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Jenny Gilbert

Study Guides and Strategies - 0 views

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    Study guides, strategies, skills, tips and habits for learners and students in 30 languages
Jenny Gilbert

GRE prompts as an Anticipation Guide | Where the Classroom Ends - 1 views

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    This idea can be developed to all 4 VCE contexts. 
Jenny Gilbert

Journal - A map to Paradise Road - 0 views

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    "A map to Paradise Road: A guide for historians" A detailed timeline of what happened.
Jenny Gilbert

Digital Storytelling Teacher Guide - 0 views

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    You might like to try digital story telling as a way of thinking about/reflecting on the theme for area of study 2 - eg do a photo montage of encountering conflict photos; retell the rugmakers story etc.
Jenny Gilbert

Interrogating Texts: 6 Reading Habits to Develop in Your First Year at Harvard - Resear... - 0 views

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    This is an excellent method for yr 10-12 to adopt when r eading forcontexts and using language to persuade.
Jenny Gilbert

http://tobaccofreeunion.org/tech-guide/Packaging%20Implementation%20Resource/Linked%20D... - 0 views

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    head to page 9-10
Heather S

Sunday School: The Context in VCE English - ABC Melbourne - Australian Broadcasting Cor... - 4 views

  • Continuing our study guide into VCE English. This week we focus "the context", a potentially confusing but creative component of the year 12 curriculum.
Jenny Gilbert

shmoop guide on the illiad - 0 views

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    characters
Jenny Gilbert

Reading Critically - Interrogating Texts - Harvard Library LibGuides at Harvard Library - 0 views

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    how to fully and actively comprehend texts - in any subject. Note if you want to resell your book use sticky notes on the page. 
Jenny Gilbert

Lesson Planning and the Common Core: A Unit Based on TED.com | Edutopia - 0 views

  • On my own website, you can learn about how students chose topics and you can download the worksheet that I used to guide them towards their choice.
  • The first thing I did was get the students familiar with the Persuasive/Memoir speech patterns that so many of the TED speeches possess. Many of the presentations, regardless of the length, whether they are 3 minutes or 23 minutes, tend to some share key common traits like: Hook Background Information Narrative Evidence Commentary Theme Call to Action Visuals
  • 1. Metasearching using dogpile What I like about this is that on the page where your results are listed, it categorizes your results in ways that might behoove better research. If the student types in "global warming," then it asks if you would also like results that only focus on "causes of global warming," "effects of global warming," and so on. 2. Google Advanced Search Obviously, the more specific you search, the less work you have to do. Let Google do the work by spending just a little time creating parameters for your results. 3. Google Scholar This can be a little heady, but it has also led to some really interesting results. 4. Reading URLs What does a .org mean? .gov? .edu? What symbols may indicate personal sites? Reading the sentences of the URL is the first step in reliable searching online.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Breaking the Google Homepage Habit
  • Of course, there are also ways to do this same activity online using social bookmarks like CiteUlike , Diigo ,
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    some good tips and ideas for preparing and researching your oral presentation in this blog post. 
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