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C Clausen

Fair Use | Center for Social Media - 0 views

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    Week 7 Required Resources: Fair Use
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    Here is another one of the required resources. When I tried the link listed on the resource page, it didn't seem to work so I've bookmarked the page I think that Judy wanted us to look at
C Clausen

Center for Social Media - 0 views

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    Week 7 Required Resource
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    Just in case anyone wants to share ideas or perspectives regarding the information found on this site, I thought I would add it to our Diigo list. Thanks, Courtney
C Clausen

How to Use Twitter to Grow Your PLN | Edutopia - 0 views

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    I thought this could be useful because it is directly connected with the collaboration and social networking that we are talking about this week.
C Clausen

W3C Semantic Web Activity - 0 views

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    After reading a post in Discussion Week 3, written by Sean W., I wanted to see what else I could find regarding the "Semantic Web." Here is one site that is rather interesting.
Joe Scott

The Solar Cooking Archive - 0 views

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    Everything a researcher needs to know about solar cooking. It is recommended that a researcher visits the "Frequently-asked questions" section.
Joe Scott

Solar Cookers International - 0 views

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    Spreading solar cooking to benefit people and environments with cooking basics and an archive.
Joe Scott

Solar Cooker Resources on the Web: Journey to Forever - 0 views

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    A thorough list of solar cooking resources.
Joe Scott

How to Use a Solar Cooker: What Works and What Doesn't - Planet Green - 0 views

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    A guide as to what to consider when building and testing solar cookers sponsored by The Discovery Company - Planet Green.
mrsbarrett

The Official Kids' Portal for the U.S. Government - 0 views

shared by mrsbarrett on 20 May 10 - Cached
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    This website has a lot of links to a lot of different topics, not just government. Students can choose government under the specific grade ranges (K-5 or 6-8) and gain access to links to the various parts of government. This would be a great resource for students to start their research.
Suzie Stambek

Kids Astronomy - 1 views

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    An interactive Solar Sytem that allows you to observe the rotating and revolving of the planets, objects within the Solar System, and much more...
Suzie Stambek

Solar System - 0 views

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    A multimedia adventure within the solar system. A place to discover the latest scientific information, study the history of space, view graphics and videos, and explore the entire solar system (planets, Sun, moons, comets, asteroids...)
mrsbarrett

Ben's Guide to US Government for Kids - 0 views

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    This is website is broken down into various age levels. Each level has information appropriate to that grade. There are also links to sites for kids with more information on the different topics.
Suzie Stambek

Nine Planets - 1 views

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    This website has a tremendous amount of information regarding stars, planets and much more. Video, images and information on how to support future space exploration.
C Clausen

Bill of Rights | LII / Legal Information Institute - 0 views

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    This website breaks down the Bill of Rights down into terms that are clear and concise.
Michelle Mellis

Ask Earl for Kids - 0 views

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    This is part of www.kids.yahoo.com which allows students to ask Earl specific questions of interest.
Michelle Mellis

Rotation of the Earth - 1 views

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    This is an auditory website that explains how our solar system formed and why planets rotate. There are also games that students can play to get them familiar with the solar system. The teachers corner is located at http://spaceplace.nasa.gov/en/kids/ where you can click on space episodes.
Michelle Mellis

Kids Astronomy - 0 views

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    This is a fun engaging site for students to use to learn about the planets, moons, asteroids, and comets.
C Clausen

Weblogg-ed - 0 views

shared by C Clausen on 28 Sep 09 - Cached
  • In the midst of all of the “uproar” over the President’s planned speech to school kids on Tuesday, I keep thinking about what all of this says about schools, about what they are for, and about the perception that a lot of people in this country have of them.
  • no better place for my children to watch that speech (or any other, for that matter) than in a place where ideas are encouraged, where critical thinking about those ideas is a natural part of the conversation, and where appropriate response and debate can flourish. Where the adults in the room lead my kids to dig deeper, to validate facts, and consider the many levels of context in which every speech and every debate takes place. Where the discussion around it is such that it lays to rest the concern that many seem to have about this particular speech in general, that in some way the President will be able to “indoctrinate” our kids into some socialist mindset. If schools are the fully functioning learning communities that we hope they are, they should be the place where our kids learn to make sense of ideas, not to fear them. That, however, is not the message we are sending.
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    Education Speech
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    Interesting article here. I like the selection of quotes that he, and his commenters, highlight, especially the one that mentions that working harder at something you are already doing isn't reform.
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