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Jennifer Weeks

How Students Benefit From Using Social Media - Edudemic - 0 views

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    By using social media in schools, students will learn about online engagement and the importance of making connections and networking.
Tara Dillon

Student Presentations: Do They Benefit Those Who Listen? | Faculty Focus - 3 views

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    February 21, 2013 By: Maryellen Weimer, PhD in Teaching and Learning Almost everyone agrees that student presentations benefit the presenter in significant ways. By doing presentations, students learn how to speak in front a group, a broadly applicable professional skill. They learn how to prepare material for public presentation, and practice (especially with feedback) improves their speaking skills. (Much of what we want for our students is to work, respect, support, find the good in one another, have fun and use web tools together! Highlighting the peer evaluative piece was one I am doing my best to work on. Great resource!) ~Tara
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    Tara, Good find. A nice way to get more students engaged. An interesting, approach to student presentations. The author does a nice job of describing advantages, as well as disadvantages, to requiring students to critique their classmate's presentations. The image of the "comatose" classmates in their seats as yet, another presenter tries to impress the teacher is comical, yet accurate. The students doing the critiques also had a vested interest as it represents a portion of their grade. A significant statistic was that," Seventy-three percent of the students agreed or strongly agreed that completing the evaluations made them pay more attention to the presentations. " A final point of interest is that students were clear in not wanting their classmates critiques to have an impact on their grade. Tom
Tara Dillon

Is Educational Technology Worth the Hype? - 2 views

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    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.
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    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.
Kae Cunningham

School Tool: Popplet Fuses Collaboration, Bookmarking, and Mindmapping | EdSurge News - 2 views

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    A new tool discovery! Looks like an interesting combination of some apps we just "mastered"
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    We use it with 5th and 6th grade! The only drawback that I see is that it connects to Flickr for images and not google which limits that feature. It does also connect to You Tube for educational videos, however. The kids use it quite easily. I like it.
Janice McGuire

Haiku LMS : FDLSD Professional Development : Web 2.0 Tools - 1 views

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    Awesome Web 2.0 Tools page on Professional Development site.
Neal Sonnenberg

Quick Screen Share - 1 views

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    This is a free screen sharing service from the makers of Screencast-o-matic. just go to their website, select share your screen, and enter your name. Quick Screen Share will then provide you with a URL to share with the person with whom you are screen sharing. When that person opens the link you he or she will be able to see your screen.
Matthew Laurence

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

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    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.
Paul Harris

Blogging in the 21st-Century Classroom - 2 views

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    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.
Bonnie Ferreira

Getting online degree from colleges - 0 views

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    This was an interesting article and I found it pertinent since I am getting certified as an online teacher. Public universities are moving toward offering more virtual degrees to lower tuition costs. Some of the courses will be traditional but others blended. This will help students obtain college degrees in non traditional ways.
David Keir

College is FREE! - 0 views

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    This article discusses how some colleges and Universities are offering free course work online.  Essentially without it being official - someone could get a college degree for FRE!
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!
Bonnie Ferreira

Education 3.0 - 3 views

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    This was an excellent article addresses the changes in the Web from 1.0 - 3.0. The 1.0 education was teacher delivering the content to the student. 2.0 discuss how the student and teacher can equally access information. Web 3.0 delivers education 24/7 worldwide with authenticity and creativity. This articles address education through web 1.0, 2.0 and 3.0.
Paul Harris

Five Things Students Can Learn through Group Work - 1 views

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    Maryellen Weimer, in her article sets out clear reasons why collaborative work, enhances creativity '. Students can see how different perspectives, constructive deliberation, questioning, and critical analysis can result in better solutions and performance.' Working effectively in groups demands students to think outside the box, and use multiple creative skills.
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    It was many years ago that I attended a seminar at the former GE Plastics headquarters here (now Sabic) outlining what for years has been obvious. Two key points included: 1) the need to adjust the school calendar, both in number of days and hours per day from the agrarian-based schedule which so many districts and schools still follow; 2) the need to include more group work in syllabi and lesson plans. The presenter emphasized that companies do not want to hire a person who is intelligent if that person cannot work well in a collaborative group situation. Opportunities abound to prepare our students for higher education and careers through group work in face-to-face instruction, the flipped classroom concept and the design of VHS courses.
Sister Jacqueline

Rubrics for Teachers - 1 views

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    Discussion, Teamwork, and Cooperative Learning Rubrics Middle School/High School Collaboration Rubric Six defined criteria for collaboration with strong performance descriptors
Matthew Laurence

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

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    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 Pincus

Why Games Don't Teach - 0 views

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    This article by Ruth Clark in Learning Solutions Magazine is a bit misleading and a bit muddled. While it appears that her contention is that games can not teach she admits that students can learn from GBL if they are structured and designed well.
Matthew Pincus

A Counterpoint to Ruth Clark's "Why Games Don't Teach" - 0 views

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    This article by Sharon Boller is a response to Ruth Clark's article "Why Games Don't Teach". Here Boller discusses Clark's inconsistencies and explains how GBL can work in the classroom. Most importantly, Boller discusses the level of engagement, the feedback mechanisms, and the "rehearsal and practice" that GBL offer.
tdoherty

The Seven Cs of Effective Communication in your Online Course - 7 views

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    This article by Melissa Venable deals with the skills one needs to effectively communicate in an online class. Whether it is between the teacher and the student or student to student communication. This is a skill that needs to be developed especially for the online teacher. The 7 C's are - Clarity, Completeness, Conciseness, Concreteness, Correctness, Courtesy, and Consideration. She further points out that there may even be more C's that need to be part of this equation - Confident, Conversational, Coherent, Creative, Convincing and Check. Her basic message is "More effective communication practices lead to a more effective learning process."
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    While the Cs in the article are associated with online courses, they can also be applied to face-to-face instruction, as well as written and oral communication. In all forms of communication, it is worth striving for these Cs.
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    While online courses bring concerns for underdeveloped face to face skills, these courses help students develop a more effective communication. In this platform students are more aware of what they are saying. Students must present their thoughts in clear, concise, correct sentences. They must also take care to be considerate of their audience. That the written word doesn't allow for tone of voice or body language to help get their ideas across. Students must really think before the "speak."
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