On Birds, Twitter and Teaching - NYTimes.com - 0 views
Voices | Powerful Learning Practice - 0 views
10 Awesome Free Tools To Make Infographics - 0 views
Once on this Island costume ideas - 0 views
Art Project, powered by Google - 0 views
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"What is the 'Art Project'?A unique collaboration with some of the world's most acclaimed art museums to enable people to discover and view more than a thousand artworks online in extraordinary detail. Explore museums with Street View technology: virtually move around the museum's galleries, selecting works of art that interest you, navigate though interactive floor plans and learn more about the museum and you explore.Artwork View: discover featured artworks at high resolution and use the custom viewer to zoom into paintings. Expanding the info panel allows you to read more about an artwork, find more works by that artist and watch related YouTube videos.Create your own collection: the 'Create an Artwork Collection' feature allows you to save specific views of any of the 1000+ artworks and build your own personalised collection. Comments can be added to each painting and the whole collection can then be shared with friends and family."
Teaching About Bin Laden - 0 views
The Bully Project - 0 views
WildEarth TV - 0 views
Puzzler - 1 views
Bachelor Of Science » 100 Best YouTube Videos for Science Teachers - 1 views
iPad apps - yiskg@weebly.com - 1 views
International School Rankings 2010 - May 1, 2011 - blog post - 1 views
Jonah Lehrer on Buildings, Health and Creativity | Head Case - WSJ.com - 0 views
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Article re how the color and shape of rooms affects the thinking that goes on inside the rooms... "They tested 600 subjects when surrounded by red, blue or neutral colors-in both real and virtual environments. The differences were striking. Test-takers in the red environments, were much better at skills that required accuracy and attention to detail, such as catching spelling mistakes or keeping random numbers in short-term memory. Though people in the blue group performed worse on short-term memory tasks, they did far better on tasks requiring some imagination, such as coming up with creative uses for a brick or designing a children's toy. In fact, subjects in the blue environment generated twice as many "creative outputs" as subjects in the red one. Why? According to the scientists, the color blue automatically triggers associations with openness and sky, while red makes us think of danger and stop signs. (Such associations are culturally mediated, of course; Chinese, for instance, tend to associate red with prosperity and good luck.) It's not just color. A similar effect seems to hold for any light, airy space."
Explore Science | GLOBE Program - 0 views
Figment: Write yourself in. - 0 views
How Shakespeare & Social Media Are Fighting Cyber Bullying - 0 views
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"William Shakespeare, the bard behind some of the greatest works in the English language, is coming to a Facebook page near you. Weekly Reader has teamed up with the Ophelia Project and White Plains High School to re-enact one of Shakespeare's plays on Facebook from April 26 to 28. Much Ado About Nothing will be presented on a special page through status updates, posts, pictures and videos. The students helped create separate pages for their characters complete with pictures, in-character bios and likes. The project is meant both as an educational resource and a tool to combat cyber bullying.
30 Free Creative Commons Photos for Education - 1 views
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