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Aaron Funkhouoser

Teachers' Resources - 1 views

  • NARA vAr Addthis_pub = "usArchives"; vAr Addthis_offset_left = -40; vAr Addthis_brAnd = "Archives.gov"; Blogs #topLinks_Addthis { overflow:hidden;height:25px; } vAr Addthis_pub = "usArchives"; vAr Addthis_offset_left = -40; vAr Addthis_brAnd = "Archives.gov"; BookmArk/ShAre ContAct Us SeArch TeAchers Home &Amp;gt; TeAchers' Resources #creditfooter { displAy:none; } #pdfNotice { displAy:none; } DocsTeAch TeAch with documents using our online tool. LocAte teAchAble primAry sources. Find new And fAvorite lesson plAns, And creAte your own Activities for your students. EducAtion UpdAtes New DocsTeAch Activity: The Civil Rights Act of 1964 And the EquAl Employment Opportunity CommissionIn this new Activity on DocsTeAch.org—o
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    I found this site interesting for me (AAron Awesome Funkhouser) As A history/educAtion mAjor, this website uses historicAl informAtion through technology.
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    I found this site interesting for me (AAron Awesome Funkhouser) As A history/educAtion mAjor, this website uses historicAl informAtion through technology.
ccervan

How to Integrate Technology | Edutopia - 1 views

  • interactive whiteboard and projector:
  • one computer
  • collaborative class blog.
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  • student blogging
  • Record Screencasts for providing onscreen instruction.
  • three to five computers
  • library with a pod of computers:
  • Build a Google Site to house class content
  • digital stories
  • Microsoft PowerPoint, LibreOffice, Prezi, or Google Docs.
  • create cartoons
  • laptop cart or a computer lab:
  • Enable students to work through course content at their own pace through the use of screencasts, e-books, and other digital media.
  • enhanced digital note taking
  • live class discussions
  • 1:1 laptops or netbooks:
  • handful of mobile devices
  • Upload and access course content
  • Record group discussions
  • record themselves reading aloud for fluency checks
  • student-created comics
  • e-books
  • Try out a tool like Nearpod to project information onto student devices.
  • Conduct research.
  • Collaborate using apps like Whiteboard.
  • 1:1 mobile devices:
  • multifunction devices
  • create videos
  • student polling
  • Quick Checks:
  • get a quick snapshot of the class
  • you can get quick and easy feedback that will help inform your instruction.
  • Personalized Feedback
  • All three tools provide the Ability for teAchers to leAve personAlized comments And notes on student work, And they provide A messAging service for students who mAy wAnt to send emAils with questions or concerns About the course.
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    A greAt resource for teAchers who Are stumped on how to integrAte technology into their existing clAssroom. Includes how to get stArted As well As ideAs like, "if you hAve An interActive whiteboArd", "if you hAve computers in your clAssroom", etc.
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    eduTopia, all ready bookmarked a link to this "how to integrate technology" but his is highlighted
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    Integrating Technology in the classroom with some examples on what to use for the technology available.
Aaron Funkhouoser

Getting Started with Firefox extension - Diigo help - 0 views

  •  Feature Highlight: Highlights Diigo saves the day with "highlights". Highlights let you select the important snippets on a page and store them in your library with the page's bookmark. Let's try it. Just open a page, maybe one of your old-school bookmarks or one of your new cat bookmarks, and find the information on that page you actually care about. Select that important text. Got it? Okay, now put your hemet on, 'cause this might blow your mind! Click the highlight icon on the Diigo toolbar. It's the one with the "T" on a page with a yellow highlighter. You will notice that the selected text gets a yellow background. This means that the text has been saved in your library, and as long as you have the Diigo add-on the text will be highlighted on the page! How's that for easy?   Now you've highlighted the text. It will appear in your library within the bookmark for the page it is on. Go to your library and you can see how it works. If you're not sure how to get to your library, just click the second icon on the toolbar (Diigo icon to the left of the search bar) and then select "My Library »".
  • Sticky Notes on the Web What? I can put a sticky note on a web page? How? Oh, that's right! Diigo. Just right-click anywhere on the page and choose to "add a floating sticky note". Type up your note and choose "Post", then move the note anywhere on the page. You have to type a note first, before you move it where you want, otherwise there's nothing to move!
  •  Feature Highlight: Highlights Diigo saves the day with "highlights". Highlights let you select the important snippets on a page and store them in your library with the page's bookmark. Let's try it. Just open a page, maybe one of your old-school bookmarks or one of your new cat bookmarks, and find the information on that page you actually care about. Select that important text. Got it? Okay, now put your hemet on, 'cause this might blow your mind! Click the highlight icon on the Diigo toolbar. It's the one with the "T" on a page with a yellow highlighter. You will notice that the selected text gets a yellow background. This means that the text has been saved in your library, and as long as you have the Diigo add-on the text will be highlighted on the page! How's that for easy?   Now you've highlighted the text. It will appear in your library within the bookmark for the page it is on. Go to your library and you can see how it works. If you're not sure how to get to your library, just click the second icon on the toolbar (Diigo icon to the left of the search bar) and then select "My Library »".
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  • Sticky Notes on the Web What? I can put a sticky note on a web page? How? Oh, that's right! Diigo. Just right-click anywhere on the page and choose to "add a floating sticky note". Type up your note and choose "Post", then move the note anywhere on the page. You have to type a note first, before you move it where you want, otherwise there's nothing to move!
j_marcum

