Skip to main content

Home/ Web 2.0: Enhancing Education Through Technology/ Group items tagged edutopia

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Shirleyph Chan

How to Use New-Media Tools in Your Classroom | Edutopia - 4 views

  •  
    Check out these seven video tips, made by Edutopia bloggers and contributors, on using technology in your classroom. Watch teachers, an administrator and consultant talk about real applications of media tools for students. Content for this project is licensed under a Creative Commons BY-NC-ND License.
  •  
    In these 7 brief video clips, educators share how they use specific technology and social-media tools in classrooms, including Twitter,Facebook, Wikis, Digital Cameras, YouTube, Wii and GPS devices.
Matthew Laurence

How to Strengthen Parent Involvement and Communication | Edutopia - 1 views

  •  
    This article provides four points to increase parent involvement and communication: 1) Make a case for increased parent involvement, 2) Reach out to parents who want to make a connection, 3) Find ways to involve families in school culture, 4) Make the commitment to join the conversation with other teachers and parents. Within each of these four points, there are various links to more actively engage with tips, articles, and discussion groups.
  •  
    Every school has a need to increase parent involvement for a variety of reasons, with such intended results as a better sense of "community" among families, faculty and students, improved student achievement, and the like. This can be a challenge for all these entities. It's helpful from time to time to have reminders of strategies that work.
Joann Archetto

Summer PD: Web Tools Collective Part 4 - Tools to Help Students Create | Edutopia - 1 views

  •  
    This article showcases some Web 2.0 creative media tools. Students should have the ability to create new media. The tools outlined in this Edutopia article are great suggestions to assist in creativity and student participation, as well as provide a showcase for their critical thinking. Also includes links to Parts 1 - 3 of Eric Brunsell's series.
Tara Dillon

Is Educational Technology Worth the Hype? - 2 views

  •  
    To begin and use a blog (or wiki) to "poll" the students...good reminder to just ask what they would find to be helpful in learning.
  •  
    http://www.edutopia.org/blog/ed-tech-worth-the-hype-bob-lenz?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+EdutopiaNewContent+%28Edutopia%29&utm_content=Netvibes Is Educational Technology Worth the Hype? Some of the key points emphasize the approach to technology that forward thinking educators should take. To prepare today's learners to meet the demands of tomorrow in a society that demands a proficient and prolific use of multiple technologies and the intellectual skills necessary to survive and thrive in our modern digital world in order for them to create, develop, and publish authentic works.
Matthew Laurence

Yes, You Can Teach and Assess Creativity! | Edutopia - 3 views

  •  
    This article by Andrew Miller builds upon the initial posting by Grant Wiggins on assessing creativity. It provides suggestions on quality indicators, modeling thinking skills, reflective processes, and a few rubric examples with some very good descriptors.
Matthew Laurence

The Digital Lives of Teens: Code Switching | Edutopia - 1 views

  •  
    This article covers the challenges and opportunities of code switching in digital spaces, at home and at school with students today. At the end of the article, the writer provides some classroom strategies to help students adapt in this 'code switching'. One suggestion is the use of a tool called TodaysMeet (http://todaysmeet.com/about), which seemed like an interesting concept.
Jennifer Weeks

Connecting School and Home: 360-Degree Communication | Edutopia - 1 views

  •  
    How schools and families can partner to set boundaries with digital communication and make children conscience of how they use technology. 
  •  
    Interesting view that schools have a powerful role to play..."Schools have taken on a more significant, all-consuming role in helping parents find the right language to communicate with children, especially in the digital realm." It is easy to forget that parents are looking for guidance about their children and effective technology use.
ann daigle

Swipe, Tap, Flick and . . . Read? Research on Children and E-Books | Edutopia - 1 views

  •  
    This article brings up some very good points about turning to e-books for textbooks in the classroom. The research hasn't been done on the effects of doing so....what would the effects be on students and their reading skills, learning, or the repercussions on teaching in the classroom? Also, they bring up a valid concern of how much control this would all give to Apple?
Colleen Gianino

The Educator's Village: Creative Commons for Classroom Lessons | Edutopia - 1 views

  •  
    This article is an intersting take on how two teachers at Burlington High School in MA are on a mission to integrate technology into the curriculum. It's not directly related to creativity, however, I feel that these two teachers are taking a very creative approach in how they want their students to learn.
Joseph Mullett

Pick and Click: Interactive Assessment Goes to School | Edutopia - 1 views

  •  
    Being a student of the PRS (Personal Response System) ideals through the UMASS/NSF Funded program, I have personally embraced and concur with so much of the data and thought process of using digital forms of assessment, that it has become a cornerstone in determining the understanding and competency of my students through both Formative and Summative assessments. If the life of a teacher is not going to change, and more is to be placed on the plate, something either needs to be removed or made simpler. Digital assessment offers a solution to teachers struggling with the load and tasks of being a reflective and responsive teacher. By keeping students more in the loop on progress and using the data to determine many of the factors associated with duration and direction of lessons, teachers can remain most informed and proactive.
Shelly Landry

