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Shelly Landry

Step C… Seven Steps To Website Evaluation For Students… Promoting Digital Cit... - 1 views

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    This blog contains the first 3 steps (out of 7) for website evaluation.  The author is using letters to represent each step.  Thus far, he has A for author; B for bias; and C for currency.  Each step is explained and a poster is included for teachers to print and use in the classroom.  This is very important information for students in order to become responsible digital citizens.  Students need to think about who is writing, why they are writing, and when they are writing.  I am anxious to see what other steps the author will include.
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    Very useful resource for teaching information and digital literacy. The idea of A to G is brilliant and inspirational! I think the break-down steps of each aspect can be truly helpful for students to understand what exactly they're looking for in terms of author, bias, or currency (and soon more). For teachers, each aspect could be introduced and focused in each topic or project, and the posters can serve as visual prompt in classroom.
Rudy Sumpter

Should students be allowed to use technology to access information during tests? - 1 views

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    Sara Ring's poll provokes thinking about how assessment methods might be evolving to include information literacy. Interesting posts follow the poll results, which at the time I retrieved this URL showed Yes ahead of No. The most votes went to Maybe.
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    I think the choices in the poll are interesting--Yes, No or Maybe. I thought the distribution of answers would be a little different. About 50% maybe seemed to be a lot. This article made me think a lot about what I would do.
Karen Wood

Clive on Learning: Knowing where to look is more valuable than knowing what - 2 views

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    An important component of information literacy is finding 'good', reliable information. When students become skillful at research, they can create amazing products and apply the knowledge learned. As Clive writes, "better to concentrate on important underlying concepts and principles".
David Keir

Adapting to Blended Courses, and Finding Early Benefits - 0 views

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    This article about Blended Learning where some of the course is taken face-to-face and other parts strictly in an online environment - this is a new wave in teaching and another option for increasing information literacy for students at all levels of education from Elementary School to College!
Kae Cunningham

Assignments That Promote Critical Thinking | Faculty Focus - 4 views

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    Critical thinking is the underlying skill needed for a student to be able to develop information and media literacy. Thus, I chose an article entitled "Assignments that promote critical thinking."
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    Suggestions for lesson on development of critical thinking skills
Sharon Blanchard

Using TRAILS to Assess Student Learning: A Step-by-Step Guide by Patricia L. Owen - 1 views

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    Patricia Owen gives some practical steps for using TRAILS (Tool for Real-time Assessment of Information Literacy Skills). She lists five steps: Devise an Action Plan, Administer Test, Analyze Results, Share Results with Teachers & Students, and Revise Instruction.
ann daigle

31 Ways to Use G+ in Higher Education - Public - Google Docs - 6 views

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    This is a great tutorial for learning what "G+" is all about and its potential use in education.
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    It clearly demonstrated how G+ can be used either within admin & staff or college students.The function "hangout" is extremely powerful, which makes the learning happen everywhere without the limits of location or time.
Neal Sonnenberg

Curriculum: Understanding YouTube & Digital Citizenship - Google in Education - 6 views

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    Google just recently released 10 classroom-ready lesson plans that teach students how to be responsible digital citizens and to protect themselves online. Lessons include information on media literacy and privacy.
Alicia Cepaitis

Marzano Study on Promethean Boards - 2 views

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    This article uses well researched data to support the use of interactive white boards such as Promethean or Mimio. It concludes that use by experienced teachers can increase student achievement by allowing teachers to better chunk and scaffold information and better monitor student progress.
Vicki Shulman

School Librarian Creates Web Lesson on Oil Spill - 0 views

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    A librarian uses web 2.0 tools such as RSS and bookmarking to incorporate a real world event into the curriculum to enhance information literacy.
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    Use Web 2.0 tools to take the students from the classroom into the real world.
Kristin Steiner