Project Based Learning: Start Here | Cult of Pedagogy - 0 views

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    "Cult of Pedagogy" is a website and a place for teachers to unite and explore ideas together through a blog, podcast, and posts. The main page goes into detail about what Project Based Learning entails. This website uses the analogy "project based learning, the content is baked inside of a long-term project, a real-world problem students need to solve in a creative and authentic way. In the process of solving the problem, students also meet required standards, but this work is integrated into the project, not separate from it". This is a key component in understanding PBL because it is more than just solving a basic math problem. The really cool thing about this website is that it connects the viewer to a podcast called "Cult of Pedagogy". Teacher's can listen to this broadcast to get ideas about teaching and PBL. There is also a tab for teaching materials. The materials included are e-book template, google drive basics, and icebreakers that all educators can utilize when implementing Project Based Learning into their classroom. Overall, this is a great tool created by an educator for all.
thexfiles93

The Science of Storytelling: Why Telling a Story is the Most Powerful Way to activate Our Brains - 0 views

  • The Science of Storytelling: Why Telling a Story is the Most Powerful Way to activate Our Brains
  • The Science of Storytelling: Why Telling a Story is the Most Powerful Way to activate Our Brains
  • Our brain on stories: How our brains become more active when we tell stories
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  • We are wired that way. a story, if broken down into the simplest form, is a connection of cause and effect. and that is exactly how we think.
  • Why does the format of a story, where events unfold one after the other, have such a profound impact on our learning?
  • A story cAn put your whole brAin to work.
  • Exchange giving suggestions for telling stories
  • a story is the only way to activate parts in the brain so that a listener turns the story into their own idea and experience.
  • Write more persuasively—bring in stories from yourself or an expert
  • The next time you struggle with getting people on board with your projects and ideas, simply tell them a story, where the outcome is that doing what you had in mind is the best thing to do.
  • The simple story is more successful than the complicated one
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    This website discusses the importance of storytelling when teaching new material to a class. We felt like when most people think of storytelling they only think of teaching in that method to younger kids but it can actually be beneficial to all ages. We thought this website had a lot of good reasons and facts as to why storytelling can be beneficial in the classroom.
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    This article is a good read because at the bottom it gives tips on how to get people engaged and do what you want them to do!  Highlighted in green is the important tips I took out of this read. 
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    This article is a good read because at the bottom it gives tips on how to get people engaged and do what you want them to do!  Highlighted in green is the important tips I took out of this read. 
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    A good story cAn mAke or breAk A presentAtion, Article, or conversAtion. But why is thAt? When Buffer co-founder Leo Widrich stArted to mArket his product through stories insteAd of benefits And bullet points, sign-ups went through the roof. Here he shAres the science of why storytelling is so uniquely powerful.
Susan Stansberry

TinEye Reverse Image Search - 1 views

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    Tineye is a free tool that helps you conduct reverse image searches. In a reverse image search you're searching for the places where an image has been posted online. Conducting a reverse can be a good way for students to discover information about an object or location featured in a picture. as demonstrated above, when the image is located through Tineye students can click through to the source to see how the image was used and what was written about the image. Performing a reverse image search can provide students with a good lesson on digital footprints. Have them conduct a reverse image search for images they have posted online and then count the number of places where that image has appeared.
bayleesimmons

