Skip to main content

Home/ UTWCIW/ Group items tagged web

Rss Feed Group items tagged

David Buehler

StumbleUpon - 2 views

  •  
    StumbleUpon, while blocked by our schools servers, might be helpful for teachers at home. After you create a free account, you can build your "profile". Your profile tells the website what you are interested in. There are numerous topics to check. After you have entered your interests, you click the "stumbleupon" button and the website will take you to a random web page that it things will interest you. You can either "like" or "dislike" each page that it takes you too, and the web site will learn more what you like. This site could be particularly helpful in finding activities for your students that you couldn't find by searching on Google. I just found out about this site from a friend, and so far I've found some pretty cool resources that I don't think I would have found otherwise.
  •  
    Wow, I just signed up... that is very cool. I think middle school and high school students would really like it. It would be very fun to use at school with the kids, but by only having control of topics and not knowing what you're going to get for content, we need to be cafeful. I really like it and can see spending hours in there.
  •  
    I submitted it for review. We'll see what happens.
Sarah Gorres

Visual Thesaurus - 1 views

  •  
    Looking for a synonym to jazz up a piece of writing? You, and students, can use visual thesaurus to find that word. The "visual" part of this online thesaurus stems from the web of words that results from a search. For example, if I was looking for a synonym for cool, I'd type the word in the search bar, and a web would be created with "cool" in the center. Stemming off the center is a color coded assortment of alternatives for "cool", and the colors are based on the meaning of "cool". What a fast and fun way to search for words!
  •  
    What I really enjoyed about this website was the opportunity for incidental learning -- unexpected learning on the way. As I child, I always enjoyed the encyclopedia. As I paged to my favorite section "dogs" I would find other articles I never would searched before. With this visual thesaurus, the user can search for one word and find herself learning others.
David Buehler

JW Pepper - 0 views

shared by David Buehler on 22 Mar 11 - Cached
  •  
    At this web site, students can hear pieces/songs that they are learning in their music class.
  •  
    I use this site all the time. You can often print a few pages of the songs as well!
Sussanah Sasman

WordPress - 0 views

  •  
    Free web software that can be used to create a blog or website! They just came out with a new, updated, more secure version too! I'm thinking of using this software next year to create a blog with my choir. Does anyone currently use this software and do you like it?
Bill Porter

Perform Everyday Tasks for Free | CatchFree - 1 views

  •  
    Useful collection of sites
Karen Ziegler

Fun Brain - 0 views

  •  
    Madlibs, sudoku, web books, reading, math! It's all here and it's FUN!!!
  • ...2 more comments...
  •  
    Games, flash cards, curriculum ideas
  •  
    Sorry, Laurie, I keep reposting your resources. I apparently have not mastered the search function yet :).
  •  
    My own kids like this site. It is a nice way for them to use technology in an educationally sound way. And yes, I have played some of these games as well. Fun!
  •  
    A fun site for K-8 activities
David Buehler

MusicTheory.Net - 1 views

  •  
    A great web site to help students learn musical theory.
  •  
    This site rocks! I can't believe I've never known about it! There were great programs and activities for teaching and practicing intervals which was the unit I just finished with my students.
Bill Porter

TodaysMeet - 0 views

  •  
    Backchannel creates a temporary chatroom that lets participants talk to each other.  Sort of like twitter, only just for that event.
Laura Kruschek

Google Sites - 0 views

  •  
    Google Sites allows you to create and share webpages. Google Sites is set up to help you create a web page (easily it states), collect your information all in one place, and control who can view it and edit it, which is a lot like Google Docs. There is also a learn more link where you can view a quick overview video to help get you started: http://www.google.com/sites/help/intl/en/overview.html This would be a great resource tool for collaborating on a group project.
Erin Freeberg

From Trivial Pursuit to Essential Questions - 6 views

  •  
    This resource provides excellent examples or "higher-level" or "essential" questions. Check out the article by McKenzie that looks at the differences between trivial, meaningless questions and those that truly encourage students to use critical thinking skills.
  •  
    I do liek this article. It reminds us that just asking questions of students is not enough. I also thought that the web was also helpful for a visual representation of the information. It does also tie-in with our class as it strongly relates to UbD, as the essential questions can guide your development of lessons and units.
Torey Allen

Quia - 2 views

  •  
    Using Quia, you can create your own or use other teacher's activities to provide students extra practice and extended learning time! There are activities in all subjects and levels and you can browse by category, activity type, or most popular activities. I found numerous Java games that were created to reinforce music skills. For example, my students could use the site to study for our upcoming terms, signs, and symbols quiz. There were free, online flashcards, matching, concentration, and word search games that reviewed all the terms I've been teaching. You can share all activities you create with other teachers and you can copy and modify other teacher's activities and contact them if you have a question. If you create a quiz in Quia, it will automatically grade it for you and track student's test scores throughout the year. You can also track how long a student spends on Quia activities. The site offers online surveys, activities in 100 languages and a calendar feature for communicating deadlines and assignments to students and parents.
  •  
    This site has pretty much anything you could want to help students practice or review content. I checked out the math, biology, and art sections and found literally all kinds of interactive games, flashcards, and quizzes on a variety of topics. The site is very easy to use and find the topic you need; the search function allows you to search by category or textbook. If you make an account, you are able to create your own activities and quizzes and also view your students' results for the activities they have completed. I will definitely come back here.
Bill Porter

Dipity - Find, Create, and Embed Interactive Timelines - 2 views

  •  
    Dipity allows the user to create a timeline that can make events come alive using media tools.
  •  
    Wow! What a great tool for making timelines fun and interesting for students!
  •  
    I will share this website with my own high school age children! It definitely gives students an opportunity to present information in an interesting fashion.
Erin Freeberg

Peanut Butter Wiki - 2 views

  •  
    Helps to collaborate and summarize collective notes
1 - 16 of 16
Showing 20 items per page