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Mary van der Heijden

Secrets to attention-grabbing IWB content | News | eClassroom News - 1 views

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    many wonder how to make the jump from passive teacher lectures to truly interactive and engaging lessons.
Katie Day

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

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    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.
Louise Phinney

29 Ways To Stay Creative! « The Ins & Outs - 1 views

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    interesting video
Louise Phinney

A Periodic Table of Visualization Methods - 1 views

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    found from link in twitter
Keri-Lee Beasley

25 Google+ Tips to Enhance Your Google Plus Experience - 1 views

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    Good starting tips for Google+
Keri-Lee Beasley

How to Chat with People in your Google+ Circle - 1 views

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    More tips for Google+ 
Keri-Lee Beasley

YouTube - 2aCreative Commons Kiwi 2c 0f - 1 views

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    Great video on Creative Commons which clearly explains the licences. 
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    Really like this-we should show this in week zero to all..
Katie Day

Bloomin' iPad by Kathy Schrock - 1 views

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    "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

BBC News - Nature's hidden prime number code - 1 views

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    a good example of prime numbers in nature -- and why they are important, e.g., for a kind of cicada which has a 13-year cycle... "Because 13 and 17 are both indivisible this gives the cicadas an evolutionary advantage as primes are helpful in avoiding other animals with periodic behaviour. Suppose for example that a predator appears every six years in the forest. Then a cicada with an eight or nine-year life cycle will coincide with the predator much more often than a cicada with a seven-year prime life cycle. These insects are tapping into the code of mathematics for their survival. The cicadas unwittingly discovered the primes using evolutionary tactics but humans have understood that these numbers not just the key to survival but are the very building blocks of the code of mathematics."
Louise Phinney

MrNussbaum.com - A Thousand Sites in One; Educational Games in math, reading, science, ... - 1 views

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    some okay games for language arts and math
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

ISB Parent Connect Program - 1 views

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    ISB's Parent Connect programme
Keri-Lee Beasley

Parent Technology & Literacy Coffee Morning: Internet Safety | - 1 views

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    YIS parent coffee morning follow up. An interesting blog to read about what was discussed & shared with parents. Great resources listed too :-)
Louise Phinney

The Innovative Educator: The 5 Cs to Developing Your Personal Learning Network - 1 views

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    In the 21st century teachers are no longer the sole imparters of information.  Instead their role shifts to empowering students to learn independently in part by developing personal learning networks in areas of passions, talents, and interests.
Louise Phinney

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

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    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
Keri-Lee Beasley

Library | 60second Recap - 1 views

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    60 second summary videos of major books kids would study at school (e.g. Romeo & Juliet, 1984, Pride & Prejudice). Great idea for tech integration: could do 60 second summaries of a chapter, a whole book, or of a character.  Would be good to show kids too, but had some rather inappropriate ads on some of the ones I saw, which is a shame.
Katie Day

Animated Sheet Music: "So What" by Miles Davis - YouTube - 1 views

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    watch music come alive.... note by note.... fascinating.... and great music -- the guy who has done it has several others....
Katie Day

Collaborative Learning for the Digital Age - The Chronicle Review - The Chronicle of Hi... - 1 views

  • We used a method that I call "collaboration by difference." Collaboration by difference is an antidote to attention blindness. It signifies that the complex and interconnected problems of our time cannot be solved by anyone alone, and that those who think they can act in an entirely focused, solitary fashion are undoubtedly missing the main point that is right there in front of them, thumping its chest and staring them in the face. Collaboration by difference respects and rewards different forms and levels of expertise, perspective, culture, age, ability, and insight, treating difference not as a deficit but as a point of distinction. It always seems more cumbersome in the short run to seek out divergent and even quirky opinions, but it turns out to be efficient in the end and necessary for success if one seeks an outcome that is unexpected and sustainable. That's what I was aiming for.
  • had the students each contribute a new entry or amend an existing entry on Wikipedia, or find another public forum where they could contribute to public discourse. There was still a lot of criticism about the lack of peer review in Wikipedia entries, and some professors were banning Wikipedia use in the classroom. I didn't understand that. Wikipedia is an educator's fantasy, all the world's knowledge shared voluntarily and free in a format theoretically available to all, and which anyone can edit. Instead of banning it, I challenged my students to use their knowledge to make Wikipedia better. All conceded that it had turned out to be much harder to get their work to "stick" on Wikipedia than it was to write a traditional term paper.
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    Cathy N. Davidson on experiments at Duke University in instigating digital devices and teaching ..... what the students learned and what she learned....
Katie Day

The Marshmallow Challenge -- or what makes a successful team -- | Action-Reaction - 1 views

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    Blog post that pulls together a 7-min TED talk on how successful teams work together, design thinking, and motivation.... and thoughts about how we can encourage feedback loops in our classrooms, leading to success and learning..... Fascinating for anyone interested in team psychology or science.....
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