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Richard Fanning

Create timelines, share them on the web | Timetoast timelines - 1 views

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    Create timelines, share them on the web. Timetoast is a great way to share the past, or even the future... Creating a timeline takes minutes, it's as simple as can be.
Sara Wilkie

#38 Skype Screen Sharing | Teach Gen Now - 0 views

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    screen sharing
Sara Wilkie

Diving Into Project-based Learning: Our Inquiry |Philip Cummings - 0 views

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    "I decided to use the teacher console on Diigo to create groups for each of my classes. I used handouts and tips from Bill Ferriter's Digitally Speaking Wiki to get everything set up and explain to the student how I wanted them to find, annotate, and share resources and information. (I highly recommend Bill's resources. They saved me a ton of time.) The students had used Diigo for research on a project during a previous school year so I thought with Bill's handouts and the boys' previous experience we were in good shape to begin. I soon learned differently. We have a 1:1 laptop classroom and the boys have a natural tendency to head straight to Google any time they have a question, but it was obvious after the first day that they weren't finding the quality resources they needed. Additionally, some boys still didn't know (or forgot) how to share to a group while others didn't know how to write a quality annotation. I had assumed too much. They needed what Mike Kaechele calls a "teacher workshop" on searching for information and on how to use Diigo. They needed me to model what they should do."
Sara Wilkie

{12 Days: Tool 8} Pinterest Cheat Sheet | Learning Unlimited | Research-based Literacy ... - 0 views

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    "Pinterest, a social sharing website that allow users to create and share virtual bulletin boards, has been the darling of social media over the past year. Its primarily female user base continues to grow by leaps and bounds. While you likely know teachers who have free Pinterest accounts, you may still be wondering if you belong on yet another social media site. "YES!" (Uttered quickly and with much enthusiasm!) And here's why. While Pinterest is exploding with fashion boards, trendy home decor, and to-die-for travel destinations (that sadly don't fit my budget), it also includes many boards for educators. Pinterest, heavy on visual appeal, can serve as a great resource for such areas as: classroom decor, language arts. content areas, lesson plans, technology tools, professional books, and much, much more! Your boards can also be a resource for students (age 13+ according to Pinterest regulations), teachers, and parents. If you're a newbie to Pinterest, listed below are a few must-know terms and how-to's. With a few quick tips, Pinterest can help you organize the internet jumble of resources for teachers and students. If you're a full-fledged addict, er, Pinterest Pro, skip to How Educators Use Pinterest or simply download today's Pinterest Cheat Sheet that also includes many ideas for boards."
Sara Wilkie

The Biggest Challenge to Overcome for the Effective Use of iPads at School « ... - 0 views

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    "A teacher's role in the classroom is to supply direction, maturity and wisdom. It is to raise questions, inspire endeavour and lay down challenges. A teacher brings purpose to the lesson. But to be effective in an iPad classroom, she must relinquish control over the tools used, allowing students to share the responsibility and joy of discovering and sharing solutions to achieve that purpose. I'm not saying that teachers are absolved of their professional responsibility for learning to use the technology. But they should admit to being learners, and not let that fact stop their students from using the device in unforeseen ways, in the pursuit of the class goals."
Sara Wilkie

Diigo user guide now available | Bright Ideas - 0 views

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    "We've now posted a user guide to help you get started with the bookmarking tool Diigo. This brilliant service allows you to save, tag and search your own bookmarks. Diigo also lets you create public lists of links and share your bookmarks with other people in groups, such as the #VicPLN Diigo group. Diigo is the perfect way to share bookmarks within your faculty, your class or your learning network."
anonymous

Top 10 ways to use technology to promote reading - Home - Doug Johnson's Blue... - 0 views

  • Young readers like know more “about the author” and the Internet is rich with resources produced both by the authors themselves, their publishers, and their fans.
  • Make sure older kids know about free websites like Shelfari, LibraryThing, and Goodreads. Biblionasium id great for younger readers.
  • Destiny Quest allow students to record what they’ve read, write recommendations, share their recommendations with other students and discuss books online.
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • While not designed just for sharing reading interests like the tools above, generic curation tools like Pinterest, Tumblr, ScoopIt - along with older tools like Delicious and Diigo - allow the selection and sharing of interests among students.
  • multimedia tools to generate creative responses to books - and then share them with other students online. Using Glogster, Animoto, poster makers, digital image editors and dozens of other (usually) free tools, students can communicate through sight and sound as well as in writing.
  • Creative librarians do surveys and polls on book related topics using free online tools like GoogleApps Forms and SurveyMonkey. (Collect requests for new materials using an online form as well.) Does your library have a Facebook fan page and a Twitter account to let kids know about new materials - and remind them of classics?
  • Get flashy with digital displays. 
  • less expensive to bring an author in virtually using Skype, Google Hangouts or othe video conferencing program.
  • Check out the Skype an Author Network website to get some ideas.
  • Take advantage of those tablets, smart phones and other student-owned (or school provided) devices by making sure your e-book collection, digital magazines, and other digital resources are easy to find.
  • Book Bowl in May. Students form teams and then we use the book bowl questions from the site to have a great competition.
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    "I am updating my workshop on how technology can be used to promote Voluntary Free Reading - the only undebatably fool-proof means of both improving reading proficiency and developing a life-long love of reading in every student. "
anonymous

