Skip to main content

Home/ UWCSEA Teachers/ Group items tagged settings

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Jeffrey Plaman

JiTT Resources - 1 views

  •  
    "The JiTT strategy is based on the notion of a feedback loop between the out-of-class assignments and the subsequent classroom activities. Based on the student responses, the instructor selects an appropriate set of items that will make up the lesson. The classroom experience then informs the choice of the next set of web assignments. Over the past seven years faculty across the country have developed a rich set of JiTT resources. To look at some examples please visit A JiTT Sampler. "
Louise Phinney

Impact: Earth! - 0 views

  •  
    This is an interactive where students can set up scenarios for a meteor hitting the earth.  They can set projectile parameters, impact parameters, target parameters and distance from impact to calculate the impact of a, hopefully theoretical, meteor.
Keri-Lee Beasley

Google Infographic - a set on Flickr - 1 views

  •  
    Clint's flickr set of the google search infographic broken up into A4 chunks for easier printing
Katie Day

Digital Roadtrip * Unique method for accessing student work on iPads? - 1 views

  •  
    "We all know that we can share via iTunes over USB to any Mac/PC with a recent version of iTunes. Well would you believe the same thing works without a cable and it doesn't have to be the Mac/PC that manages the devices. It means that any teacher can access all the students files on a device that has been "Saved to iTunes".  You can even pick up the work, mark it and hand it back to the iPad whilst the iPad is still being used by the kids (unbeknown to the user!). As consumers we can sync over wifi and share files via iTunes. You can do this with a class set of iPads by attaching each device once to the teacher's computer and checking the "sync over wifi" option and "enable". Don't sync -just unplug each device. Provided you are on the same network, you can then open and close files on the class set from your computer."
Louise Phinney

Tech Tidbits: Increasing Teachers' Digital Efficiency | always learning - 1 views

  •  
    essential productivity skills: Creating labels in GmailCreating e-mail lists in ContactsInstall Google Notifier to set up web Gmail as your default email client (this has saved me hours of work)Creating collections in Google Docs and organizing your filesMaking a copy of a document & saving for yourself (to edit)Sharing a collection with a group (made in your Contacts list) or a colleagueMake a Google Doc public, for linking on your class blogCheck the revision history in a Google DocCreating events in Google Calendar and setting automatic reminders via e-mailCreating repeating events in Google CalendarImporting the school's calendar into your own Google CalendarCreating a Google Reader account and subscribing to feedsCreate a bundle of feeds in Reader for each class you teachAdding feeds to folders in ReaderRecording screencasts in QuickTime
Jeffrey Plaman

The Definitive Facebook Lockdown Guide - Securing your privacy settings (Sept. 2011) | ... - 1 views

  •  
    Guide to the new Facebook privacy settings
Keri-Lee Beasley

Classroom Norms - a set on Flickr - 1 views

  •  
    Awesome set of pictures which could be used in a classroom as essential agreements. Simple, effective, great design.
Keri-Lee Beasley

Some thoughts on setting up Minecraft at school - EdTech Blog at Chatsworth - 0 views

  •  
    Very detailed post by Rob Newberry about setting up a minecraft activity at school. 
David Caleb

Reading photographs - 1 views

  • Photographs have tremendous power to communicate information. But they also have tremendous power to communicate misinformation, especially if we’re not careful how we read them. Reading photographs presents a unique set of challenges. Students can learn to use questions to decode, evaluate, and respond to photographic images.
  • What happened just before this moment, or just after it?
  • The photograph of a crowd of jubilant Iraqis toppling the statue of Saddam Hussein in Baghdad on April 9, 2003, is one of the most common images of the recent war in Iraq. A closeup shot shows a crowd of primarily Iraqis toppling the statue. A wide shot of the same scene would have revealed that the crowd in the square was made up of primarily US forces and journalists.
  • ...20 more annotations...
  • One type of photography in which setting is very important is travel photography.
  • Using landmarks, monuments, or famous natural elements in a photograph is a core technique for evoking a sense of place.
  • The photographer selects the focal point not only by focusing the camera but also through other techniques.
  • shutter speed to bring only one element into focus immediately elevates that to the most important part of the image.
  • one element in the photograph is strongly backlit, it may seem to glow and thus draw the viewer’s attention.
  • What is the photographer’s thought process as she composes, frames, shoots and selects an image? Listen as photographer Lisa Maizlish narrates the decisions she made in photographing the students featured on the PBS reality show American High.
  • viewers have to decide how to interpret a photograph’s context
  • information about the people, events, setting, and so on are made explicit by the photographer — there are distinct visual clues that tell us who the people are, what they are doing, and where and when the photograph was taken.
  • implicit — implied but not clearly communicated by the photographer, or left to be inferred by the viewer.
  • identities of the people
  • unclear
  • their purpose may be unknown
  • time and place may be difficult or impossible to discern.
  • simple "W" questions can be open to debate.
  • Viewers may not even realize that they are making those assumptions
  • Just as successful written communication requires that the writer and reader speak the same language, successful visual communication requires that the photographer and viewer share a common "visual language" of signs, clues, and assumptions.
  • Were your assumptions correct? Can you always trust your first instinct? (And even having read the caption, how much do we really know about these girls and their lives?)
  • a different culture might ask why this round brown object is
  • we have to be careful that we have enough cultural background in common with the photographer to correctly interpret what we see.
  • The photograph by itself tells us very little about what’s going on; we probably could have invented any number of captions, and you’d have believed us!
  •  
    Reading images - lots of good strategies here
  •  
    Reading photos
Keri-Lee Beasley

