Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or urlToday's Teens Can Be Adept Multitaskers, Study Suggests - 0 views
Interactive: Snake Oil Supplements? The scientific evidence for health supplements | Information Is Beautiful - 0 views
Search Education - Google - 0 views
A Higher Chance of Becoming Great? The "Twitter" Factor - The Principal of Change - 0 views
-
Isolation is now a choice educators make. We have access to not only information, but each other. We need to tap into that.
The end of 'just Google it': Why students need to be digitally literate - Innovate My School - 0 views
20 Questions To Guide Inquiry-Based Learning - 0 views
Rethinking teachers « Doing some thinking - 0 views
-
Teachers are no longer responsible for providing information
-
Teachers do have to be knowledgeable
-
Teachers should set standards
- ...2 more annotations...
Digital Information Fluency Model - 0 views
Facebook has improved its privacy controls. Should we trust it not to screw up again? - By Farhad Manjoo - Slate Magazine - 0 views
-
he master switches also don't affect what third-party applications can do on your profile
-
but they don't affect what Facebook calls your "directory information," which includes rules about whether people can search for you, send you friend requests, or see your list of friends.
Taming the Wild Wiki | Lesson - 0 views
-
Ask students what they think it means to say that a source is reliable. With the class, develop a definition of the term reliableas it relates to information sources.
Guest Blog: Reinventing Assessment for the 21st-Century | Edutopia - 0 views
-
Today's students' are unlike any other student in history; they have access to more information than any generation in history
-
At the beginning of each unit teachers present essential questions that are hovering over each lesson and are constantly referred to throughout the unit.
Mind Over Mass Media| The Committed Sardine - 1 views
-
NEW forms of media have always caused moral panics: the printing press, newspapers, paperbacks and television were all once denounced as threats to their consumers’ brainpower and moral fiber.
-
Experience does not revamp the basic information-processing capacities of the brain. Speed-reading programs have long claimed to do just that, but the verdict was rendered by Woody Allen after he read “War and Peace” in one sitting: “It was about Russia.” Genuine multitasking, too, has been exposed as a myth, not just by laboratory studies but by the familiar sight of an S.U.V. undulating between lanes as the driver cuts deals on his cellphone.
-
And to encourage intellectual depth, don’t rail at PowerPoint or Google. It’s not as if habits of deep reflection, thorough research and rigorous reasoning ever came naturally to people. They must be acquired in special institutions, which we call universities, and maintained with constant upkeep, which we call analysis, criticism and debate.
Visual-Spatial Learners - 0 views
-
share with you information about this important learning style, and to share with you about recognizing, assessing, teaching, counseling and living with visual-spatial learners.
The end of online privacy - The Globe and Mail - 0 views
-
Indeed, a variety of players – including state security agencies to Internet marketers to organized-crime circles – are creating an online world in which the very concept of anonymity has basically vanished.
-
“People at first thought anonymity was very simple,” he says. “It's the complete opposite: The Internet is a great tool for spying.”
-
“We're not working with any individual consumer information,” Mr. Green says. “In fact, we don't want it.” Instead, Generation5 says it focuses on balancing anonymity with consumer targeting.
« First
‹ Previous
181 - 200 of 271
Next ›
Last »
Showing 20▼ items per page