Skip to main content

Home/ UWCSEA Teachers/ Contents contributed and discussions participated by Katie Day

Contents contributed and discussions participated by Katie Day

Katie Day

Bloomin' iPad by Kathy Schrock - 1 views

  •  
    "Below you will find links to iPad applications that target the various levels of Bloom's Revised Taxonomy. I only included free apps that were "content-neutral" to make them usable across the curriculum. I also tried to include apps for the iPad only, but a few iPhone apps may have snuck in!"
Katie Day

Google+ For Educators - 2 views

  •  
    a Livebinder collection of links
Katie Day

National Gallery of Art | NGAkids home page - 0 views

  •  
    interactive art you can make online.... for kids...
Katie Day

WikiSummarizer - 0 views

  •  
    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)
Katie Day

Word Painting - Commas: They save lives! - 2 views

  •  
    funny poster showing the importance of commas....
Katie Day

buzztouch -- Free iPhone App Builder | Phone and Android Content management system - 0 views

  •  
    "Would you like to develop an iPhone or Android application? If so, it just got much easier with the Buzztouch content management system. Visitors don't need to know any coding, and after creating a Buzztouch account they can get started building their own application. Visitors should look over the "How Buzztouch Works" area to get acclimated to the program and they should also check out the "FAQ" section. This version is compatible with all operating systems and users will need to have access to an iPhone, iPad, or Android phone to test their application's functionality. "
Katie Day

The History of English in Ten Minutes - Open University - YouTube - 1 views

  •  
    10 videos Total length: 13 minutes Description: Where did the phrase 'a wolf in sheep's clothing' come from? And when did scientists finally get round to naming sexual body parts? Voiced by Clive Anderson, this entertaining romp through 'The History of English' squeezes 1600 years of history into 10 one-minute bites, uncovering the sources of English words and phrases from Shakespeare and the King James Bible to America and the Internet. Bursting with fascinating facts, the series looks at how English grew from a small tongue into a major global language before reflecting on the future of English in the 21st century.
Katie Day

Byliner - discover & discuss great articles online - 0 views

  •  
    another site like LongReads or The Browser or Arts & Letters Daily -- that curates great articles online
Katie Day

Giving One Percent - 0 views

  •  
    "Giving One Percent supports Australians giving their fair share to life-saving work with the world's poor. Everyone can give. We help you decide how much to give, who to help, and how. Take a look at our information, tools, links and support to help you make the simple decision to be part of the solution in your lifetime. "
Katie Day

TED-ED - Brain Trust - 1 views

  •  
    The TED-Ed Brain Trust is a private forum created to shape and accelerate TED's push into the realm of Education. The aim of this community is to assemble a new archive of remarkable TED-ED videos, each designed to catalyze learning around the globe. Unlike TEDTalks, TED-ED videos are less than ten minutes long and may assume a variety of different formats. They may be identified or created by any member of the TED-ED Brain Trust. To become a member of this Trust, please apply here.
Katie Day

Global Peace Index 2011 « Vision of Humanity - 0 views

  •  
    "The GPI, produced by the Institute for Economics and Peace, is the world's leading measure of global peacefulness. It gauges ongoing domestic and international conflict, safety and security in society, and militarisation in 153 countries by taking into account 23 separate indicators."
Katie Day

Worst PPT Slide Contest Winners | InFocus - 3 views

  •  
    Yes, a contest for the worst Powerpoint slides.... a bad example is worth its weight in gold -- see the winning entries
Katie Day

iLearn Technology » Blog Archive » Using Angry Birds to teach math, history a... - 2 views

  •  
    interesting blog post of how to use Angry Birds to teach a variety of things... also, I didn't realize you could play Angry Birds via Chrome - http://chrome.angrybirds.com/
Katie Day

lino - Sticky and Photo Sharing for you - 0 views

  •  
    an online web sticky note service that can be used to post memos, to-do lists, ideas, and photos anywhere on an online web canvas. ...
Katie Day

Inc. Research Institutions for Seismology - Education and Public Outreach - - 0 views

  •  
    Tons of great resources about teaching kids about earthquakes as well as seismic research, data, and activities.  Sponsored by the US National Science Foundation.
Katie Day

Paper Tigers - What happens to all the Asian-American overachievers when the test-takin... - 1 views