Troy Hicks: A Conversation About Digital Writing | Edutopia - 0 views

  •  
    "The digital tools offer students new opportunities, no doubt, but they still need to be intentional in the way that they craft their pieces of digital writing."  This quote sums this article well.  Despite the new technology, teachers and students must be intentional in the ways they approach writing.  The article discusses Troy Hick's book Crafting Digital Writing.  The book looks very interesting.  Part of the article also discusses some of the arguments against digital writing with Tony's counter arguments.  There are also some great links within the article to various writing resources.
Chris Chen

Troy Hicks: A Conversation About Digital Writing | Edutopia - 0 views

  •  
    This article points out the significance and the approach to the digital writing in a dialogue style with Troy Hicks, an associate professor of English at Central Michigan University. He uses 'MAPS' heuristic -- mode (genre), media, audience, purpose, situation -- to help writers "intentionally" and "deliberately" think through composing digital texts. He also suggests teachers give themselves and students the opportunities and permission to play (and possibly fail) with the tools, as this can serve as a model of overcoming learning curves and digital writing process. This reminds me of the idea, 'dabble' with the tools, brought up by Jeff Utecht(2013).
julegig

How to Create Social Media Guidelines for your School - 3 views

  •  
    This Edutopia article highlights how to develop the seven steps you need to help bring social media in your classroom and adapt a social media policy in your school culture. It shares valuable resources to get to a shared vision for your school.
Shelly Landry

Creativity on the Run: 18 Apps that Support the Creative Process | Edutopia - 3 views

  •  
    'We do not need to teach creativity, but rather inspire its daily practice.' This opening sentence is intriguing yet inspiring to me. As said in the title, this article introduces 18 apps to support students developing creativity at different thinking stages. The writer also suggests some practical strategies which could be incorporated in our daily teaching practice. Nevertheless, what strikes me more is the reminder that we, as a class, school, or community, need to build a culture of trust in the first place to cultivate culture of creativity and innovation.
  •  
    What a great article about creativity.  What I loved is that the article states that schools do not need to teach creativity.  Schools need to foster it by providing students a safe place to take risks and providing them tools that make that risk taking possible.  Creativity is about finding solutions to problems using one's own ideas and thinking skills.  Students can do this when given the power and opportunities to do so.
  •  
    Like Chris, the opening to this post caught my eye. "We do not need to teach creativity, but rather inspire its daily practice." Ms. Darrow's article captures the importance of creating a school that values it's students, encourages them to take some risks, and lets them practice these skills with abandon. With support and coaching from teachers, students can work through the steps outlined in this article using technology to streamline the process, help them develop real life/career skills, and appeal to their interest in digital media. I like how Darrow labels this process; there are clear steps to increase understanding. Collaboration or group work can use this format as well, group members' jobs are easily created with the resulting structure. It also creates natural places to scaffold the process for individualizing learning in a classroom full of all kinds of learners. Each activity we do in a class may not need all these steps and some may need more, but I plan to keep this article in mind as I tweak my courses this summer.
mark olofson

A Web 2.0 Class - 0 views

  •  
    An article about a multi-school blog collaborative class
Charles Haseman

Does Project-Based Learning Lead to Higher Student Achievement?: Understanding the Bene... - 4 views

  •  
    Merits of Project-Based Learning. This is where I want my teaching to head back to. In career and technical education I did a lot of projects with my kids. Not so much lately and really want to move back to this because I really believe that it works!
  •  
    It made me want to do more than I do. I cannot afford to use "time" as an excuse. Good learning from PBL's takes time and there are many benefits including providing applications to the teaching and answering the question "why do we need to learn about this?"
NIM Facilitator

Using Technology to Encourage Writing | Edutopia - 0 views

  •  
    Interactive instructional idea that cover all grades levels and many subject areas for ways to enhance your instruction with an Elmo document camera.
sarah domick

Students Design Games and Software Tools to Tackle Real-World Problems | Edutopia - 5 views

  •  
    Wonderful article on students solving real world issues while using their problem solving skills and creativity. Even though this was a contest and not a lesson plan, this is how our lessons and classrooms should be structured.
ruby xu

Do Standards Kill Creativity? | Edutopia - 2 views

  •  
    The article argues that standards can create conditions for creativity and creativity does not equal freedom from all constraints. So what kills creativity?
Shirleyph Chan

Summer PD: New Teacher Boot Camp Week 3 - Using Storybird | Edutopia - 2 views

  •  
    This article introduces another fun, collaborative, storytelling digital tool - Storybird.
1 - 20 of 64 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page