Digital Citizenship: Resource Roundup | Edutopia - 4 views

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    Check out Edutopia's collection of articles, videos, and other resources on internet safety, cyberbullying, digital responsibility, and media and digital literacy.
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    This site is a collection of articles, videos, and other resources that highlight key factors that go into digital and internet safety. It also discusses digital literacy, responsibility, and cyberbullying.
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    This site does a good job using both text and a video component of describing and simplifying some aspects of digital citizenship. It has also gathered more resources and provided a link to those on this topic.
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    This site does a good job using both text and a video component of describing and simplifying some aspects of digital citizenship. It has also gathered more resources and provided a link to those on this topic.
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    This site does a good job using both text and a video component of describing and simplifying some aspects of digital citizenship. It has also gathered more resources and provided a link to those on this topic.
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    This site does a good job using both text and a video component of describing and simplifying some aspects of digital citizenship. It has also gathered more resources and provided a link to those on this topic.
heather7499

Tips for Teachers: Creating a Teaching Portfolio Online | Teach.com - 0 views

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    This is a blog on Teach.com that has helpful tips on creating a digital portfolio. It discusses why one should have a digital portfolio, ways to make them, and what should be included. It adds just a little extra to our book.
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    This is a blog on Teach.com that has helpful tips on creating a digital portfolio. It discusses why one should have a digital portfolio, ways to make them, and what should be included. It adds just a little extra to our book.
jessiemp

Getting Started with Diigolet - Diigo help - 0 views

  • Tags help you find and organize your bookmarks by letting you select all of your bookmarks with a certain tag or combination of tags. Quickly add relevant tags to a bookmark by clicking on any of the recommended tags that appear under the description field on the “Save Bookmark” pop-up. When you are satisfied with the information in the “Save Bookmark” pop-up, click the “Save Bookmark” button. Now a link to the page is stored in your Diigo library, and the information you entered is stored with it.
  • Highlight Highlighting lets you denote important information on a page, just like highlighting in a book, but with Diigo, the highlighted text will be conveniently saved to your library as well. There are some important things for me to denote on my recipe. My wife doesn’t like pineapple, my grandfather can’t have eggs or chocolate, and I don’t like coconut very much, so I highlight those items on the recipe to let me know I need to deal with them. Highlight by clicking “Highlight” on the Diigolet. Then select the text you want to highlight. The text will be visually highlighted and the text is now stored in your library. It’s that easy. Click the button again to exit highlighter mode. You can also change the color of a highlight by clicking the downward-pointing arrow next to “Highlight” and choosing a color. Colors are useful for differentiating different types of highlights. I will use a different color for each of the different people I need to consider.
  • To add a sticky note to a highlight, simply move your mouse cursor over a highlight. When the little pop-up tab with the pencil on it appears, move the cursor to it and a menu will appear. Choose “add Sticky Notes”. Now you can type and post a sticky note just like before, but this time it will be tied to the highlighted text.
cortneydee33

Creating a Livetext Portfolio Document - YouTube - 1 views

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    Watching this video before/during creating a LiveText portfolio will be a lot of help. It walks you through step by step instructions. During week 5 you will have to create a portfolio on LiveText and if you get confused this will be a good video to come back to.
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    Watching this video before/during creating a LiveText portfolio will be a lot of help. It walks you through step by step instructions. During week 5 you will have to create a portfolio on LiveText and if you get confused this will be a good video to come back to.
chelseaharwell

Be Smart Online | OnGuard Online - 0 views

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    The internet makes many everyday tasks faster and more convenient, like shopping, researching products, banking, searching for health information, and communicating on the go. Get tips for being safe and making the most of your time online
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    This site is a good digital citizen site because it shows different ways to show good internet etiquette. This site is more of a secure your computer site. It can help you keep your computer from getting a virus and it can also get a virus off of your computer. It shows how you can be more smart online and also shows ways to protect your kids.
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    This site is a good digital citizen site because it shows different ways to show good internet etiquette. This site is more of a secure your computer site. It can help you keep your computer from getting a virus and it can also get a virus off of your computer. It shows how you can be more smart online and also shows ways to protect your kids.
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    This site is a good digital citizen site because it shows different ways to show good internet etiquette. This site is more of a secure your computer site. It can help you keep your computer from getting a virus and it can also get a virus off of your computer. It shows how you can be more smart online and also shows ways to protect your kids.
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    The internet makes many everyday tasks faster and more convenient, like shopping, researching products, banking, searching for health information, and communicating on the go. Get tips for being safe and making the most of your time online.
an_glover

