Click on the following link to learn about Jing:http://www.screencast.com/t/SLWZToscXUSign up for Jing @http://www.jingproject.comView video tutorials @ Help Center
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How to get the most out of SlideShare - The Next Web - 0 views
Copyright Clarity: Using Copyrighted Materials for Digital Learning - 11 views
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Social Studies Class: Integrating the Web & Technology - 4 views
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Using Jing for Educators - 0 views
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What can teachers do with Jing?Create a tutorials for working with new technologies. Demonstrate how to access your class delicious bookmarks, log-in to your class wiki, ning or blog, and how to fill out a Google Docs form you’ve created.Create screencasts to publish student work. Copy to your class website.Create a lesson about Internet safety. Have students show examples of their own “safe” internet practices.…more for teachers.Demonstrate how to edit writing.Model a “think aloud” reading technique.Show parents how to use a class website, how to read a test report, or how to access student grades.Add voice to class photos to share classroom activities on your class website.
Use of Synchronous Collaborative Wikis in an Online Learning Enviro... - 2 views
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PLE Articles - 3 views
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I could stand to be more savvy in my own organizing of online learning and networking:
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This is so me! I really need to create a personal learning environment for myself with everything in one place.
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I know that I do not take full advantage of these and I should! It just needs to be my go to and make it a habit. It totally makes sense to have everything in one place.
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For me taking the step after doing more of my own PLE would be to help my staff.
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Exactly. How is it that I can create a Symbaloo and resources for teachers but can't find the time to do it for myself. I feel like a chicken with my head cut off some days trying to remember all my favorite places and websites that I use for different lessons.
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I am terrible at this to. I have lately been creating folders on my bookmark toolbar to get more organized. There are so many resources that we have learned about from each other and this course that I have forgotten about and I wish I would have come up with some way to organize them as I was learning about them.
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DITTO! I find myself going through many bookmarks on my computer daily. Need to get things organized and manageable.
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ou can embed media (images, videos, and Slideshare presentations) in a tile, as an instructor, you can make a webmix quite interactive.
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Love that this can be done especially so kids don't have to go to various websites all the time and try to navigate which can be tricky even for us adults at times.
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Symbaloo has improved options since I was first introduced to it. I'd like to help staff create their own!
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I agree with the ease of it and having others use it. I think it is imperative they have a full hour or more to work with it. I would recommend they come with sites/images/links they definitely want to include before work time. They may spend more time on that and not finish it. Suddenly, it gets pushed back and not used.
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allows students to direct and manage their own learning experience while pursuing educational goals.
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Learning isn’t germane to structured classroom environments alone; it occurs in both formal and informal settings.
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This has been true for centuries, yet our schools still function with the thought that things must be learned in the classroom. That thought is starting to shift and progress has been made, but we still have a long way to go to change some mindsets.
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I love getting updates from friends teaching through outdoor classrooms or non traditional settings. They always share the successes but also acknowledge any difficulties. Trouble shooting is key for those making shifts to PLEs.
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The employ of PLEs in the classroom can go horribly wrong if teachers fail to prepare students and set usage parameters. PLEs place a large amount of responsibility on students and thus requires a high level of self-management and awareness.
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These are critical steps! We can't just assume students know how to do it. We have to teach them the skills either at first or as you go along. Throwing students into the situation is setting them up for potential failure.
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Agreed Kim! I also made a comment earlier about student motivation factoring into this too
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What I do like about Symbaloo is that if I make any updates to this webmix, students receive the updates as well!
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I use symbaloo for my library resources. I am able to embed it on my library page. What I like is that it gives the students the direct link to many of the resources without them having to hunt for them. There are times that I want them to do that, but sometimes it just needs to be quick and Symbaloo works well for that.
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I like the links readily available for a teacher's specific unit. Symbaloo helps students stay connected to assignments and increases efficiency of finding information.
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I encouraged students to use their accounts as an information dashboard for “professional” or school interests as well as personal passions.
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I really like this idea. I have never really explored Symbaloo enough or thoroughly enough to use it with students. I would like to explore that possibility more as part of my personal learning plan
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I thought that was an interesting idea also. We've discussed Symbaloo for years but I hadn't considered students creating their own.
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I like the clean look of it. People get easily lost in many online sites. Symbaloo forces you to find the key sites. This can really force you to find the best of the best.
