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Robin Galloway

Harvard and M.I.T. Offer Free Online Courses - 0 views

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    The latest partnership to offer free massively open online courses (MOOCs). Good article outlining the history of such initiatives. 
Daniel Lang

Sheppard Software - 0 views

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    Fantastic website that has great resources for educators and for those wanting to learn about all kinds of subjects. Includes games for learning math skills, world geography, science, and more.
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    Great tool for teachers and students alike - especially if you're like me and want to brush up on some of the basics (though this has more advanced lessons as well)!
Jennifer Roche

Teaching Article: How to be an Unforgettable Teacher - 2 views

  • 1) A Great Teacher Will Always Be There- If you are not in your classroom, you are not teaching. Yes, teachers must take days off occasionally, but do not make it a habit. If you are feeling a little sick, unless it is serious, show up! A sick regular teacher is ten times better for his or her students than a healthy sub is. Regular attendance is a must. Be proud to have a perfect attendance record.
    • Jennifer Roche
       
      Resourceful information for when we become teachers!
Mason Nichols

Stock Up & Save on Back-to-School Basics! - 0 views

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    Discount for teacher supplies! 
Robin Galloway

Students Speak Up in Class, Silently, via Social Media - 0 views

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    Highlights Iowa teachers and students' use of backchannels in the classroom
studern

Using Smart Boards in the Classroom - 0 views

    • studern
       
      In my high school the teachers would use the smart boards very interactively. Such as in physics and math, the teacher would have lessons prepared and saved on the smart board and then have questions through out the lesson for students to come up and do. This way the teacher could see if we were understanding the lesson throughout it. It was kind of like immediate feedback for a teacher and student because the student would also get to see the correct answer immediately after they did the problem.
Morgan Malskeit

Worksheets & Handouts | Play and learn: Being online - 0 views

  • Today, children are going online at an increasingly young age; therefore this book aims at introducing concepts of modern technology in their daily vocabulary and activities. Whilst this activity book offers children from 4 to 8 years of age 30 pages of fun and games, it also leads them to sharpen their basic language and mathematical, social and cultural skills. It gives them a glimpse of the impact modern technology can have on their everyday life. Above all it offers an opportunity for parents and teachers to sit together with their children and discuss these important issues. Although the activity book was created in such a way that young children can enjoy and do the games alone, many of the exercises do have a deeper level. The booklet endeavours to encourage parents and teachers to talk about topics such as privacy and modern technology with their children and pupils starting from a very young age as these issues undoubtedly already play an important role in their lives. The table on page 4 offers parents and teachers an overview of the themes that are touched upon and the exercises that go with them. Additional information can be found at www.saferinternet.org. We encourage you to read these guidelines as they will provide more sample information about the pedagogical objectives behind each game and the messages the children will hopefully pick up
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    What technology can have on peoples lives and the outcomes of it.
lizr10

Welcome to Twitter - Login or Sign up - 0 views

shared by lizr10 on 16 Oct 14 - No Cached
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    Great way to see what people are talking about. Good way to get information for you to use in your classroom
iupdateyou123

Pleural Mesothelioma - 0 views

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    Pleural Mesothelioma
Damian See

Five Research-Driven Education Trends At Work in Classrooms | MindShift - 0 views

  • QUESTIONING HOMEWORK The growing movement against homework in the U.S. challenges the notion that the amount of homework a student is asked to do at home is an indication of rigor, and homework opponents argue that the increasing amount of “busy work” is unnecessarily taking up students’ out-of-school-time. They argue that downtime, free play, and family time are just as important to a child’s social and emotional development as what happens in school. Some research has shown that too much homework has “little to no impact” on student test scores. Other research on how brains work challenges the common method of asking students to practice one discreet skill at home. Overall, there’s a push to reevaluate the kinds of work students are being asked to do at home and to ask whether it adds value to their learning. If the work is repetitive or tangential, it may add no real value, and teachers across the country are starting to institute no-homework policies. Even principals are starting to revolt and schools are instituting “no homework” nights or substituting “goals” for homework.
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    A good article for ideas to use in the classroom.
tuttleh

Edmodo | Where Learning Happens | Sign up, Sign In - 0 views

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    Edmodo is a great website students can use to connect to other students!
futuristspeaker

10 Unanswerable Questions that Neither Science nor Religion can Answer - Futurist Speaker - 2 views

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    A few years ago I was taking a tour of a dome shaped house, and the architect explained to me that domes are an optical illusion. Whenever someone enters a room, their eyes inadvertently glance up at the corners of the room to give them the contextual dimensions of the space they're in.
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