Skip to main content

Home/ Ed Tech @ OSU/ Group items tagged web literacy

Rss Feed Group items tagged

kaitlynwood14

S.O.S. for Information Literacy - 2 views

  •  
    S.O.S. for Information Literacy is a dynamic web-based multimedia resource for educators that promises to make a significant contribution to enhancing the teaching of information literacy skills to students in K-16. The project is currently in its final stage of development in which S.O.S. is being expanded for use by high school and college level educators.S.O.S. for Information Literacy will link lesson plans and teaching ideas to related real-world multimedia examples of excellence in teaching, especially focusing on collaborative efforts between classroom teachers and library media specialists in K-12. There are useful lesson plans, powerpoint, handouts, web pages, and activities for your students to learn about information literacy, plagiarism, and digital citizenship.
  •  
    S.O.S is a site for helping to teach literacy in the classroom.
jessicahand

Educational Technology - 0 views

  •  
    Digital Literacy is an animated, interactive web site that teaches students about digital literacy, safe use of the internet and more.
Ashlyn Hood

Google Search Engine-Week 6 - 2 views

http://www.mesacc.edu/~paoih30491/ArgumentsQuoteSummarizeParaphr.html This website explains how to avoid plagiarism. It explains the difference between summarizing, paraphrasing, and quoting in re...

Technology edtech cse week7

katiethorne

Webonauts Internet Academy - 0 views

  •  
    Do you have what it takes to graduate from the Webonauts Internet Academy?
  •  
    The Webonauts Internet Academy game teaches kids about key issues of web safety and good citizenship. They get to go through training learning the rights and wrongs of digital behavior.
  •  
    The Webonauts Internet Academy teaches kids about key issues of web safety and good citizenship. It offers information on cyberbullying, and activities to enlighten parents and teachers on how to keep children Internet safe.
addifreiner

Tapping the Power of Poetry - 0 views

  •  
    Children's Poetry includes several featurues that make it ideally suited for teaching phonemic awareness, word recognition, and reading fluency. -children's poems are short and easy to learn -Poems Play with the Sounds of Language -Poems Make Phonics more engaging Poems can range from simple to complex.
Katie Klingaman

Do Your Students Know How To Search? | Edudemic - 0 views

  • There is a new digital divide on the horizon. It is not based around who has devices and who does not, but instead the new digital divide will be based around students who know how to effectively find and curate information and those who do not.  Helene Blowers has come up with seven ideas about the new digital divide – four of them, the ones I felt related to searching, are listed below. The New Digital Divide: In an age of information abundance learning to effectively search is one of the most important skills most teachers are NOT teaching. They assume students know how to conduct a search, and set them free on the internet to find information. They assume that students have the skills to critically think their way through the searching and the web. Sadly, this is not the case and everyday we are losing the information literacy battle because we often forget to teach these crucial searching skills in our schools. Teachers – especially in the elementary grades  -need to develop a shared vocabulary around the skill of searching. They need to make sure their students learn some basic search strategies and keep applying them until they become almost automatic. Here are some of the searching skills and vocabulary we should be teaching students : Quotation Marks: Students should always use quotes to search for an exact word or set of words. This is useful when you want something like quotes, song lyrics or text from a an exact historical time period. Example: “The Great Chicago Fire” Dashes (or minus sign): Use this symbol directly before a word to help exclude unwanted information from your search Example: Great Chicago Fire -soccer Two Periods: Use this to help you find information between those two numbers. For example you might want to try: Example: Great Chicago Fire October 8..10 Site Search: For a look through the Chicago HIstory Museum site only Examples: Great Chicago Fire site:chicagohs.org         site:Chicagotribune.com
  •  
    This page helps teach how to Google a topic.
  •  
    This page provides tips for searching for information. They are searching skills that all students should know in order to research efficiently and effectively.
kathyessmiller

DuckDuckGo: what is it and how does it work? | WIRED UK - 0 views

  •  
    DuckDuckGo doesn't track. How does it make money?
1 - 9 of 9
Showing 20 items per page