Skip to main content

Home/ SJC English KLA/ Group items tagged sharing

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Jenny Gilbert

SafeShare.TV - The Safest Way To Share YouTube videos - 0 views

  •  
    Not only does SafeShare.TV remove distracting and offensive elements around YouTube videos, but it also allows you to crop videos before sharing them.
Jenny Gilbert

Awesome Highlighter :Highlight and share in education ~ Educational Technology - 0 views

  • There are several ways educators can use Awesome Highlighter , here are some suggestions : Teachers can use it to show students the important parts of a lesson Teachers share links of Highlighted text of relevant interest with students to save them time Students can use it to share referencing quotes between each other They can also use it to gather information for research and classroom project
Jenny Gilbert

BBC - Skillswise - Lesson plans - 0 views

  •  
    These pages provide you, the tutor, with the opportunity to share your favourite lesson plans with others. Great variety - especially suited to VCASL literacy type activites and a range of learner levels.
Jenny Gilbert

Googledocsdocs.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

  •  
    A pdf on how you can use google docs to create and collaborate on documents - useful for avoiding those problems of docs at work/home- use google docs and they are available in both places. Also useful for creating docs as a class as they can also be shared and edited.
Jenny Gilbert

Getting Started With Diigo.pdf - File Shared from Box.net - Free Online File Storage - 0 views

  •  
    this is a useful intro to diigo
Jenny Gilbert

Find and share documents on English - docstoc - 0 views

  •  
    searchable docs. This link is for english docs - many other categories.
Jenny Gilbert

Academics- rubrics - 0 views

  • Rubrics provide clear criteria for evaluating a product or performance on a continuum of quality.  Rubrics are not simply checklists with point distributions or lists of requirements.  Well designed rubrics have the following in common: 1. They are task specific: The more specific a rubric is to a particular task, the more useful it is to the students and the teacher.  The descriptors associated with the criteria should reference specific requirements of the assigned task and clearly describe the quality of work at each level on the rubric. The rubrics to the left are all posted as Word documents so that teachers can tailor them to a particular task. 2. They are accompanied by exemplars: The levels of quality described in the rubric need to be illustrated with models or exemplars.  These anchor papers help both the students and the teacher to see and understand what quality work looks like as it is described in the rubric.  These models or exemplars can come from past student work or the teacher can create a model to share with the class. 3.  They are used throughout the instructional process: The criteria used to evaluate student work should be shared as the task is introduced to help students begin with the end in mind.  Rubrics and models should also be referenced while the task is being completed to help students revise their work.  They should also be used after the task is complete, not only to evaluate the product or performance, but also to engage students in reflection on the work they have produced. Ideally, students should be involved in the process of generating rubrics through the careful analysis of exemplars; by studying the models, students draw inferences about the criteria that are important to a successful product and then describe different levels of performance for each criterion.
Jenny Gilbert

Why Tweet - Google Docs - 0 views

  •  
    In spite of disparaging remarks about twitter I hear at school it is my second most favourite application for gaining access to shared teaching resources and inspiration on the web. perhaps some of these links may open the eyes of the naysayers in our college.
Jenny Gilbert

Briefly Noted: Practicing Useful Annotation Strategies - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  •  
    Andrew Williamson 07 Mar 11 10:40:00 - This is a fantastic web 2.0 tool. Upload images and annotate. You can other embed media inside the annotations. Annotations pop up as you click or hover over the objects you add. You can embed the annotated image into webpage or blog. This could be a useful tool for teachers and students. Lots of scope for creativity with layers etc. You can share to a group and set editing permissions for public or restricted people/groups for collaboration purposes
Jenny Gilbert

elemenous's pln Bookmarks on Delicious - 0 views

shared by Jenny Gilbert on 21 Oct 09 - Cached
  •  
    a shared list of bookmarls on building PLN's
Jenny Gilbert

Simple private real-time sharing and collaboration by drop.io - 0 views

  •  
    I wonder if this is any better or worse than google?
Jenny Gilbert

Digital Storytelling: A Tutorial in 10 Easy Steps - 0 views

  •  
    Students can share their work with their global2 classroom blog - if you set one up.
Jenny Gilbert

Online Course Lady: Writing with Aesop: Conjunctive Adverbs - 0 views

  •  
    Students need to learn when and how to sue these to help their writing flow well. This is a great page to share with them. 
Jenny Gilbert

Why academics need to think of themselves as writers | Higher Education Network | Guard... - 0 views

  • what is a writer?" (I must admit I didn't come up with this brilliant idea, but adapted it from a suggestion from another instructor.) Students would always come up with different ideas about what that meant, but more often than not they never talked about themselves as writers. They thought of published authors as writers. They thought of people who sat in a sunlit room all day with a stack of white pages (or in front of a computer) as writers. They thought of people who were paid to write as writers. My students often did not think of themselves, or their instructors, as writers.
  • tell students on a regular basis that writing isn't only important because they need to graduate or pass a class but because it is the key to engaging other scholars in conversation. Even in informal media such as Twitter or Facebook we write to get our ideas across or to interact with other academics. And even though we can argue that academic writing is not the same as tweeting, the rules of engagement are similar: we value clear, well-argued writing in each case. We value thoughts that are well articulated. We value creative, interesting posts that steer away from the clichés. Therefore, I think the most important advice I can share with my writers is this: think of yourselves as writers.
  • I believe that thinking of yourself as a writer can change the way you feel about writing in general
1 - 20 of 29 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page