The Internet is an integral part of student life. It is how most students study, communicate and research everyday. Though the web often makes student life more efficient, those digital footprints may put personal information at risk if the right precautions are not taken. The following is a useful (and relatively quick!) guide to keeping students safe online
CIPA/COPPA compliance. This is to ensure student safety as well as monitor and filter their online behavior. As Web 2.0 becomes more popular and educational technology online sites replace desktop software, this has become more of an issue. A lot of subscription-based or ed tech sites require a student email address to create an account which can become a BIG issue when dealing with CIPA compliance, because a majority of students to not have a school email account. Here are 20 Web 2.0 sites that do not require a student email address to create an account. This list is in alphabetical order.
Interactive Whiteboard resources:
These pages offer ways for students to work with words, work with images, and collaborate to create/improve/decide on this shared student workspace in your classroom. Think of that big white thing (IWB) as the students' shared workspace for practice, discussion, creating, and problem solving. The Tips and Strategies page offers ways to structure time and classroom management to facilitate student access and use of the IWB.
"Here's a small piece of news that might mean a lot to teachers who assign research papers-and to the students who write them.
Last week, Google released some new features for Google Docs, its web-based word-processing software. The updates include a new item in your menu bar, called Add-ons, that gives writers access to a wide selection of new, third-party tools. Several of these apps are specifically designed for writing and evaluating research work.
The best thing about these new tools? They're free! This release from Google marks one fewer reason for teachers and students to depend on Microsoft Word, the proprietary and expensive software that has traditionally dominated the paper-writing process. Definitely welcome news for students (and adjuncts) on tight budgets."
Students with learning disabilities may have problems with reading, math, reasoning and recall. But given the appropriate tools, learning disabled students too can achieve academic success.The iPad has numerous apps to help learning disabled students compensate for their particular disability.
If you're looking for a kid-friendly website to direct your students to during centers, tech tools to assign to your students who need extra help (or want extra work), or new tools to engage your students in learning, this website is for you!
This website features a collection of free, kid-safe, online resources categorized by subject, grade level, and standard
(adapted from DC Public Schools Learning Standards).
Good site with explanations of online scams, ways to prevent & avoid spyware & malware, proper browsing techniques for students & parents.
Good website to familiarize yourself (students, teachers, parents) with best practices of safe internet usage.
On March 24, 2011, my classroom was awarded a 21st century model classroom complete with 30 iPad 2's.
Over the next five months, we will prepare to deploy 30 iPad2's so that 125 students may use them on a daily basis for the 2011-2012 school year.
Follow the documented, educational journey as our students discover the power of thinking, questioning, and creating in a classroom that uses iPad2's every day!
A great way to get students tweeting without actually tweeting. Exposing students to the concept of a tweet, writing in that medium, and digital citizenship/responsibility, without the specter of actually using the Twitter platform.
"Come and learn about the Google Apps Scripts - FormEmailer, Doctopus and Autocrat.
FormEmailer - Create a Google Form and provide feedback to students based on their submissions.
Doctopus and Goobric - Your digital copy machine to distribute Google Docs to your students and grade them with a digital rubric.
Autocrat - Create a Google Doc based on individual submissions on a Google Form. "
"If you are teaching with one, a few, or a class set of iPads, finding the right apps and project ideas for your students can be a challenging task. We've organized some of the best resources from Edutopia and beyond to help you figure out what tools are best for your early elementary school students. Explore different ways to integrate technology into your instruction!"
Digital Storytelling can transform your students' writing into a visual masterpiece that is filled with voice and emotion, while enhancing critical thinking skills. The iPad takes digital storytelling to a new level by making the process easier, and even more engaging for students of all grade levels as well as for their teachers.
This site will help guide you in what you need for success in the iPad Digital Storytelling classroom.
Official NYCDOE student intervention and discipline code. Beginning on page 17 are the K-5 discipline infractions and appropriate responses.
Among other things it outlines the various stages of cyber-bullying and the possible intervention strategies and outcomes.
This document, the Student Social Media Guidelines along with the Social Media InfoGraphics (which will be released in 2014), provides information about how to use social media responsibly, both within and outside the school community by:
- Outlining recommendations for healthy social media communications;
- Providing ideas about how to create a smart digital footprint; and
- Informing you about what to do if you become aware of dangerous postings or other hurtful information.
Here is a presentation you can use with your school staff, students and friends to bring them into the world of Diigo and Social Bookmarking. You can click to full-screen and present yourself or just share via your own network or email. Regardless of how you decide to share, these 7 slides will quickly persuade your peers that Diigo truly rocks.
In order to help educators integrate iPads effectively, we have compiled a list of apps focused on learning goals consistent with the CRCD framework. While many of these apps have also appeared in our iPads in the Classroom section, this list is driven by specific learning goals that promote critical-thinking, creativity, collaboration, and the creation of student-centric learning environments.