% of white teens. 37% of black teens write music or lyrics, while 23% of white teens do. 49% of girls keep a journal; 20% of boys do. 26% of boys say they never write for personal enjoyment outside of school. Multi-channel teens and gadget owners do not write any more -- or less --than their counterparts, but bloggers are more prolific.
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    Overall, nearly two-thirds of teens (64%) say they incorporate some informal styles from their text-based communications into their writing at school.
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    "At its core, the digital age presents a paradox. Most teenagers spend a considerable amount of their life composing texts, but they do not think that a lot of the material they create electronically is real writing. "
Steve Fulton

Teaching with Technology in the Middle: Diigo for Digital Writing Reflection - 2 views

  • They've used it to keep track of information they find on the web, to share information with our class group, and
  • because of their proficiency with it that when an idea came to me today 5 minutes before the start of class of a new purpose for which I could have my students use Diigo
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    My most recent post about how I had my students use Diigo to assess thinking and learning in their blog writing.
John Kirkland

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2009/03/25/us/26sacramento2_600.JPG - 1 views

    • John Kirkland
       
      Most of us cannot fathom living in "tent cities" such as these. However, African Americans were forced to live in similar dwellings simply for registering to vote.
Diana Martinez

Our Documents - 100 Milestone Documents - 0 views

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    100 milestone documents compiled by the National Archives of US History from 1776 to 1965
stephanie mccabe

The History of English in 10 Minutes - YouTube - 0 views

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    cute but informative video about the history of English...only one part needs to be sensored for classroom use: about the 5:35 mark
Steve Fulton

Can the iPad really help improve children's writing? « huntingenglish - 1 views

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    Good post that promotes the use of iPads for writing instruction.  Doesn't provide much reason why it's any better than a laptop, but a good resource for ideas on different apps when considering classroom writing applications. 
Steve Fulton

http://supportblogging.com/ - 0 views

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    a wiki of resources that can be used to support blogging in education.
Steve Fulton

Forty_five_Interesting_Ways_to_use_Wordle_in_ - 3 views

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    Slideshow of 45 ways to use Wordle in the Classroom
Lucy Arnold

CCCC Position Statement on Teaching, Learning, and Assessing Writing in Digital Environ... - 1 views

  • ncreasingly, classes and programs in writing require that students compose digitally. Such writing occurs both in conventional “face-to-face” classrooms and in classes and programs that are delivered at a distance. The expression composing digitally” can refer to a myriad of practices. In its simplest form, such writing can refer to a “mixed media” writing practice, the kind that occurs when students compose at a computer screen, using a word processor, so that they can submit the writing in print (Moran). Such writing may not utilize the formatting conventions such as italics and bold facing available on a word processor; alternatively, such writing often includes sophisticated formatting as well as hypertextual links. Digital composing can take many other forms as well. For example, such composing can mean participating in an online discussion through a listserv or bulletin board (Huot and Takayoshi). It can refer to creating compositions in presentation software. It can refer to participatingin chat rooms or creating webpages. It can mean creating a digital portfolio with audio and video files as well as scanned print writings. Most recently, it can mean composing on a class weblog or wiki. And more generally, as composers use digital technology to create new genres, we can expect the variety of digital compositions to continue proliferating.
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    "Creating new genres" is interesting to me... I am going to keep thinking about this I think.
Steve Fulton

GOOGLE - 2 views

shared by Steve Fulton on 24 Aug 10 - Cached
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    An Excellen list of Google resources to be used in education, organized in an LiveBinder
Steve Fulton

adflip.com ^ Ads archive, greeting cards of automobile, celebrity, audio magazines adve... - 0 views

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    Adflip provides one avenue for examining the rhetoric of ads from across the last 50 to 60 years in the United States. This might be done by choosing a general topic, such as automobiles, and picking apart the use of image, word choices, and other advertising strategies that also connect to the zeitgeist of the times
Steve Fulton

http://letterpop.com/ - 1 views

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    "Use LetterPop to create eye-popping newsletters, actionable presentations, irresistible invitations, beautiful product features, sizzling event summaries, informative club updates, lovely picture collages, and a whole lot more."
Steve Fulton

FutureMe.org: letters to the future - 2 views

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    When I learned about Future Me my first thought was that it would be great to have students use Future Me at the beginning of a school year. Students could write about what they hope to learn that year, what they do or don't like about school, and goals that they have for themselves. Then at the end of the school year students can read their letters and see how they've changed over the year.--Richard Byrne
Dorry Altman

TwHistory - 0 views

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    Virtual reenactments of real, historical events using Twitter - composed by students (or volunteers) Set up your own or use the ones already archived
John Kirkland

[The Wright brothers at the International Aviation Tournament, Belmont Park, Long Islan... - 1 views

    • John Kirkland
       
      Early Picture of the Wright Brothers from 1910
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