Skip to main content

Home/ ALT Lab/ Group items tagged words

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Tom Woodward

The one word reporters should add to Twitter searches that you probably haven't conside... - 1 views

  •  
    A nice breakdown of Twitter search methodology we might parallel in other contexts. "You probably skipped right over the most important word used by the five sources above. It's everyone's favorite word, and one you should add to any Twitter search that's seeking personal experiences: Me. (And its close cousin "my.") Most people relating a personal experience - aka, good sources - will use it. Most people observing from afar - aka, useless sources - won't. Let's look again at those five sources, and this time pay attention to the words they used that enabled us to find them. There's another word variation they all have in common."
Yin Wah Kreher

iTunes - Books - The Stack Model Method (Grades 3-4) by Kow Cheong, Yan - 1 views

  •  
    My friend wrote these ebooks for K12 learners. If you are interested in reviewing them, let me know. The Stack Model Method-An Intuitive and Creative Approach to Solving Word Problems (Grades 3-4) is the first title of a two-book series in Singapore math publishing, which comprehensively reveals the beauty and power of the stack model method as an intuitive and creative problem-solving strategy in solving non-routine questions and challenging word problems. Like the Singapore's bar model method, the stack model method allows word problems that were traditionally read in higher grades to be set in lower grades. The stack model method empowers younger readers with the higher-order thinking skills needed to solve word problems much earlier than they would normally acquire in school.
Yin Wah Kreher

Thesaurus Poetry | Reflections on the Teche - 0 views

  •  
    The assignment: Choose a word. Write it in capital letters. Find 4 synonyms. Write those in a second line. (Pick the easiest word to rhyme for your last word.) Then write a phrase that ends with a rhyming word. As a class, we wrote this poem.

    MAGICAL
    Imaginary, mythical, enchanting, spellbinding
    Potions of my mind unwinding.
    -Mrs. Simon's Caneview class
Tom Woodward

reticent - Phocabulary word - Photo Word of the Day to improve and enhance word memory.... - 3 views

  •  
    Found this via a trackback. An interesting idea and easy to make in WordPress.
Tom Woodward

I have a website that buries words within words - Medium - 4 views

  •  
    An entirely different level of the super secret crush page "so, although it looks very simple (it begins with just three short sentences and a small logo), you can spend a lot of time clicking to expand the text out, further and further, each version you expose being by itself grammatical and meaningful but containing within it the possibility of more (more text, more information, more narrative). At the moment there are about 800 links you can click; it can expand from eight words to about 6,800. "
Tom Woodward

STET | Attention, rhythm & weight - 2 views

  •  
    "And without a common language for describing what works and what doesn't, our work isn't being pushed or explored further. I see example after example appearing online, that people have clearly spent time and thought into making, which cover the same ground and also share the same mistakes. Experimentation is great if you're learning. If you're not, it's just expensive. The words we've been using so far, like "intuitive" and "immersive," are overloaded with meaning. Let's drop them. What are we really trying to say? By pulling these words apart, we may find more precise ways that pinpoint the different problems we are trying to solve. "
Jonathan Becker

The N-word: An interactive project exploring a singular word - Washington Post - 2 views

  •  
    Whoa. Just whoa.
Tom Woodward

Seeking Genius in Negative Space - 7 Days of Genius - Medium - 1 views

  •  
    "Be deeply curious about the world around you. Become aware of your thoughts and learn to think about thinking. Practicing metacognition will help develop a sense for the tricks your mind plays, and how to overcome them. With this awareness, learn to overcome automatic processing. When confronted with something new or unfamiliar, withhold judgment; if you see something you don't understand in the negative space, go with it and see where it leads. Remember that impossible geometry exists, and your mind is constantly trying to force you to see things that you already know how to see. It's learning to see the unseen that makes this practice valuable! Be aware of the limitations of the labels that have been applied to the world. Keep in mind how small the grid of words is compared to the wordless plane. Opportunity exists where words don't exist, yet. Learn to sit with Keats in uncertainties, mysteries, and doubts without grasping for conventional explanations. Allow time to visit the fantastic and the unconventional, and become aware of the moments when you're avoiding staying in these contexts. Meditation can be essential here."
sanamuah

GIFs Go Beyond Emoji to Express Thoughts Without Words - The New York Times - 1 views

  •  
    "A GIF, in many ways, can be an even more effective form of visual communication than emoji because of the movement in an animation that provides a greater range of expression."
Tom Woodward

Twitter Natural Language Processing -- Noah's ARK - 0 views

  •  
    "We provide a tokenizer, a part-of-speech tagger, hierarchical word clusters, and a dependency parser for tweets, along with annotated corpora and web-based annotation tools. "
Jonathan Becker

