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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Michele Mathieson

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.              
Michele Mathieson

Prezi - The Zooming Presentation Editor - 2 views

shared by Michele Mathieson on 18 Sep 11 - Cached
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    I'm really liking this presentation tool.  Watch the intro video.  Anyone want to try one?  Gladly work with you! Lisa - Let's use this in our next TLT meeting.
Michele Mathieson

FlipSnack | My flipping books - 0 views

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    Will not work on iPad, but seems to have a lot of choices if you want to create a flip book for a device that uses flash player.
Michele Mathieson

New Educational iPad Apps and Books for Kids - 2 views

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    Good preschool, junior k apps
Michele Mathieson

ALA | AASL Top 25 Websites for Teaching and Learning - 1 views

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    Tagxedo, edistorm, kerpoof, and more. Check out Dipity for creating timelines. Fun, creative websites we could be using. Think about using the websites both on the iPad, but also in the computer labs.
Michele Mathieson

MIND Research Institute - About Mind - 2 views

  • The MIND Research Institute enables elementary and secondary students to reach their full academic and career potential through developing and deploying math instructional software and systems. A non-profit organization, MIND also conducts basic neuroscientific, mathematics, and education research to improve math education and advance scientific understanding.
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    This is where the game Kick Box came from that I shared with the students during our TAC classes.
Michele Mathieson

Book creator app - 1 views

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

iPhone apps and iPad apps | Appolicious ™ App Directory - 1 views

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    Go to Education on the left hand side. Amazing amount of good quality apps. Categories very helpful. Found app for kindergarten patterns this way.
Michele Mathieson

Qwiki Embraces HTML5 And Takes The Next Content Step With The Qwiki Editor | TechCrunch - 0 views

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    Andrew - remember Qwiki? If this comes through, what a great tool for Current Events. Could be instead of the newspaper we used to do. Create your own Qwiki!
Michele Mathieson

Enabling and adding to the Bookmarks Bar in Safari for iPad [How To] | Cult of Mac - 1 views

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    If bookmark bar does not show up, try this. So if you have installed the web highlighter and it does not show up under the tool bar when you open Safari, try this fix.
Michele Mathieson

ShowMe - The Interactive Learning Community - 4 views

  • Learn and teach anything.
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    Go to Browse and see a great sample of ShowMe  tutorials.  Wouldn't it be great for our students to start making a library of lessons?  Or perhaps posting directions to a complicated homework assignment or project?
Michele Mathieson

Tools - 1 views

shared by Michele Mathieson on 05 Sep 11 - Cached
  • Diigo iPad, access my library and add notes. Diigo Browser for iPad, the best browser on iPad. Bookmark to Diigo with annotation and offline reading.
    • Michele Mathieson
       
      Tools to use with Diigo
Michele Mathieson

62 things you can do with Dropbox | Web | Macworld - 2 views

  • 6 Scan important personal documents—your passport, driver’s license, marriage certificate, and so on—and store the scans in Dropbox; that way, you can get to them anytime you need to provide a copy.
  • Archive the original installation files of your apps so that you can install (or reinstall) them as necessary
  • Download PDF copies of the user manuals for products you own
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Give meeting participants iPads, and sync all of those tablets to the same Dropbox folder.
  • To share work files among coworkers, store them in Dropbox’s Public folder
Michele Mathieson

Unable to install web highlighter, ipad - 4 views

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    If the web highlighter is not installing properly, try this fix.
Michele Mathieson

What is confusing on Diigo? - 24 views

Diigo
started by Michele Mathieson on 04 Sep 11 no follow-up yet
  • Michele Mathieson
     
    Please add a comment to this thread so I can make screenshots and tutorials for us.
    I became confused with the different viewing options and which one does what.
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