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Students engaging in networked learning have to learn to be more self-directed than in the typical classroom
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This is definitely a concept that we need to teach our students. Cooperative/group learning was something that I did not like growing up as I was usually the one most responsible in the group and ended up doing most of the work. We need to teach all of our students how this concept works so that it can be successful for all.
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Very true for this to be successful. I think a step before that is to do an in-depth training for staff. So many times new methods and teaching tools are dumped in our laps without training, supports, or guidance. PLEs could have lasting, powerful effects on students so I'd make sure it's all staff not just teachers to benefit from training.
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A PLE is the method students use to organize their self-directed online learning, including the tools they employ to gather information, conduct research, and present their findings.
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Interesting ... a PLE isn't a physical environment at all, but rather a method ... hadn't thought of it that way before reading this article.
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I think what is also crucial to think about is how to get students to effectively research. We find this as a battle a lot. I wonder, though, if students are picking their own path that we would have more time to teach and reinforce these skills with them.
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These tools provide a medium for students to create their own learning space that is more natural and unique to their interests and learning styles.
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What? You mean our kids don't like to physically come to school, sit down, listen and learn anymore? And we are to adjust our 'teaching' to best fit their learning, including the delivery methods and mediums?!?!? Now that takes a GROWTH mindset!
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Lol! I have a small group of students everyday. Because of the numbers I let them choose where we work each day - comfy loungers, table with rigid seats… I also let them make decisions on as many things as possible every period. I like to think these students feel empowered, valued, and appreciated because of these simple tweaks to my teaching style. However, realistically I believe this would be more difficult for me in a class of 30. I want to learn strategies and then help other teachers to take the leap.
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This encourages students to apply their learning in different venues which creates a culture of lifelong learning.
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This to me seems like the greatest benefit to a PLE, but still relies HEAVILY on learner motivation. If a student is not motivated to learn (individually or otherwise) a PLE seems like it could be a way lose touch with that student
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I agree with this also. Motivated students are not my concern. It's my middle school students that project their lack of interest, refuse or struggle to learn in the traditional setting, and those that show apathy toward any aspect of learning. These students may benefit the most from PLEs but how to convince them in a class of 30+ is daunting.
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facilitation of students’ “active role in the learning process”
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I think a lot of modern day teachers (will) struggle with this ... moving from the keeper and giver of knowledge to facilitator of knowledge. We don't 'teach' them anything anymore that they can't learn on their own ... if they WANT to (even the quadratic formula). The challenge to me is how do we motivate and teach today's kids to WANT to learn on their own?
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Yes, how do we instill the intrinsic value of personal growth and learning? I see one way is connecting to real-world implementation. Students ask "why learn this" and "when will I ever use this". I agree that some or many teachers will struggle shifting from keeper to facilitator because it's out of comfort zone and control issue.
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I currently have a few students that would be ready and do well with this learning environment. How do we change the mindset of those other students that think school is useless and would do nothing all day long if given the opportunity? I'm afraid the "active" role may need to be more facilated that what we have been reading about so far.
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The concept of PLE is not a way to replace classroom learning, but to enhance it.
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I think this is important because some people might think that having a PLE for a student, then the teachers role is done. The teacher still has to provide what students need to learn, standards, but it is the student who decides how and the teacher is there to be a facilitator.
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I second this comment. This concept would take a lot of background and professional development. Teachers may feel threatened and some may worry about losing jobs as the internet can replace everything. Understanding it is not meant to replace is essential.
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So important to know that the teacher still plays an important role in this type of environment. Especially as students who are so used to the traditional learning environment move to a PLE.
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Teachers, she explains, are no longer the primary or even the best source of information available to students
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This is so true! With all of the ways students can find information using technology, the teacher is more there to help or facilitate a students learning if needed. Unlike "back-in-the-day", when students relied on the teacher or library for almost all of the information or learning.
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Truth. While the teacher's job has changed greatly, they are still very necessary. Now however, the need to teach students how to find the information and find good and trustworthy information.
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Not every student is ready for this responsibility,
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It would be nice if all students would be able to have a PLE, but some are not mature enough or motivated enough to work independently. Some students still need to be "pushed" to get work done and stay on task.
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There has never been one way for students to learn. We have to be flexible and offer different ways. I agree, this does not fit all students. We can still integrate pieces of this for students but use traditional means as well!
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The concept of PLE's seems really appealing to "lazy" teachers and it will unlikely work. For those of us that use technology frequently in our daily instruction you know that it takes a lot of pre-planning to incoporate technology appropriately. If you add the element of a student not being ready to take this step you either have teachers never try or really really fail.