Improving My Teaching via Podcast - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

  •  
    "All of these companions have arrived in my life courtesy of the Teaching in Higher Ed Podcast, a free and fantastic resource for college and university faculty. Curated by Bonni Stachowiak, of Vanguard University, the podcast offers weekly episodes in which Bonni and her guests explore, in her words, "the art and science of being more effective at facilitating learning." Some episodes also focus on personal productivity for academics."
Jonathan Becker

What do we call this thing we call flipped learning? - Casting Out Nines - 0 views

  •  
    "I believe that words mean things and the names we attach to the things we care about serve as little icons that can tell a very brief story about the things themselves. I think flipped learning is at the point now where it's past the point of being the Next Big Thing in Education, and the first order of business, it seems to me, in moving the conversation about flipped learning forward is just figuring out what story we want to convey by way of the terminology we use."
Jonathan Becker

Lost (and Found) in Translation: What Online Students Want | EDUCAUSE - 0 views

  •  
    "What do students most want from an online class? Connections. They want to develop relationships with the instructor, classmates, and the material. They want online learning to translate seamlessly from their computer to the lecture hall. In other words, to make it feel "real, like you are in the classroom." That's what instructors want, too"
Joyce Kincannon

Assessing, Measuring Connected Learning Outcomes | DMLcentral - 1 views

  •  
    "Hoffman and I spoke about all this and more in the video below. She gives advice on how to frame and scaffold reflection on the open web, and words of encouragement for those who are contemplating jumping into connected learning."
sanamuah

Teaching Without Walls: Life Beyond the Lecture: The Liquid Syllabus: Are You Ready? - 0 views

  •  
    "Here is my grand vision. Imagine with me. What if your syllabi were beautiful? What if they were a pleasure for students to engage with? What if they provided opportunities to not only understand and access policies, expectations, schedules and such, but for our students to meet us?  What if the syllabus became a site where former students could share voices (stories, feedback, words of encouragement) with future students? Isn't THIS what our goal should be as we move into this amazing landscape of mobile, digital media?"
Tom Woodward

Popcorn Poetry | class blog? - 0 views

  •  
    "After reading our classes popcorn poem I realized that a good portion of the class is amazed by how we were able to construct poetry to social media. I myself am one of those people. We've always considered poetry to be something containing a higher meaning with vocabulary words we wouldn't use on a daily basis, but as of last friday we created poetry where the stanzas were replaced with tweets by different account users, and the theme of the poem was spread through the us of a twitter timeline, and retweets. With using my new definition of a genre of poetry I see these popcorn poems as multiple authors, viewing the potential of poetry in the social media realm, were so used to seeing poem being on paper containing X amount of stanzas, but now we see people's different first impression on what poetry via internet is like. For the most part each student was surprised, and had a good feeling about what this could be going forward with the more assignments we get that involve us doing popcorn poems. "
Tom Woodward

ONA15: How news organizations build simple bots to help report the news | Knight Lab | ... - 0 views

  •  
    Really need to think about how to do more with this internally for some of the routine support stuff. "It's no secret that newsrooms are increasingly using bots to cut down on busy work. Software now routinely churns out quarterly earnings stories for The Associated Press and earthquake alerts for Los Angeles Times, freeing reporters to pursue more in-depth projects. And while no bot can write 3,000-word investigative stories, it can assist reporters by alerting them to new data and filtering the information for them."
Yin Wah Kreher

Moving past summative vs. formative assessments | Christensen Institute - 0 views

  •  
    Assessment, or testing, was still administered, but now it was used as an integral part of the learning process. As a result, when he eventually took his spot on Toyota's production line, Spear was able to assemble his part the first time and every time. In other words, assessment was used both for and of learning. Toyota doesn't have to treat formative and summative assessments as two different things-just as we don't have to do so in education when we move to a truly competency-based system.
Jonathan Becker

Can Rap Genius Annotate the World? -- NYMag - 3 views

  •  
    "They've shortened the company's name to Genius and secured $40 million in funding to plunge fully into a Silicon Valley "pivot": the transition from doing one thing better than anyone else-annotating rap lyrics-to doing something bigger and bolder-"annotating the world," a capaciously vague ambition that no one, themselves included, is certain they can pull off. Annotation has been a Silicon Valley dream since the invention of the first web browser, but it has yet to produce an elegant solution comparable to what Wikipedia did with the crowdsourced encyclopedia. The Genius founders see their platform as a means for enlightened discussion in contrast to the dark world of the internet comment. Users can upload a text, click on any word, and add whatever context they deem worthwhile."
  •  
    Thank you for sharing how to comment on this site.
1 - 20 of 34 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page