How to make a Storyboard for Video - 0 views

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    Has step-by-step instructions and storyboarding tips on how to make a storyboard for videos. a storyboard is a tool for sketching out how a video will unfold, shot by shot. It looks like a comic strip.
ashtonpoarch

Edmodo Teacher Review - 1 views

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    Teacher's review of Edmodo, a website mentioned in the chapter as a collaborative tool.This site can be used as a classroom/teacher website. It's like a safe, classroom friendly version of Facebook.
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    Teacher's review of Edmodo, a website mentioned in the chapter as a collaborative tool.This site can be used as a classroom/teacher website. It's like a safe, classroom friendly version of Facebook.
jdholt1994

Strategies for teachers - One Computer Classroom - 0 views

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    This site has many useful tips for how to maximize the use of your computer in a one computer classroom.
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    This is a great tool for ideas in teaching in a one computer classroom. It has many ideas on using it as a teacher, in groups, using as a learning station, etc. It helps give ideas on how to get the most out of a one computer classroom.
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    This is a great website for ideas when it come to one computer classrooms. There are described ways for it there is only a teacher computer or if there is a teacher computer and one computer for the students to use.
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
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    This page helps teach how to Google a topic.
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    This page provides tips for searching for information. They are searching skills that all students should know in order to research efficiently and effectively.
lunastella22

Cleopatra: Searchasaurus - Powered By EBSCOhost - 1 views

  • In the year 48 B.C., the great Roman general Julius Caesar traveled to the city of alexandria in Egypt. He took up residence in the Egyptian palace and demanded to have the country's rulers, 21-year-old Cleopatra VII and her younger brother, Ptolemy XIII, brought before him. Cleopatra was hesitant. She and her brother were in the midst of a long and bitter battle for power over Egypt. She thought--with good reason--that her enemies would try to kill her if she were seen approaching the palace. Still, she knew it was important to answer his demand. Caesar was extremely powerful, and Cleopatra knew he could be helpful in her struggle against her brother.
  • In Cleopatra's brief life she was involved in war- and peace-making, royal intrigue, a ruthless struggle for power, violent and treacherous acts, and legendary love affairs. She ruled over--and then lost--an entire kingdom, and her name is forever linked with two of the most powerful men of the ancient world, Julius Caesar and Marc antony. although we know little of absolute fact about her, she lives on in our imaginations--on movie and television screens, in books and newspaper articles. Somehow Cleopatra's vivid, larger-than-life story reaches out from centuries ago and continues to enchant us today
  • Cleopatra's full name was Cleopatra VII Thea Philopator. In Greek, Cleopatra means "glory of her race," and Philopator means father-loving. She was born in 69 B.C., the third daughter of Ptolemy XII, king of Egypt. Ptolemy XII, who was known by the more familiar name of auletes ("flute player"), was a descendant in a dynasty that had begun in 323 B.C., when Ptolemy I, a native of Macedonia and a subordinate of alexander the Great, became one of three Diadochi (successors) to gain control over portions of alexander's massive empire. Cleopatra would ultimately become the last of the Ptolemaic dynasty to rule Egypt.
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  • Cleopatra herself was, first and foremost, a Ptolemy. The very best of ancient Greek and Egyptian cultures lay at her feet. She received her education from the best scholars in Egypt. Servants fulfilled her smallest whim. She lacked for nothing, and there was little she could have wanted that would not have been granted her. But life during that period, as Ptolemy XII knew, was not perfect. Beneath the outward glamour and elegance, Egypt and the Ptolemy line were in grave danger. a self-indulgent king, Ptolemy XII watched as the Egyptians became increasingly restless and dissatisfied with his leadership. Moreover, the kingdom had been split when his brother became king of Cyprus, and when the Egyptians discovered that Ptolemy XI, his father, had left a will that ceded Egypt to Rome, Ptolemy XII found himself on unstable ground indeed.
  • The exiled queen first traveled to the Roman province of Syria, where she found backers to help her raise her own army in return for offering to share Egypt's wealth once she was restored to the throne. Cleopatra began to face the fact that Rome, not Egypt, was the central power of the Mediterranean world. Therefore, she reasoned, would it not make sense to ally herself with Rome rather than fight it?
  • By 48 B.C., Cleopatra had raised a substantial army. Determined to regain the throne, she led the army to Pelusium in northern Egypt in preparation for fighting her brother and his regents for control of the kingdom. Cleopatra knew that the Ptolemy dynasty was not as powerful and influential as it had once been. The glorious days of Egypt's ascendancy were gone, and Rome was now the world's great power. But the queen held a burning desire to restore Egypt to its former splendor and influence. She was convinced that she would be the one ruler who could honor her ancestors by renewing the Ptolemaic reign, and she was determined to do so by whatever means were necessary. Cleopatra VII did not know, as she readied her forces for battle, that the two Romans with whom she would cast her lot during this struggle would change her life forever--and secure her place in world history.
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    World history (999 BCE-500 CE), Among other women CleopAtrA rose to power under some unusuAl circumstAnces. CleopAtrA hAs been the inspirAtion for All sorts of books And plAys.
mdgleason

