Skip to main content

Home/ techleadership/ Group items tagged Non

Rss Feed Group items tagged

seantheoret

Virtual Nerd Math Videos - 0 views

  •  
    Virtual Nerd's patent-pending tutorial system provides in-context information, hints, and links to supporting tutorials, synchronized with videos, each 3 to 7 minutes long. In this non-linear system, users are free to take whatever path through the material best serves their needs. These unique features make Virtual Nerd a viable alternative to private tutoring.
kaliasnow

Understand trait theory of leadership is and how you can adopt some of the required cha... - 0 views

  • Trait theory of leadership is one of the first academic theories of leadership and attempts to answer why some people are good leaders and others are not.
  • Proponents to this theory, which is now considered largely out of date, believe that leadership development consists of identifying and measuring leadership qualities, screening potential leaders from non-leaders, and then training those with potential.
  • As a result, it is prudent to first understand these ‘traits’ and then develop areas of weakness, in order to become a great leader yourself.
Chelsea Turley

2¢ Worth - 0 views

  • If you can’t point to it, how do you describe it to non-educators? As I wrote in a previous blog, I suspect that an answer might be to focus more on “Student 2.0,” someone we can point to – and then design education around that
  • failure is an essential part of learning. I thought that this was an interesting acronymic arrangement for failure. F - First A - Attempt I - In L - Learning
  •  
    Blog about "teaching and learning in the new information landscape"
leahammond

Student Rights and Responsibilities in the Digital Age: A Guide for Public School Stude... - 0 views

  • You have the right to express yourself online, whether you are writing e-mails, posting to a blog, updating a homepage, or talking in a chat-room. Yet you also are responsible for your actions as they affect others
  • The U.S. Constitution and the Washington Constitution guarantee freedom of expression for everyone, including students. Students do not give up their constitutional rights when they walk onto school grounds. Whether you want to comment on a new school rule, gay rights, teen pregnancy, or the latest national news, you have the right to express your ideas, including those that are controversial. But there are limits
  • such as giving a sexually suggestive speech at a school assembly, or promoting illegal drug use at a school functio
  • ...16 more annotations...
  • But in most situations, school administrators and teachers cannot prevent you from saying something just because it is controversial.
  • true threat A defamatory statement Obscene
  • True Threats Whether you are in school or not, online or in-person, the right to free speech does not protect speech that a reasonable person would interpret as a serious expression of your desire and ability to harm him/her.
  • Defamatory Statements The right to free speech also does not protect false personal attacks against another person that are untrue, that harm someone's reputation, and that you knew, or should have known, were untrue when you said or wrote it.
  • Obscene Speech The right to free speech does not protect speech that deals with sex in a manner appealing to purely lustful interests in a patently offensive manner, and without serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.
  • For speech to be considered a "true threat," it must be something that a reasonable person would interpret as a serious expression of an intention to harm him/her.
  • If the school provides students with an e-mail address, it can impose rules on its use. For example, it can require that the address be used only for school-related purposes and can prohibit using the account in a way that interferes with another student's learning, such as sending flames or bullying messag
  • It may also monitor what you view, send, or receive on school-provided computers or e-mail account
  • Your school may prohibit all access to the Internet on any computer. Or your school may prohibit using school computers to access the Internet, including sites such as Facebook or YouTube, or using Hotmail or Gmail accounts, if school officials believe access is disruptive to the schoo
  • When you are using the school's computer and Internet access, school officials can see what you are sending and receiving onlin
  • Check your personal e-mail or non-school-related websites outside of school, on your own time, with a computer that does not belong to the school.
  • But merely because you are off campus, you are not free to say just anything. Remember, state and federal laws make it illegal to post threats of violence against a person or to advocate certain illegal action
  • Posting information on the Internet can be like publishing it in the newspaper. If the website is public, anyone can look at i
  • Keep in mind that school officials, college admissions officers, and potential employers are free to look at it.
  • Other people could take your posting and copy it to another website where you can't delete it
  • What's more, what you put on a public website may stay on the Internet foreve
dejalm

(PDF) ENSURING ETHICS AND EQUITY: POLICY, PLANNING, AND DIGITAL CITIZENSHIP - 0 views

  •  
    Overview of mobile tech and digital citizenship within classroom
  •  
    Overview of mobile tech and digital citizenship within classroom focusing on design and interactions
1 - 6 of 6
Showing 20 items per page