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Michele Mathieson

YouTube epub - 0 views

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    Video showing Pages doc export as ePub
Michele Mathieson

Spotting a Fake: Teaching Website Evaluation Skills | Education.com - 1 views

  • Test the wading pool. Younger students under grade six may not be ready to surf the vast “open Web,” warns Schrock. “They do not have the knowledge base to know if what they are finding is reliable, authoritative, and may not understand what bias is all about.” There is little authority on Wikipedia, she says, while a site such as BrainPOP, while colorful and interactive, doesn’t include citations. “I would rather see students use a juried directory such as www.homeworknyc.org for homework,” she says, which includes citations to information. Use kid-friendly search sites. An older student with training may be able to search the Web for a hobby – like skateboarding or a favorite young adult author – on search engines such as www.kidsclick.org, monitored by librarians though San Jose State University. Visit a fake site. Take a peek at www.allaboutexplorers.com, an intentionally fake research site in which the biographies of explorers are riddled with factual errors. Sir Francis Drake’s bio mentions artifacts like computer disks, while another page claims that Ferdinand Magellan’s expedition to the Spice Islands was financed by Bill Gates. Search for as many questionable facts as you can. Or, browse the stories at the mock site www.theonion.com and figure out which pieces of an article aren’t true. Detect bias. “One way to approach bias is to teach about advertisements and persuasion,” says Schrock. “Bias and persuasion seem to be closely linked.” Create a Web page about a topic you know well, and then use it to persuade others. For instance, your child may build a biased site that talks about why a Nintendo DS is better than a PSP. (He probably needs some media literacy training evaluating persuasive materials like commercials and magazine ads, says Schrock.) Be inquisitive. Always ask the question: “Who wrote this?” Click on the “About Us” page for more information. Find a “byline,” or the line attributing an article to an author. Scan the bottom of a website for a person or organization’s name, and then Google it. Look to experts. Brainstorm proven leaders in the subject you are researching and take note of their organization and affiliations they have. If you’re writing a report on gorillas, for instance, find out what organizations Jane Goodall has worked with. Check out their websites for further information and links to even more resources. Befriend your librarian. Use this free and friendly resource. “I suggest to parents that they talk to their local public librarian – students often can have home access to great subscription databases of information by using their library card number,” says Schrock. Beware of phony URLs. Check the URL and pay attention to fishy addresses. It’s not always effective to look at the domain – .com, .net, .org, .mil, .gov – as a way to determine bias or authenticity, warns Schrock. “Except for .mil and .gov and k12.us, anyone can have any domain.” Also, a site that asks for personal information to access a free, public site may not be legit. Check the copyright date. Most websites, especially frequently updated ones, display a “last updated” date or a year the site was created. If you see a date that’s a decade old (or more), it's wise to find a site with more recently written content (posted within the last several years). Create a shortlist. Over time, build a list of tried-and-true websites. Take note of the best websites on animals, history, sports, the environment, or current events, and return to this list when necessary. You will build your knowledge of the Internet, and learn which sites are reliable.              
lisacetroni

Student Choice in the Classroom -- Join Michele & Lisa in this discussion... - 41 views

Have you been more conscious about choice since we discussed it at our last TLT? Have you tried to implement choice in either bold or subtle ways? Anything to share at our next TLT meeting? Mark...

Student choice TLT

Michele Mathieson

Dream it! Design it! Do it! on Pinterest - 7 views

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    Karen has made a Pinterest page of books that support our Friday activities. Take a look!
Michele Mathieson

ALASmedia - FlickSchoolWiki - 0 views

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    Marco Torres is an amazing teacher, filmmaker, presenter. This is a page of resources from Marco that could be useful for our Fridays. Love to talk to anyone about it and how we could apply his ideas.
Michele Mathieson

Transform Chrome's New Tab Page With These 5 Extensions - 1 views

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    For everyone using Chrome, these look like great extensions!
Michele Mathieson

BalancEdTech - St Annes Belfield - Self Directed Learning Exploration - 4 views

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    Sara & Jordy's wiki page for us.
Michele Mathieson

