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Taylor Wilson

Teaching History with Technology - 0 views

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    This is a great teaching resource for History teachers. It shares some great ideas about lesson plans, projects, activities, etc.
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    I found this useful website that has many links and sources for history teachers trying to incorporate technology into their classes. They seem to provide quite a bit of support. I think I will like this site.
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    This is a great website for history teachers. It provides a comprehensive guide to teaching history with various types of technology. It includes different links to websites that provide technological lesson plans and activities, most of which I found could be very useful in a history classroom. The site also gives ideas on creating presentations and using multimedia in the classroom. Another great feature the site provides is the ability to discuss and collaborate with other history teachers - it provides blogs, Wikis, and even Google docs.
Rick West

Clif Mims - The Easiest Podcasting Tool - 1 views

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    Easy way to create podcasts from your cell phone.
Rick West

Elgg - Open Source Social Networking and Social Publishing Platform. - 2 views

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    An alternative to Nng for creating social networks.
Rick West

Learning Through Conversations | island.byu.edu - 1 views

shared by Rick West on 16 Dec 09 - No Cached
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    A BYU site for creating learning networks and communities.
Rick West

Tikatok - Imagine a Story. Create a Book. - 1 views

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    A cool self-publishing website where students can write and illustrate books and have them published for as little as $3.
David Wetzel

Science Newsletter Project: Creating Newsletters to Demonstrate Science Concept Underst... - 0 views

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    One strategy for teaching science concepts is through the use of student developed newsletters. This approach involves students in the learning process as they research information, write articles, and present these articles in an individual or class newsletter format. This newsletter project helps students improve their writing skills as they learn how to write in science.
David Wetzel

Tips and Tricks for Podcasting - Part 3 - 0 views

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    This is third and final installment on "Tips and Tricks for Podcasting" and focuses on GarageBand.
Rick West

Ex-Pixar Designer Creates Amazing Kids' Book for iPad | ChurchMag - 1 views

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    Cool new media book!
Rick West

YouthLearn: Learning - 0 views

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    THis is a great website with ideas and lesson plans for teaching students how to create instructional videos. Good ideas on storyboarding activities.
Rachel Affleck

Seeing poetry - 0 views

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    this is an interesting use of technology in the English classroom -- to express poetry through video
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    it also has tips for creating videos in the classroom that I thought were helpful
rickwesttest2

GoAnimate - Create your own cartoons and animations easily. Our tools are free and you ... - 2 views

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    A student found this website. As long as you focused on the content, and not just the animations, it could be a fun way for students to represent things they have learned in much the same way that they normally give presentations.
Rick West

Color wheel | Color schemes - Adobe Color CC - 0 views

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    a great tool for picking color strategies for themes.
Rick West

How Technology Is Warping Your Memory | The Creativity Post - 1 views

  • Last year at MIT, researchers identified a neural circuit that helps the brain to create long-lasting memories, and the circuit was found to work more effectively when the brain is actively paying attention to what it's looking at. Numerous studies have also found that when students multitask while doing schoolwork, they understand and retain less of the information.
  • The bottom line? If you lose the bigger story, you're likely lose the smaller details, too.
  • So-called "senior moments" are becoming increasingly common among younger people, recent data has found, and it's thought to be due, at least in part, to excessive reliance on technology. A 2013 Trending Machine national poll found that millennials (aged 18-34) are more likely than those over the age of 55 to forget what day it is (15 percent vs. 7 percent) and where they put their keys (14 percent vs. 8 percent). Gen-Yers even forget to take a shower (6 percent) more frequently than seniors. Rising stress levels (which may also have something to do with constant connectivity) could be a factor as well.
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