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Lisa Dumicich

Free Custom Toolbar | Conduit - 0 views

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    Conduit Community Toolbars Are Absolutely Free We Deliver Real Value at No Cost! Yes, we provide this great service completely free. Do you collect or sell data to earn revenues? No, we neither collect nor sell any personal usage data. We are committed to the highest standards of privacy. We also guarantee no adware, no malware and no spyware.
Lynne Crowe

Diigo Blog » "Tip of the day" ~ How to customize Diigo toolbar - 0 views

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    How to customise the Diigo tolbar
Lynne Crowe

ShareThis | Quick Sharing to MySpace, Email, and More! - 0 views

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    ShareThis for Users Download the ShareThis Toolbar for one-click sharing from your browser.
Lynne Crowe

professionallearningboard Toolbar - Download - moodle, professional learning board, pro... - 0 views

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    The Professional Learning Board community has free and low-cost resources for parents & teachers: professional development, instructional strategies, classroom management, online teaching and learning tools, virtual classrooms, continuing ed, and schools.
John Pearce

Print Friendly Version - 0 views

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    With the Print Friendly Bookmarklet in your browser Bookmarks toolbar you can quickly clean up any webpage, removing ads, navigation, and all the junk you don't want to print before sending it to the printer. Even better you can remove extraneous paragraphs from the page and then if you wish save the file as a pdf.
Roland Gesthuizen

Annotating the Web with Diigo on the iPad - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 3 views

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    But I have discovered another use for Diigo: annotating websites on the iPad. As far as I know, Diigo offers the only means to highlight passages and add annotations to websites from within the iPad's native Safari browser. Diigo does this through the Web Highlighter bookmarklet, which opens up a toolbar that looks like this:
Mark Boyle

edublogs: Angela McFarlane @ BLC07: Why do we build communities? - 0 views

  • I think eduBuzz.org has helped create not just this, but far more in terms of explicit reflection that wasn't there before. I'm wondering whether reflection is, in fact, a personal, private thing rather than a community issue, since often the community at large may not choose to be 'interested' in what you have to say. Take live blog posts, for example, written for the author more than the audience. The biggest problem of online communities, and we've seen this, too, in East Lothian and eduBuzz.org, is that novices in particular find it hard to filter information. Angela says that the problem is one students have, but so many of our teachers and managers also have trouble filtering what is important, what is of interest and might be important, what is of interest but might be a waste of time, and what is of no interest at all, personal or professional. Teachers and students are guilty of not knowing how to question the authority of an information source, other than to say blogs must be relatively poor quality and the BBC must be of relatively high quality (both, of course, had had their moments). And again, not just students but for many teachers, too, it is not cool to have an extensive vocabulary to express oneself. We see a resistance in students to use words to say how they are feeling beyond 'good', 'bad' and fine (and I'd be advocating the use of sites like We feel fine to both educate our students and help counter this claim to some extent), and we also see resistance from some teachers to use a more extensive vocabulary to think about teaching and learning. Finally, both teachers and students, because we over test, tend to not want to do anything that doesn't fit into the test. We cut and paste without engaging with material, we can take tests but cannot learn.
    • Mark Boyle
       
      From Diigo
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