10 ways to electrify class with Kahoot! | Ditch That Textbook - 1 views

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    A cross between Learning Catalytics and the traditional eclickers. Free to use and sign up. Try it out! If you want help with this, let me know. Link to the actual sign up page: https://getkahoot.com/
Michele Mathieson

Book creator app - 1 views

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    RLA- what do you think compared to Pages?
Michele Mathieson

Math Movies - home - 0 views

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    Wouldn't it be fun to have our students make a few of these videos and post them on this page? It looks like they have videos from a variety of places. Check out the math addition videos for ideas.
Michele Mathieson

Dgh - Early Dark Ages - 0 views

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    Watch the videos at the bottom of this page. Fun project for students. Could our 3rd & 4th graders do something like this?
Michele Mathieson

Making Deeper Learners | Connected Science Learning - 0 views

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    An interesting article that might help us facilitate student learning during FABlab and Quests. Take a look at the Learning Dimensions on page 11.
Michele Mathieson

Q-files - Children's Online Encyclopedia - 0 views

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    I will add to our Symbaloo page - looks like a good resource for student research.
Michele Mathieson

- Top 10 Sites for Educational Apps - 2 views

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    Great resource list of sites that review iPad apps.
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    You should visit the site called "Teachers with Apps" from this link. It is a blog that explains and reviews apps for all ages/subjects. Lots of great apps to download!
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    Also, the MindLeap page has awesome apps organized by grade level! Check it out!
lisacetroni

ICDL - International Children's Digital Library - 0 views

shared by lisacetroni on 11 Nov 11 - Cached
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    You may find this website interesting and helpful in promoting cultural awareness through literature. It's free. The books are actually photos of the pages of a real book... A little odd at first, but then, sort of quaint.
Michele Mathieson

How to Write Effective Driving Questions for Project-Based Learning | Edutopia - 4 views

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    Hmmmm... Do you think a Tubric will help you write Driving Questions? Check it out; you can make one. Watch the video on this link, then go to BIE to download the 2 pages you'll need to make it. If you make one, bring it to our next TLT meeting on February 14th.
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    I don't know.... I might try one, although the construction looks frustrating..... But there may be another way to achieve the same thing...... It's got me thinking....
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    I don't know if the tubric would help- I don't think 3 x5 cards would be unmanageable. Not sure though... What makes a good story? Or... What makes a story good?
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    Agreed. The Tubric is just a tool. I get excited about using DQ's as a springboard for projects. I think they improve the focus.
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    I'm interested to know that her PBL lesson included direct instruction and in-class practice. Was it considered PBL because it was answering a DQ, involving a real-life situation?
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    Also, I think the Tubric seems cool! Makes the task of creating DQs seem more fun and likely to be successful, compared to sitting down with a blank piece of paper. I would like to put our heads together and come up with some DQs we could use... Ooh, starting to get excited about the possibilities!
Michele Mathieson

Levels_of_Technology_Integration.pdf - 12 views

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    Take a look at this resource from November Learning.
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    I liked the progression in the use of technology. Here is another way I thought the lesson could be ramped up and use technology to it's maximum potential... Have students discover landmarks or fun facts about a certain capital and then take virtual tour of that city via Google Earth. Students could take screen shots of the landmarks and write one or two sentences about each one.
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    We are right to question the value of technology--especially depending on how it is used. Is it being used because we are told to use it, or is it adding value to instruction? More importantly, are students thinking and feeling more deeply? Some technology is not used to enrich the educational experience.
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    I compared the two sheets. Existing lesson has the students contacting specific people like state leaders and global peers, or other students. The 2nd page which "ramps it up" suggests actively seeking out the opinions and knowledge of others and publishing work on the web. But maybe it's OK to limit the contacts the students are making. Or does safety/security matter anymore?
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    I think that the idea of global learning through technology can be directly applied to the world language classroom. Language learning is really about communication (and the ability to communicate with others around the world), and the integration of technology into the classroom can allow students to form connections with other students throughout the world. I would love to start a twitter interaction with 3rd and 4th grade students and a class in Spain!
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