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Patrick Higgins

Google Reader -Patrick's shared items - 0 views

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    Here is the link to the items from the various RSS feeds I read. These are links to articles that I chose to "share" with whomever might be interested. If you were to do something like this, you could share this with students and mark articles for them to read entirely digitially.
Patrick Higgins

authorSTREAM Online PowerPoint Presentations and Slideshow Sharing - 0 views

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    Haven't seen this one yet but it looks like a great alternative to slideshare.
Patrick Higgins

The Lily Pad - 1 views

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    An outstanding take on Google Forms by David Wees. Great use of the format of creating multiple pages to make a choose-your-own-ending story. Will be sharing this one.
Patrick Higgins

Flickr: Photo-A-Day for Schools - 0 views

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    This looks fun. Would be great for a year end retrospective.
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    Take a photo a day in your school and share it on flickr. I tried this a few years back, but never stuck with it.
Patrick Higgins

Child Poverty Rate by Country - Swivel - 0 views

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    This one is better looking than the previous graph I shared.
Patrick Higgins

100 Informative & Inspiring YouTube Videos for Educators | AccreditedOnlineColleges.com - 0 views

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    While YouTube may be known for sharing silly videos or as a way to see your sister's children who live across the country, it is actually becoming a powerful form of online education. This listing provides a collection of videos that educators will find both interesting and inspirational. Whether you are working with students at the elementary level or with college-aged students, you are sure to find plenty of inspiration among these YouTube videos
Patrick Higgins

Blogs That Promote Unconventional Discussion : The Teaching Palette - 0 views

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    List of art teachers who are writing about their experiences in the classroom and sharing resources.
Patrick Higgins

Reading in a Whole New Way | 40th Anniversary | Smithsonian Magazine - 0 views

  • We can agree or disagree with Kevin, but the world keeps spinning. Screens are made and used in instructive and destructive ways. As an educator I need to learn to use screens as learning platforms so that I can model constructive informative behavior for the students I interact with. So here is how I came to write this post. I subscribe to Will Richardson's blog weblog-ed in my Google Reader. He shared a link to Kevin Kelly's blog Technium. As I read the blog post I used Diigo to underline and add sticky notes. I now have this annotation in my Diigo groups. I will Twitter this and add a link in the New Literacies Institute Ning at newlit.org. Kevin will sell a few more books, which I have hundreds of, and add more readers of his blog.
  • This article is very interesting because it made me think.And I thougt that I was right when I bought a computer for my 81st birthday.It has a wide screen,and I could enlarge the letters to be able to read it because my eyes are bad. I felt that I was not anymore excluded of the world.I had entered the 21st century. The last 12 or some years I spend writing a book by hand.Nobody would ever read a single word of the more than 400 pages.No editor would have accepted it.But is has been typed and now it is on the web.Everybody can read it,and sites of military history,dutch and french,published it or parts of it(I wrote it in french)because it is about the 1940-campaign. Thank you,dear author,you made me feel I was right.
  • Bring on the technology, we have plenty of idle brain space waiting to make use of it.
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    Kevin Kelly writes about how reading has changed from a silent, individual pastime to one that is collaborative, more physical pursuit.  
Patrick Higgins

Learned Helplessness | Practical Interactivity - 1 views

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    Hope everyone is doing well. I am still sharing things through here if you are interested. This article is fantastic in terms of how we should be learning.
Patrick Higgins

the Awesome Highlighter >> Highlight text on web pages - 0 views

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    Highlighting tool that is shareable.
Patrick Higgins

iCharts | create, share, and embed interactive charts online - 0 views

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    Charts for everything. Haven't tried to upload any data yet, but the available data is nice to look at. Try searching for something that interests you.
Patrick Higgins

Diigo Blog » Announcing "Diigo Educator Accounts" - 0 views

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    This is interesting. Diigo accounts for students to share resources.
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    Student accounts for Diigo.
Patrick Higgins

Comiqs | Create & Share your Comic Stories - 0 views

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    Another comic generator
Patrick Higgins

ToonDoo - The Cartoon Strip Creator - Create, Publish, Share, Discuss! - 0 views

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    Have your students create comics.
Patrick Higgins

The New Writing Pedagogy - 0 views

  • Moving to a new pedagogy is not easy for many district administrators, however, as the Web as a writing space is still primarily an unknown, scary place to put students. But as research is showing, students are flocking to online networks in droves, and they are doing a great deal of writing there already, some of it creative and thoughtful and inspiring, but much of it outside the traditional expectations of “good writing” that classrooms require
  • That change is spelled out clearly by the National Council of Teachers of English, which last year published “new literacies” for readers and writers in the 21st century. Among those literacies are the ability to “build relationships with others to pose and solve problems collaboratively and cross-culturally,” to “design and share information for global communities to meet a variety of purposes,” and to “create, critique, analyze, and evaluate multi-media texts.” Very little of that kind of work is possible to achieve without expanding the way we think about writing instruction in the context of online social tools.
  • “Using online writing tools will allow students to write whenever and wherever they feel inspired, and to be able to speak to an audience that is larger and more important to them than the traditional classroom,” Childers says. “There is a reason why we should constantly be looking for ways to incorporate more innovative writing opportunities into our curriculum.”
Patrick Higgins

Facebook for Parents - 0 views

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    Share this!
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    This is excellent for parents to understand.
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