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Keri-Lee Beasley

Classroom Collaboration Using Social Bookmarking Service Diigo (EDUCAUSE Quarterly) | E... - 0 views

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    A great comprehensive blog post on using Diigo for Collaborative Bookmarking. Great for people just getting started.
Katie Day

Diigo explained via Prezi | Quite Useful - 3 views

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    Prezi presentation on why Diigo is useful for teachers -- especially groups of teachers
Keri-Lee Beasley

Diigo Tutorial - 3 views

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    Comprehensive Diigo Slideshare (possibly a bit out of date)
Keri-Lee Beasley

Cyberbullying - List | Diigo - 2 views

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    George Couros's Diigo list on Cyberbullying.
Katie Day

Student Learning with Diigo - 1 views

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    a great website that introduces Diigo and its benefits for teachers and students
Louise Phinney

http://www.ijello.org/Volume6/IJELLOv6p175-191Estelles683.pdf - 0 views

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    an older research paper (2010) but puts forward a case for the use of diigo
Jeffrey Plaman

Student Learning with Diigo - 1 views

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    This site has tutorials and lesson ideas for using Diigo in education.
Louise Phinney

The 18 Best Free Web Tools Chosen By You - Edudemic - 0 views

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    Claco, ClassDojo, Diigo, DropBox, Edmondo, Evernote, Glogster, Google Apps, Google Drive, Google Hangout, KidBlog, LiveBinders, Pinterest, Socrative, ThingLink, Storify, Twitter, Wordle
David Caleb

Three Huge Mistakes We Make Leading Kids…and How to Correct Them - 4 views

  • Afterward, one group was told, “You must be smart.
  • The other group was told
  • “You must have worked hard.”
  • ...9 more annotations...
  • second group, most of the kids chose to take the test
  • Ninety percent of the kids who heard “you must be smart” opted not to take it.
  • second test
  • equally as hard as the first one
  • third test was given
  • The first group of students who were told they were smart, did worse.
  • The second group did 30% better.
  • Eight Steps Toward Healthy Leadership
  • Help them take calculated risks. Talk it over with them, but let them do it. Your primary job is to prepare your child for how the world really works. Discuss how they must learn to make choices. They must prepare to both win and lose, not get all they want and to face the consequences of their decisions. Share your own “risky” experiences from your teen years. Interpret them. Because we’re not the only influence on these kids, we must be the best influence. Instead of tangible rewards, how about spending some time together? Be careful you aren’t teaching them that emotions can be healed by a trip to the mall. Choose a positive risk taking option and launch kids into it (i.e. sports, jobs, etc). It may take a push but get them used to trying out new opportunities. Don’t let your guilt get in the way of leading well. Your job is not to make yourself feel good by giving kids what makes them or you feel better when you give it. Don’t reward basics that life requires. If your relationship is based on material rewards, kids will experience neither intrinsic motivation nor unconditional love. Affirm smart risk-taking and hard work wisely. Help them see the advantage of both of these, and that stepping out a comfort zone usually pays off.
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    What we should be doing to help our kids become more independent 
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    Dave, top article. I don't know what the technical term is, but I'm going to re-Diigo this with some Outdoor Ed tags? First part is expecially relevant
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    In fact, is it possible to re-Diigo it? I bet Jeffy Plaman will know...
Louise Phinney

How Social Media can Enhance Schools as Professional Learning Communities | resourcelin... - 2 views

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    The field of social media is a burgeoning area of communication, and one that educators cannot ignore. Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Diigo, GooglePlus - these platforms for communication are not going to go away; and while there is a great deal of negative media surrounding their use, they can be harnessed to create myriad possibilities for schools as learning communities. Current research only proves the dominance of Social Media as a modern communication medium
Katie Day

Christmas Related - List | Diigo - 0 views

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    Colin Gallagher's fun Xmas list of online creativity and fun.... e.g. ElfYourself, Make your own gingerbread, Snowflake Maker.....
nadinebailey

The Scientific Case For Teaching Cursive Handwriting to Your Kids Is Weaker Than You Th... - 1 views

    • nadinebailey
       
      But this article is written from a cultural viewpoint, in both Spain and France children learn to read and write using cursive before print because it helps with the boundaries of where words start and finish. But nothing in the article really examined a non-BANA perspective
Louise Phinney

Seth's Blog: When a conference works (and doesn't) - 0 views

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    When we get together with others, even at a weekly meeting, it either works, or it doesn't. For me, it works - If everything is on the line, if in any given moment, someone is going to say or do something that might just change everything - If there's vulnerability and openness and connection .If there's support If it's part of a movement
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