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Celina Borges

Triptico | Word Magnets - 17 views

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    A veru fun and effective tool to be used in both group and private classes, aiming, for instance, to work on specific structures.
Maggie Verster

The Great IWB Debate - The Interactive Whiteboard Revolution - 7 views

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    Will be following this debate with interest seeing that I now have my very own mobile iwb!!! (and having great fun using it)
anonymous

Pixton | A melhor maneira para criar e compartilhar quadrinhos - 2 views

shared by anonymous on 23 Apr 13 - No Cached
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    Great for Ss to become motivated about writing in conversational English!
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    I really love this! I teach lots of teens and kids and I believe that are going to have fun with and also learn more English.
Roseli Serra

Roseli Serra (roseliserra) on Pinterest - 3 views

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    "Pinterest"
erika queiroz

BigHugeLabs: Do fun stuff with your photos - 11 views

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    A great tool to inspire in the classroom
Anita Close

EduDemic » 20 Other Social Networks Teachers Should Know About - 12 views

  • These networks don’t constantly fail whale like Twitter These networks don’t have privacy concerns galore like Facebook These networks are devoted to education and wholly organized around that idea.
  • well as tools for creating games, puzzles, and other activities. Pronetos – Also known as the Professor’s Network, Pronetos
  • English, French, German, Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese. iMantri – iMantri is a peer-to-peer community for people who are seeking mentors or offering coaching in a particular area. Members can use the site’s tools to assess their competencies and find people who are either willing to help or in need of help. Smart.fm – Smart.fm is an education platform and online community that relies on personalized learning algorithms to help people achieve their academic goals. The site helps users establish goals, create a study schedule, and track learning progress. Grockit – This online interactive learning environment uses social gaming technology and a Web 2.0 infrastructure to help students master academic skills and prepare for standardized tests. Grockit members can study alone or in groups. Loomagoo – Created by Students at Loyola University New Orleans, Loomagoo is a social network for students who want to share notes and other learning materials
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • million members who help each other learn English, Spanish, French, Hindi, German, and Mandarin Chinese. Tutpup – Tutpup is an award-winning social learning network that allows young learners to come together online to play fun, educational games. The
sandra vasconcellos

http://nikpeachey.blogspot.com/search/label/activities - 0 views

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    Great tool specially for students who are about to graduate. This will enable them to share ideas, memories and fun about the course they"ve taken together. The class could start working on it right at the beginning of the semester and finish at the very end.
gabriela anjos

High Techpectations: Spontaneous Advice - 0 views

  • What's a simple way to start infusing your curriculum with technology? What's a good starting point? Do you have a fav collab project? Courtesy of my Twitter Network: Suggest they take a part of their curriculum that they know well.... & consider if it could be made more collaborative, interactive, or personal for the students... then the tech tools are a win...  Need a GREAT project? Use Glogster to create and publish a WOW multimedia poster on any academic topic!http://tinyurl.com/3m799m  I've been thinking a lot about NETS-making tech "transparent and routine."  For tech neophytes, it's got to be non-threatening. so I've used GoogleGroups and GoogleDocs for out-of-class discussion and collaboration. As a language teacher, epals.com has been invaluable with connecting my students to native speakers.  Also, wikis & google earth Every faculty member has del.icio.us account-didn't support browser bkmrks when gave new machines-made em use del.icall summer collaboration and planning was done on wiki or google docs-all tech supprt documentation on wiki-students/teachers add  Visit ISTE student profiles. Pick a unit to enhance w/them. See http://tinyurl.com/6eybas  We start many a noobie on sharing online bookmarks, understanding how to share and access others bookmarks and subscribe to them. Use technology to reach it?  Sometimes I think when they see how well the objective is reached, and how engaged the students are We use wikis & google tools a LOT for collab started as tchr driven switched 2 stud recommend gaggle too Blogs would be my top suggestion... very collaborative.. easy learning curve... lots of possibilities.  My teachers found the http://1001tales.wikispaces.com collaboration to be a powerful and easily integrated project. locating images for a timeline project? posting a question of the day on a class blog? recording and sharing language mp3s? I started last year with podcasting and posted their work on the web, just like students in my class do. This year I showed teachers how to post and use a ning. They LOVED it. I call it Facebook for teachers. Set up Google Apps for Ed acct. for older students. Demonstrate the powerful uses of apps. Learn to organize Start with wikispaces. Look for other examples. Keep it simple & collborative. Kids work in teams to build wiki. Maybe info one? I'd say using tools such as Voki and Voicethread have been a good start for me :o)  Tchers have 2 start by letting go of the idea that they are "integratin tech" change to using tool for effective instruct ,that said...phone in response casts to gcast, post assign 2 wiki let kids discuss, storytelling 4 slide...feel post coming on:) The easiest way for this writing teacher is to pick a topic, any topic, and podcast students another starting point is to use VoiceThread to accomplish that.or start blogging and ask them to share their poetry (quick, simple success) then post that online. Have them drop poems into PPT Poetry then put it online with VoiceThread and invite feedback from other teachers' students on the poems, serious or fun. Take them to Thinkfinity.org and let them use the story mapper or bubbl.us to map a poem, story, nonfiction text Do something simple that can be successful and allow person to see tech can support and make easier initially...find easy web sites that kids can do (my background is EC) that excite them. Find place so they communik8 (such as ask an expert) Online enviros such as nings or wikis offer the most flexibility for just about any kind of content; images, video, audio,text basic start would be w digital camera and bulletin bd then putting pics into projects, especially w a technophobe....take a look at what is happening and see what could be done w tech--morning messages, sign in on the computer, parent notes etc. I think that there is incredible power in planning learning with other teachers, and inviting student input :-) I think wikis are an easy way in for teachers. they understand the collaborative nature of them. So do kids I think blogging is a simple way to start for humanities teachers. It's writing for an audience. That makes sense to teacher
    • gabriela anjos
       