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I agree that some teachers may think that using the PLE will be an easy out for them in regards to planning and instruction. If it is done well, the teacher who is part of the PLE actually should have more work to do as they monitor students on their individual work.
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Even while this does not work for all students, a modified version would still beneficial for all students. Some would need more guidance while still setting goals and completing projects.
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I would totally agree that not every student is ready, but isn't this the point of personalized learning?
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PLEs give learners a high degree of control over their work by allowing them to customize the learning experience and connect to others, including experts in the field.
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clean, visual interface of Symbaloo and the ease of adding content; they also liked that they could customize the “tiles” they were adding and that their webmixes loaded quickly.
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I'm in an elementary school and use Symbaloo in my library site. The kids and teachers love how easy it is to use and find the sites that they use quickly. I even have teachers accounts linked to our school page so that specific ages can go to their own class symbaloo.
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I have been out of the classroom for a couple of years. I would love a chance to share these ideas with some of the new teachers I coach in my work.
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Because Symbaloo is web-based, you can access your favorite webmixes from different computers.
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Instead of a teacher providing resources that everyone uses, students can utilize their PLE to acquire information using preferred apps and resources such as blogs, YouTube, Pinterest, Ning or Delicious.
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This is such a win, win. The students are finding what interests them, helping others, and also helping the teacher. All too often teachers spend a large amount of time finding the resources. This works much better in the upper levels as it is essential to talk about reliability and good sources. I think it is essential to look at databases provided by the AEA and others purchased. These are reliable and good places to go. In the elementary, I send them here for reading levels and as they don't have the same ability to search online.
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PLE by creating blogs, wikispaces, prezi presentations and photo collages as final projects; thereby diversifying instruction.
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This is where I get frustrated in the elementary. Most sites are for students ages 13 and up. I won't allow them to create their own prezi, animoto, powtoon, etc. accounts. So I have them use my login & password which is likely breaking copyright rules. These social media platforms (including Pinterest), need to create student friendly ones for ages 7 and up (just threw out an age) so that we can integrate similar style of teaching.
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I agree. If we wait until they are in middle school to have them "appropriately" use websites they have already developed their sense of digital citizenship without the proper instruction we know they need.
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Heather- I did some digging into Symbaloo's privacy policy and it looks like as long as you have obtained parental permission, students under the age of 13 can create an account- but I would look into a creating a pro account. I know I'm going to check it out! "By making any such personal information available to Symbaloo, you acknowledge that you have obtained the consent of a parent and/or guardian of that individual to provide such personal information, and that you have taken reasonable precautions to prevent individuals under the age of 13 from falsifying such consent"
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Students can extend their learning into questions to parents, email conversations, Facebook posts or even twitter hashtags.
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Organizations/schools have always tried to increase communication. Parents have always continued to want more understanding of what students are learning. Using this type of format and inviting them into the learning is crucial. They can give feedback, see how to help, and also feel confident in what students are learning and the type of projects/products. The trick- how do we integrate families without internet? That is not impossible (especially if they come pick at school and allowing access in the library), but something to seriously think about. Rural areas can't go to McDonalds 20 miles away to do homework. We must have a policy to help those without internet.
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supporting students in developing their skills and motivations for becoming themselves networked and sophisticated online learners
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I was elated to read this quote. I think we can focus too much on the what verses how do we grow and improve our resources. The sheer number of resources is overwhelming and can cause people to shut down. I think the key is to teach how to evaluate a resource and think about if it fits the current need. Curating is not like liking or making comments everywhere. We need to teach people how to decide.
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teacher centered classrooms to more learner centered classrooms
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teachers must pursue training and be knowledgeable of how to utilize PLEs to enhance learning and ensure that students are using this e-learning tool in a meaningful way.
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I decided to revisit Symbaloo, which I first discovered about a year or so ago through my colleague and friend Wendy Drexler.
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Personal learning environments are beneficial because they support learning anywhere and allow learners to connect the diverse environments of school, home and play
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Study group resources
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Symbaloo EDU
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I was doing some research on Symbaloo EDU and it looks like they have created something called Learning Paths- https://www.symbalooedu.com/learning-paths/ This would be a way for students to move through learning at their own pace.
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You can share with the public or with a select group of individuals (via email).
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let’s never forget it is an ongoing balancing act.
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sharing with others.
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The social media platform that supports PLEs creates a perfect space for peer collaboration and sharing information.
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Symbaloo