Skip to main content

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

Rss Feed Group items tagged

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.
Sharon Blanchard

Creating TRAILS by Julie A. Gedeon and Barbara F. Schloman - 1 views

  •  
    If you are outside of Massachusetts you may not be able to access this article. Trails (Tools for Real-time Assessment of Information Literacy Skills) is a tool designed by Kent State University to measure the information literacy skills of high school students. It is designed as a classroom tool that enables a teacher or librarian to "obtain a snapshot of skill levels in order to better tailor instructional efforts."
weirba11

Create Educational Interactive Timelines with TimeRime - 2 views

  •  
    Create interactive and informative educational timelines in an extremely easy manner. Students will love being given the option of creating a timeline. Use Timerime for history, art, science, social studies or just about any subject in which they are required to understand the time frame at which events occurred.
weirba11

Using Socrative to help students practice writing. - 2 views

  •  
    Socrative is an awesome tool used in Education to gain a better understanding of what our students have learned or are learning during a lesson by getting. In this post about socrative we see how it can be used assess writing in the classroom.
Christine Kurucz

5 Social Networks Students Can Use To Find A Job - 1 views

  •  
    The days of the traditional cover letters and resumes sent through the mail are over. Today, people/students find jobs through social media sites -- Linkedin, FB, even Twitter. As we talk about digital communication, this is a "real world" application in how students need to know these tools as well as how to present themselves in a digital forum. This is the type of situation where all the writing skills and presentation skills taught in high school count, and we need to be sure our students can do this in a virtual environment.
  •  
    This is a useful article! Gone are the hard copy resumes printed on nice, heavy weight paper with matching envelopes. Thanks, Christine.
Theresa Petrov

The Impact of Digital Tools on Student Writing and How Writing is Taught in Schools - 1 views

  •  
    This short article explains a new Pew study which explored the affects of broader access to the internet and social media and student performance. The article speaks of both the positive and negative affects that they are seeing as per standardized tests and teacher feedback.
  •  
    I found this very interesting as our school goes to a Bring Your Own model and the entire High School becomes a 1:1 laptop zone. Many teachers have asked questions about this and the Pew study is something I plan to share with them.
NIM Facilitator

Artemis-Fowl - 2 views

  •  
    Content Area/Grade Level/Course Title/Activity Type: English/Language Arts/High School/Literature/Student Activity Topic/Lesson Name: Literacy Circle Book Report
NIM Facilitator

Cell Respiration - 10 views

  •  
    Science/High School/Biology - Grade 10/Student Activity Topic/Lesson Name: Cellular Respiration Overview and Purpose: To demonstrate an understanding of the Cellular Respiration Process using Glogster EDU
tbreza

Higher order thinking skills - 4 views

  •  
    Many educators are looking for more outside the box methods to learning and understanding. Many teachers have tried implementing more technology inside the classroom or tried to create a more blended classroom. This article shows another method of instruction that brings higher order of thinking and that is using games to differentiate instruction. Our students have been playing games since they were no more than 2 years old. Why not implement a learning method that they are already accustomed to. This has transformed classroom learning into a more interactive learning style that has shown great success. The articles talks about the importance of moving your lessons to the students strengths so why not lean them towards what they know best? Using games for higher learning is no different then a classroom review. It is no different then a quiz. The only difference is that it is more interactive and it is electronic. This style of high order thinking or critical thinking creates a learning environment that is geared to challenge the students in a way that they want to be challenged.
Paul Harris

Blogging in the 21st-Century Classroom - 2 views

  •  
    This article discusses the success of setting up class blogs involving high school juniors. The author points out that 'students value an authentic audience for their writing'. A great starting read for any teacher that has had thoughts about working with blogs in their classroom.
gregcjr

Lecturing about lecturing - 0 views

  •  
    I have never been a fan of lecturing during class...for either the high school or college classes I teach. If there is information I need to share, I will always use a Power Point (or something similar) and then make those files available for students to download. But even when presenting information in this manner, I continue to engage students with questions, asking for real life examples, etc. And I limit the time, or break it up with another activity. It seems to work pretty well and the ideas from this article pretty much confirm what I have always felt about the lecture style class.
craig weinhold

critique it - 0 views

  •  
    the above url provides a link to a website called: http://edu.critiqueit.com/ Here you can post articles and invite people to read them and give input. sounds like a great resource for virtually any high school class.
Chris Skrzypchak

Teaching Risk-Taking in the College Classroom - Faculty Focus | Faculty Focus - 6 views

  •  
    Taking a risk means that failure is an option. Many students may see taking a risk as a negative. If we want students to take risks, we must not only create an environment that encourages students to take risks, but makes risk taking seem like the best option.
  • ...2 more comments...
  •  
    We have fostered this lack of risk taken when every team wins a trophy at the end of the season.
  •  
    I wonder why this article didn't discuss the biggest penalty to risk-taking--grades. If we assign a project and tell students how to get an A, why would they take the risk, be creative and possibly fail? When students fail a paper, they should have the ability to re-write, learn fro their mistakes and improve their grade. But time and energy prevents most teachers from doing this.
  •  
    This article talks about how to encourage students to take risks in the classroom. These "risks" can range from just questioning to imagining to trying out something new. This is a very important higher order thinking skill that many students have trouble comprehending and acting on because they would rather stick with what they know (or what they think will get them the highest grade). I think the ideas in the article can be applied to high school classrooms as well as college classrooms.
  •  
    A great article about helping students be more creative by incorporating risk-taking activities in the classroom. Create an environment where taking risks are rewarded. Also start with small risk-taking activities and build up into more complex ones.
Katy Williams

Science Podcasts Extend Learning Beyond Class - 4 views

  •  
    Great article on using podcasts, from kindergarten through high school, to help with enrichment and review at home. Also the article discusses a switch in lecture and homework - do the lecture at home and front load or review the information and do the lab, experiment, work, activity during class time.
Janine Modestow

The Good Place (Michael L. Umphrey on gardening, teaching, and writing) - 1 views

  •  
    A great perspective on the similarities between the initial transformation from folk culture to commercial culture and the same transformation back from commercial culture to folk culture. Everyone can produce, but, at the same time, it requires that we be more critical of what we consume. It discusses the transformation from high schools of the past to the present.
Mrs. Bee

Kids can W.R.I.T.E. - Activities for Every Grade - 3 views

  •  
    A simple little article but I really liked some of the ideas that were included. For example, to help with teaching purpose and tone there is a site for making greeting cards - while this could be aimed towards the lower grade levels I think it could also be incorporated into high school literature courses by having characters write greeting cards to other characters. I also think that some of the suggested sites could be utilized across departments.
Deborah McQuade

The High Cost of Low Salaries - 1 views

  •  
    Every teacher should read this
Mark Little

article "Wiki-Based Collaborative Laboratories in a High School Science - 11 views

  •  
    This article had some nice ideas about collaboration in the science classroom and the ideas may be applied to other disciplines perhaps
‹ Previous 21 - 40 of 41 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page