      Good hints on how to add more tech richness to our curriculum
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    Some good hints on how to add techrichness to our curriculum!
Carla Arena

Story Starters for Grades 1-4 | Scholastic.com - 0 views

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    This is reeeeally cool! I had fun playing with it.
Kelly Vieira

Nik's Daily English Activities - 1 views

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    This site, from an online friend, is just a treasure! Nik has two other fantastic blogs. Have fun!
Gilmar Mattos

I Learn, You Learn, We Learn » Digital Learners - 0 views

  • The differences between digital native learners and digital immigrant teachers. Digital Native Learners Digital Immigrant Teachers Prefer receiving information quickly from multiple multimedia sources. Prefer slow and controlled release of information from limited sources. Prefer parallel processing and multitasking. Prefer singular processing and single or limited tasking. Prefer processing pictures, sounds and video before text. Prefer to provide text before pictures, sounds and video. Prefer random access to hyperlinked multimedia information. Prefer to provide information linearly, logically and sequentially. Prefer to interact/network simultaneously with many others. Prefer students to work independently rather than network and interact. Prefer to learn “just-in-time.” Prefer to teach “just-in-case” (it’s on the exam). Prefer instant gratification and instant rewards. Prefer deferred gratification and deferred rewards. Prefer learning that is relevant, instantly useful and fun. Prefer to teach to the curriculum guide and standardized tests.*Ian Jukes and Anita Dosaj, The InfoSavvy Group, February 2003
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    This site shows clear definitions of Digital Natives X Digital Immigrants and also brings many SlideShare postings all related to Online Learning. I specially liked the one by Jennifer Carrier Dorman called ONLINE TOOLS TO ENGAGE STUDENTS
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    Very interesting -loads of information for Teachers
Carla Arena

Rives tells a story of mixed emoticons | Video on TED.com - 0 views

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    Have fun with this 3-minute video!
Maria da Luz Delfino

Alien Scavenger Hunt II - 0 views

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    Free Cool stuff for kids!
Carla Arena

Learning technology teacher development blog: Animated EFL ESL Writing Prompts - 0 views

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    A great site to play around with students and making learn fun with learners in charge of the creation.
Cecilia Carneiro

http://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2008/01/30/the-best-music-websites-for-learning-english - 0 views

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    I've always enjoyed using music to teach for various reasons, I can say that one reason is that after listening to music everybodyis in a better mood, also because it makes learning much more fun and teaching as well. Eventhough finding music to use in classis not the challenge it was when I started teaching, and some books have songs built in their lessons still Ithink it is great to have all those alternatives Larry gives at hand and I'msureI'm goingto use them.
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    Description of the best music websites for teaching
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    I'm sure you will, and you'll also see possibilities for learners to find their own songs and put on a blog, wiki or webpages.
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