10 activities to share learning globally (or locally) | Ditch That Textbook - 0 views

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    "Sharing learning is powerful because it makes students' learning relevant beyond their own classrooms."
Sara Wilkie

News releases 2010 - 0 views

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    "Women of Steel share stories for oral history project Sheffield's Women of Steel have shared their stories with students from the University of Sheffield to keep alive their memories of working in the city´s steelworks during World War II. "
anonymous

Protecting Reputations Online in Plain English - YouTube - 0 views

    • anonymous
       
      Great video to share with students to get them to think before they share!
Sara Wilkie

Derek's Blog » Thinking about BYOD - 0 views

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    "he topic of BYOD continues to be a hot topic in schools, with many schools I visit looking at investing in wireless technologies to support students (and staff) bringing their own device to school. While there appears to be agreement that the notion of BYOD is something to be pursued, there isn't a shared understanding of what that might mean in a school context. "
Sara Wilkie

UnBoxed: online issue 6, fall 2010 - 0 views

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    "The author shares findings from her action research, focusing on the question, "How can I use critique to improve the quality of student feedback, student work and create a culture of collaboration?" "
Sara Wilkie

Tips on Inspiring Student Curiosity - Teaching Now - Education Week Teacher - 0 views

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    "teacher-ready tips for stimulating curiosity in others. First, she suggests starting with the question, rather than the answer-which teachers will recognize as the foundation of inquiry-based or discovery learning (see: math teacher Dan Meyer's take on how to make math "irresistible" to students). She then suggests offering some initial knowledge on the subject. "We're not curious about something we know absolutely nothing about," she writes. Again, teachers may know this as "activating prior knowledge" or "setting the stage" before a lesson. Finally, she says it helps to require communication, or "open an information gap and then require learners to communicate with each other in order to fill it." The think-pair-share technique and vocabulary activities that require students to teach each other their words both exemplify this. What would you add to the list? How does stimulating curiosity gel with other motivation tactics-or should teachers think of curiosity and motivation as one and the same?"
Sara Wilkie

On close reading, part 2 | Granted, and... - 0 views

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    "a shared close reading of a complex text in which students propose emerging understandings, supported by textual evidence, with occasional reminders and re-direction by teacher-facilitators."
Sara Wilkie

How a Class Becomes a Community: Theory, Method, Examples For Your Hacking Pleasure | H... - 0 views

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    "About three years ago, I began inviting my student-led, peer-evaluated, collaboratively structured classes to think about the shape of a course: what defined it, what its participants could do to describe and circumscribe its practices, how a group of strangers, all enrolled in the same institutional experience of a "course," could come together as a community of choice, mission, shared purpose, and mutually beneficial learning. "
Richard Fanning

8 Steps To Great Digital Storytelling | Edudemic - 1 views

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     Consider Digital Storytelling as the 21st Century version of the age-old art of storytelling with a twist: digital tools now make it possible for anyone to create a story and share it with the world.
Sara Wilkie

Introduction to Cooperative Learning | Cooperative Learning Institute And Interaction B... - 0 views

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    In the ideal classroom, all students would learn how to work cooperatively with others, compete for fun and enjoyment, and work autonomously on their own. Cooperation is working together to accomplish shared goals. Within cooperative situations, individuals seek outcomes that are beneficial to themselves and beneficial to all other group members. it may be concluded that it is the drive for goal accomplishment that motivates cooperative and competitive behavior. Positive interdependence tends to result in promotive interaction, negative interdependence tends to result in oppositional or contrient interaction, and no interdependence results in an absence of interaction.
anonymous

New School Technology - The Ugly Truth of Technology Integration - 2 views

  • This is a crucial piece of information that a teacher must have to complete a lesson, and one that may cause frustration it has not been taught/shared.
    • anonymous
       
      There are lots of ways to work thru this, so it isn't as easy as it sounds. A lot of the solution is based upon your depth of knowledge. However, with good problem-solving skills (and sometimes a few friends or students) teachers can work thru it.
  • Are these sites blocked by a district web-filter?
    • anonymous
       
      As we all know, this can change daily! Frustrating indeed!
  • There will be frustration, messiness and moments of panic, but there can also be great moments of discovery, sharing, and learning.
    • anonymous
       
      Can't this also be the case when implementing a new strategy of any sort?
    • anonymous
       
      Think of problem/project based learning...
anonymous

TidBITS: How to Set Up and Use Google+ Hangouts - 0 views

shared by anonymous on 01 Apr 13 - No Cached
    • anonymous
       
      I have participated in a few hangouts via wireless. As long as you don't care about the video not freezing up, then NBD. However, if I were going to use as training options, I would need to go with Ethernet. Just something to keep in mind.
  • Google account, enabled for Google+
  • best quality recordings, make sure you have the desired person in the top spot (click their thumbnail in the bottom row
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  • screen-sharing capabilities. They’re view-only — you can’t control someone else’s screen through a hangout. You can share your entire desktop
  • You can also mute yourself manually by clicking the microphone icon at the top the screen.
Sara Wilkie

Dropbox and DropitTome for classroom use - National Technology in Education | Examiner.com - 0 views

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    "Now that half of the school year is over, teachers often find themselves needing a better organization plan for their classroom. Dropbox is a free service (there are paid levels as well) teachers can use to store and access their files from any device. It also provides a way to share files between classes and between students and teachers."
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