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Keri-Lee Beasley

Tweetdoc: Document your twitter event - 0 views

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    A neat little tool to make PDFs from your twitter event.
Louise Phinney

Kathy Schrock's - Google Blooms Taxonomy - 1 views

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    graphic depicting google tools to support blooms revised taxonomy
Keri-Lee Beasley

Ifttt: The cool tool that allows you to link together your Facebook, Twitter, Google , ... - 1 views

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    Article about 'if this then that' - a neat productivity tool
Katie Day

New Technologies Supporting Informal Learning - JETWI Final.pdf | Crocodoc - 1 views

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    Example of a tool called Crocdoc that allows you to upload PDFs and collaboratively annotate them
Katie Day

WikiSummarizer - 0 views

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    a tool from Wikipedia that summaries related entries (an interesting variation on the now-defunct Google WonderWheel) - use with students to help them find other articles/entries related to their research topic)
Sean McHugh

The Overprotected Kid - The Atlantic - 0 views

  • Sandseter began observing and interviewing children on playgrounds in Norway. In 2011, she published her results in a paper called “Children’s Risky Play From an Evolutionary Perspective: The Anti-Phobic Effects of Thrilling Experiences.” Children, she concluded, have a sensory need to taste danger and excitement; this doesn’t mean that what they do has to actually be dangerous, only that they feel they are taking a great risk. That scares them, but then they overcome the fear. In the paper, Sandseter identifies six kinds of risky play: (1) Exploring heights, or getting the “bird’s perspective,” as she calls it—“high enough to evoke the sensation of fear.” (2) Handling dangerous tools—using sharp scissors or knives, or heavy hammers that at first seem unmanageable but that kids learn to master. (3) Being near dangerous elements—playing near vast bodies of water, or near a fire, so kids are aware that there is danger nearby. (4) Rough-and-tumble play—wrestling, play-fighting—so kids learn to negotiate aggression and cooperation. (5) Speed—cycling or skiing at a pace that feels too fast. (6) Exploring on one’s own.
  • This last one Sandseter describes as “the most important for the children.” She told me, “When they are left alone and can take full responsibility for their actions, and the consequences of their decisions, it’s a thrilling experience.”
  • the final irony is that our close attention to safety has not in fact made a tremendous difference in the number of accidents children have.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • sometimes it seems as if children don’t get the space to grow up at all; they just become adept at mimicking the habits of adulthood. As Hart’s research shows, children used to gradually take on responsibilities, year by year. They crossed the road, went to the store; eventually some of them got small neighborhood jobs. Their pride was wrapped up in competence and independence, which grew as they tried and mastered activities they hadn’t known how to do the previous year. But these days, middle-class children, at least, skip these milestones. They spend a lot of time in the company of adults, so they can talk and think like them, but they never build up the confidence to be truly independent and self-reliant.
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    Sandseter began observing and interviewing children on playgrounds in Norway. In 2011, she published her results in a paper called "Children's Risky Play From an Evolutionary Perspective: The Anti-Phobic Effects of Thrilling Experiences." Children, she concluded, have a sensory need to taste danger and excitement; this doesn't mean that what they do has to actually be dangerous, only that they feel they are taking a great risk. That scares them, but then they overcome the fear. In the paper, Sandseter identifies six kinds of risky play: (1) Exploring heights, or getting the "bird's perspective," as she calls it-"high enough to evoke the sensation of fear." (2) Handling dangerous tools-using sharp scissors or knives, or heavy hammers that at first seem unmanageable but that kids learn to master. (3) Being near dangerous elements-playing near vast bodies of water, or near a fire, so kids are aware that there is danger nearby. (4) Rough-and-tumble play-wrestling, play-fighting-so kids learn to negotiate aggression and cooperation. (5) Speed-cycling or skiing at a pace that feels too fast. (6) Exploring on one's own.
Keri-Lee Beasley

10 Tech Tools for Writers - 0 views

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    Super ideas for writing
Louise Phinney

How To Cite A Tweet | TeachThought - 0 views

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    twitter, the plucky social media network with much of Facebook's reach but none of its self-adoration, received a vote of confidence from an unlikely source: the Modern Language Association. Long an indirect but potent tool of torture in English classrooms and University campuses everywhere, the MLA (and other cohorts, including APA and Chicago) released a format for quoting tweets in formal writing.
Mary van der Heijden

Mathematically Speaking | kindergartenlife - 3 views

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    One of the most powerful things I have learned is how amazing young children are in their thinking around mathematical concepts.  In Kindergarten I began developing a culture that not only had examples and artifacts of our learning, but ways for children to begin to use "math talk", which is the language I began modeling in explicit ways for children to see and began to practice in their own understanding of the concepts we are exploring. Through daily, explicit modeling through our daily number corner, math dyads and other mathematical work stations the children began to apply their understanding in meaningful ways throughout the day which has helped to build self-confidence in all of the children. What is important to understand here is that I did have to add something new onto my already full plate, but rather this was an opportunity to learn some new tools and a different way of thinking about what I was already teaching. This is one example of  where I started to see how rigor and relevance applied in my teaching and how vital it is and has become in my daily teaching practice.
Louise Phinney

Create Animation - Sketch Star - 1 views

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    easy to use animation tool with great tutorials 
Louise Phinney

Search Education - Google - 0 views

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    Web search can be a remarkable tool for students, and a bit of instruction in how to search for academic sources will help your students become critical thinkers and independent learners. With the materials on this site, you can help your students become skilled searchers- whether they're just starting out with search, or ready for more advanced training.
Louise Phinney

iPaddiction: Haiku Deck In Action - 1 views

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    presentation tool
Louise Phinney

Free Technology for Teachers: Create a Text Message Exchange Between Fictional Characters - 0 views

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    Good for any class doing a character study The ever clever Russel Tarr has developed a new neat tool for creating fictional text message exchanges between fictional and or historical characters. The Classtools SMS Generator is free to use and does not require students to log-in. To use the SMS Generator just click the left speech bubble icon and enter a message. Then to create a reply just click the right speech bubble icon and enter a new message. You can make the exchange as long as you like.
Louise Phinney

Avenue4Learning - The Tool Isn't The Problem - 1 views

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    Blog post about a schools experience with ipads
Sean McHugh

Mural.ly - Google Docs for Visual People - 3 views

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    Best Web 2.0 tool I've seen in ages. Click it to believe it.
Louise Phinney

Script Central - Getting Sand Everywhere - 0 views

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    great tools to automate from Jay Atwood at SAS
Louise Phinney

The Best Online Tools for Content Curation - 1 views

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    "Don't Bookmark, Curate Online Content"
Katie Day

Design Thinking for Educators - Toolkit PDF to download - 0 views

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    "This toolkit contains the process and methods of design along with the Designer's Workbook, adapted specifically for the context of K-12 education. It offers new ways to be intentional and collaborative when designing, and empowers educators to create impactful solutions. At IDEO, we've been using similar processes, methods, and tools for years in tackling some dauntingly complex challenges. More often than not, we've experienced how Design Thinking helps to get to the next step. "
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