The Top 17 Free Digital Storytelling apps for The iPad ~ Educational Technology and Mobile Learning - 0 views

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    This is a list of apps used for digital storytelling. Using a variety of apps can be a great way to have students connect with technology and tell a story. Having a concise list of apps that students can use would be very helpful.
brianne_g

Step 1: What is a PLN? - Teacher Challenges - 2 views

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    Welcome to our professional learning series on building a PLN. This series guides you step by step through the process of setting up your own PLN. The aim of this first step is to: Explain what is a PLN. Help you understand why educators create their own PLN.
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    Welcome to our professional learning series on building a PLN. This series guides you step by step through the process of setting up your own PLN. It's great for people who still need to delve deeper into what a PLN actually is.
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    This is a very information-rich site that further introduces the PLN and delves into several different avenues a teacher can take in developing their PLN, with one avenue explored being Twitter. I particularly found the Step 6: Curation page to be intriguing. This page introduces curation, the strategic collection and compilation of knowledge and media found online, and demonstrates how it can be a valuable tool for educators engaged in expanding and sharing their constant learning and teaching journeys (See the video towards the middle of the page where a teacher shows his netvibes and scoopit accounts, and the very complex ways in which teachers can organize and share knowledge from these information collection/filtering tools. VERY valuable for our fast-paced and information-heavy time.)
katelyn_butler

Why Teach with Project-Based Learning?: Providing Students With a Well-Rounded Classroom Experience | Edutopia - 1 views

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    This is a great article that gives information about: what project based learning is, why you should use it in your classroom, and how students benefit from it. This would be a great read for new teachers looking to gain a better understanding of project based learning, and it can also help teachers generate creative ideas to use in the classroom.
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    This is a great article that gives information about: what project based learning is, why you should use it in your classroom, and how students benefit from it. This would be a great read for new teachers looking to gain a better understanding of project based learning, and it can also help teachers generate creative ideas to use in the classroom.
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    thanks for the information
mrsjackson227

12 Easy Ways to Use Technology in the Classroom, Even for Technophobic Teachers | TeachHUB - 8 views

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    With this ed tech guide, teachers will find easy ways to use technology in the classroom.
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    With this ed tech guide, teachers will find easy ways to use technology in the classroom. I am a big fan of the "webquest" idea for younger learners.
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    With this ed tech guide, teachers will find easy ways to use technology in the classroom. I am a big fan of the "webquest" idea for younger learners.
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    With this ed tech guide, teachers will find easy ways to use technology in the classroom.
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    webquests were quite popular several years back but the website that hosted them contains so many broken links. you can accomplish the same task with a well-crafted google search engine and a google doc with links & exercises.
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    A website with exAmples on how to use technology in Any clAssroom - especiAlly for beginners! Includes exAmples like creAting A clAss blog or webpAge, creAting A clAss podcAst, etc.
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    I think this website informs great ways to help teachers to bring more technology into the class.
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    This article was chosen because it displays ideas for teachers to incorporate technology in the classroom, even if the teacher isn't "tech-savvy". The ideas range from utilizing IPads for children in the classroom to even using review games such as "Jeopardy" and "Who Wants To Be a Millionaire?".
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    This is a great article on 12 ways to use technology in the classroom
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    I like this article.
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