Learning 2.0: How digital networks are changing the rules - 12 views

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    This site looks at information literacy and looks at the 5 different "minds". They relate them to ethical, disciplined, synthesizing, creative and respectful minds when talking about students using web 2.0 applications.
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    In this article, Mélanie L. Sisley looks at the pros and cons for the brain of our current information-laden environment, quoting Howard Gardner, Nicholas Carr and others. Her conclusion is that we need to consider how to make this new media environment work for us in a purposeful, positive way.
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    This site states, "Web 2.0 is providing a stage for anyone to express a digital presence and contribute thoughts and opinions." It suggests that technology is making us be creative and to think for ourselves.
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    Interesting article that discusses how our brains change when using Web technologies. The term "partial attention" is explained as "a state of constantly scanning for information." Insightful description of how our world has changed significantly now that technology is here to stay.
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    This article from eLearn Magazine discusses how neuropsyhcologists are studying the effects of using new media and Web 2.0 tools on our brains. Their results show both positive and negative findings. Some of the benefits include certain areas of the brain being worked harder and making strong neural connections allowing us to process and evaluate large amounts of information quickly. A downside is that we are not retaining information for extended periods of time and we are losing the ability to communicate with feeling because we are not always in face-to-face contact with others. The article also discusses Psychologist Howard Gardner's "Five Minds of 2.0 Learners." These are higher order thinking skills he believes individuals need in order to be successful in the digital world. These include disciplined, synthesizing, creating, respectful, and ethical minds. This is an interesting read and could start a great classroom discussion about technology use with your students.
Rebecca Herges

Evaluating WikiTrust - 2 views

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    This article discusses WikiTrust, a tool that students can use to evaluate the trustworthiness of information posted online. As educators, we need to teach kids how to use the Internet wisely and how to gain valid information.
Mary Ann Foncello

Massachusetts district's advice: Focus on learning, not technology - 3 views

eSchool News names Hampshire Regional School district as "eSchool of the Month" for integrating technology successfully throughout academic and administrative processes. Cross-curricular unit "Com...

Media Literacy Education technology

started by Mary Ann Foncello on 13 Oct 12 no follow-up yet
Linda Williams

Adapt Courseware Adds Social Tools for Community-Based Learning - 1 views

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    Like blogging, Adapt Courseware is a social learning space that allows the student to create a profile to get to know his/her peers. Allows the students to participate in discussion groups and to seek help or support from study groups. It also allows the student to create a post that they are interested in or to comment on posts from others.
Kae Cunningham

What are educators' professional obligations to learn from social media channels? | Dan... - 0 views

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    A 'challenge' for every teacher to step up and finally embrace the tools that enhance learning.
Kae Cunningham

6 Must Watch Videos on 21st Education ~ Educational Technology and Mobile Learning - 2 views

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    digital natives- can we keep up?
Linda Williams

Ideas for Active Online Learning - 1 views

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    Heidi Beezley, instructional technologist at Georgia Perimeter College, explains tells how to improve teaching online courses with active learning, and providing students to have be able to meaningfully talk and listen, write, read, and reflect on the content, ideas, issues, and concerns of an academic subject"
Linda Williams

Adapt Courseware Delivers New Social Learning Tools to Improve Student Engagement - 1 views

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    A comprehensive adaptive online curriculum resources that individualize each student's learning experience, It is a new social learning tool. The tool promote increased online collaboration among students and with instructors. The goal is an approach to community-based learning is to deliver a more engaging educational experience where each student can benefit from a high level of support and interaction.
Sister Jacqueline

How Educators and Schools Can Make the Most of Google Hangouts - 1 views

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    What Is a "Hangout?" A Hangout is a web-based tool created by Google for communicating through video. Up to ten people can "hang out" at one time in a virtual "room." A Hangout can be as simple or as complex as needed. It can be used simply to converse or, through the use of extra apps and add-ons that Google provides, a Hangout can become a virtual meeting space.
Maureen Sweeney

The Benefits of a Course Blog - 1 views

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    Great article on the benefits of a course blog . . . " Students who read, commented, and were involved with the blog maintained their initially positive attitudes" towards course.
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