Easily manage all your social network settings - 1 views

  •  
    Change profile pics or settings on all your social media platforms using Bliss Control
Jeffrey Plaman

WWIII Propaganda Posters - a set on Flickr - 2 views

  •  
    Great set of posters on digital media
Katie Day

Learning Science Through Inquiry - 0 views

  •  
    <> Each one-hour program features classroom case studies and informative discussions. When you participate in the workshop in a group setting, you get the added benefits of peer interaction during pre- and post-viewing activities. The Learning Science Through Inquiry workshop provides a solid starting point to explore, discuss, and critique the inquiry approach - and ultimately put it to use in your own classroom.
Katie Day

iPads in Chicago Public Schools - 1 views

  •  
    how-to manage iPads in educational setting - instructions / advice
Katie Day

Decoding Learning report - Nesta - UK - November 2012 - 1 views

  •  
    "In the last five years UK schools have spent more than £1 billion on digital technology. From interactive whiteboards to tablets, there is more digital technology in schools than ever before. But so far there has been little evidence of substantial success in improving educational outcomes. Something is going wrong. Nesta commissioned the London Knowledge Lab (LKL) and Learning Sciences Research Institute (LSRI), University of Nottingham, to analyse how technology has been used in the UK education systems and lessons from around the world. Uniquely, we wanted this to be set within a clear framework for better understanding the impact on learning experiences. Decoding Learning finds proof of technology supporting effective learning, emerging technologies that show promise of impact, and exciting teacher practice that displays the potential for effective digital education."
Katie Day

Awareness Promoting Information -API- icons - a set on Flickr - 0 views

  •  
    appropriateness, articulation, change, criticality, deviation, inconsistency, responsibility, revision, safety, schedule
Louise Phinney

Mrs. Shelly Terrell: Building a Teacher Support System Using Collaborative Web Tools | ... - 0 views

  •  
    Schools have the ability to support teacher innovation, risk-taking, and collaboration by setting up a support and mentoring system in their schools.
Jeffrey Plaman

Supergiant Games | Bastion - 0 views

  •  
    Bastion is the first title from Supergiant Games, an original action role-playing game set in a lush imaginative world, in which players must create and fight for civilization's last refuge as a mysterious narrator marks their every move. Got a question about the game?
Jeffrey Plaman

An Illustrated Guide To Our Maddening Relationship With Tech | Co.Design: business + in... - 1 views

  •  
    Ah, modern life. The way we live now is intrinsically tied to increasingly pervasive technology, our relationship to which could be permanently set to "it's complicated." French graphic designer Jean Jullien presented his own playful take on our ever-evolving connection to gadgets, gizmos, and yes, human interaction for Allo?, currently on display at London's Kemistry Gallery.
Louise Phinney

Free Technology for Teachers: 3 Ways To Quickly Share Bunches of Links With Your Students - 0 views

  •  
    "If you have ever tried to get all of your students to the same set of websites at the same time, you know that just a couple of mistyped characters can create a frustrating experience. One solution is to post all of the links on your course blog. Another solution is to use a link bundling service that will group all of your links together into one package. Then instead of sending out a bunch of individual links you can just send one link that will open all of the bundled links for your students. Here are three services that you can use for just that purpose."
1 - 20 of 70 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page