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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
Laura Collander

What Kids Learn When They Create with Digital Media - National Writing Project - 0 views

  • "In this new world of digital media creation and participation, the role of the parent, the role of the educator, the role of the adult more generally is shifting—and it's still not defined,"
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    National Writing Project page that discusses how digital media can help our students
stephanie mccabe

OER Commons - 3 views

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    "Learning is Sharing Find Free-to-Use Teaching and Learning Content from around the World. Organize K-12 Lessons, College Courses, and more."
Steve Fulton

Comments4Kids - 1 views

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    Network of classroom and student blogs organized to help promote the commenting on and sharing of student writing and learning. Gives educators a good audience of commentators for their students
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.
Alicia Wright

Technology Impact on Learning - 0 views

  • "We know that successful technology-rich schools generate impressive results for students, including improved achievement; higher test scores; improved student attitude, enthusiasm, and engagement; richer classroom content; and improved student retention and job placement rates.
    • Alicia Wright
       
      It's backed!
Malcolm Campbell

Technology Transforms Writing and the Teaching of Writing - Technology - The Chronicle ... - 1 views

  • bad habits they fear their students pick up on computers
    • Malcolm Campbell
       
      Wouldn't it be nice to capture 'gamers' attention for such sites as these? Wonder how it might work?
  • Students submit essays that are longer but not better written than those in years past
    • Malcolm Campbell
       
      This doesn't appear to be the case, re: longer papers. Whycome so many papers fall short of minimum page counts?
  • The perils are clearer. "Students will tinker endlessly with the text and forget that their paper doesn't have a thesis," says Kathleen Skubikowski, an assistant professor of English who directs the writing program at Middlebury College. "I receive immaculately word-processed documents that are just terrible," says David Galef, an associate professor of English at the University of Mississippi.
    • Malcolm Campbell
       
      Interesting! Sometimes a roadblock to me is the time it takes to learn the technology associated with new applications and, like the thesis for students, I'm occaionally in danger of forgetting to plan my class lessons.
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    Chronical of Higher Ed piece
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.
Diane Morrow

Apple Learning Interchange - iPod touch. Touching student lives in the classroom. - 0 views

    • Diane Morrow
       
      Use ipod touch to have students publish their work on wordpress blog?
Diane Morrow

Apple Learning Interchange - iPod touch. Touching student lives in the classroom. - 0 views

  • With the iPod touch in hand, keeping a digital plan book is easy, convenient, and dare we say fun! The iPod touch can make your plan book portable and easy to access anytime and anywhere where it is convenient! Just reach into your pocket and you can start planning out or carrying out the activities of your classroom!
    • Diane Morrow
       
      ipod touch for planning
Steve Fulton

The "We Think" video - 0 views

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    Cool video on how the web is changing the role of information our society. Also brings up points about questions that will have to be answered as we move forward
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