  • while I don’t believe our roots necessarily define us, I do believe there are racially inflected assumptions wired into our neural circuitry that we use to sort through the sea of faces we confront
  • Earlier this year, the publication of Amy Chua’s Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother incited a collective airing out of many varieties of race-based hysteria. But absent from the millions of words written in response to the book was any serious consideration of whether Asian-Americans were in fact taking over this country. If it is true that they are collectively dominating in elite high schools and universities, is it also true that Asian-Americans are dominating in the real world?
  • Now he understands better what he ought to have done back when he was a Stuyvesant freshman: “Worked half as hard and been twenty times more successful.”
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • Who can seriously claim that a Harvard University that was 72 percent Asian would deliver the same grooming for elite status its students had gone there to receive?
  • The researcher was talking about what some refer to as the “Bamboo Ceiling”—an invisible barrier that maintains a pyramidal racial structure throughout corporate America, with lots of Asians at junior levels, quite a few in middle management, and virtually none in the higher reaches of leadership. The failure of Asian-Americans to become leaders in the white-collar workplace does not qualify as one of the burning social issues of our time. But it is a part of the bitter undercurrent of Asian-American life that so many Asian graduates of elite universities find that meritocracy as they have understood it comes to an abrupt end after graduation
  • It’s racist to think that any given Asian individual is unlikely to be creative or risk-taking. It’s simple cultural observation to say that a group whose education has historically focused on rote memorization and “pumping the iron of math” is, on aggregate, unlikely to yield many people inclined to challenge authority or break with inherited ways of doing things.
  • Leadership Education for Asian Pacifics. LEAP has parsed the complicated social dynamics responsible for the dearth of Asian-American leaders and has designed training programs that flatter Asian people even as it teaches them to change their behavior to suit white-American expectations. Asians who enter a LEAP program are constantly assured that they will be able to “keep your values, while acquiring new skills,” along the way to becoming “culturally competent leaders.”
  • The law professor and writer Tim Wu grew up in Canada with a white mother and a Taiwanese father, which allows him an interesting perspective on how whites and Asians perceive each other. After graduating from law school, he took a series of clerkships, and he remembers the subtle ways in which hierarchies were developed among the other young lawyers. “There is this automatic assumption in any legal environment that Asians will have a particular talent for bitter labor,” he says, and then goes on to define the word coolie,a Chinese term for “bitter labor.” “There was this weird self-selection where the Asians would migrate toward the most brutal part of the labor.” By contrast, the white lawyers he encountered had a knack for portraying themselves as above all that. “White people have this instinct that is really important: to give off the impression that they’re only going to do the really important work. You’re a quarterback. It’s a kind of arrogance that Asians are trained not to have. Someone told me not long after I moved to New York that in order to succeed, you have to understand which rules you’re supposed to break. If you break the wrong rules, you’re finished. And so the easiest thing to do is follow all the rules. But then you consign yourself to a lower status. The real trick is understanding what rules are not meant for you.” This idea of a kind of rule-governed rule-breaking—where the rule book was unwritten but passed along in an innate cultural sense—is perhaps the best explanation I have heard of how the Bamboo Ceiling functions in practice. LEAP appears to be very good at helping Asian workers who are already culturally competent become more self-aware of how their culture and appearance impose barriers to advancement.
  • If the Bamboo Ceiling is ever going to break, it’s probably going to have less to do with any form of behavior assimilation than with the emergence of risk-­takers whose success obviates the need for Asians to meet someone else’s behavioral standard. People like Steve Chen, who was one of the creators of YouTube, or Kai and Charles Huang, who created Guitar Hero. Or Tony Hsieh, the founder of Zappos.com, the online shoe retailer that he sold to Amazon for about a billion dollars in 2009.
  • though the debate she sparked about Asian-American life has been of questionable value, we will need more people with the same kind of defiance, willing to push themselves into the spotlight and to make some noise, to beat people up, to seduce women, to make mistakes, to become entrepreneurs, to stop doggedly pursuing official paper emblems attesting to their worthiness, to stop thinking those scraps of paper will secure anyone’s happiness, and to dare to be interesting.
  •  
    fascinating article (May 8, 2011) in New York magazine by Wesley Yang
« First ‹ Previous 321 - 340 of 708 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page