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Maggie Verster

Manage Your PDF Documents with Free Tools - 0 views

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    Whether you are downloading ebooks, gadget manuals, research papers or your monthly bank statements, chances are that all these documents are available as Adobe PDF files. That's because PDF is probably the only format that can retain the original formatting and can be read across all platforms or even on the web if you don't want to install any desktop software for reading PDFs.
Maggie Verster

Mind42.com - Collaborative mind mapping in your browser - 0 views

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    In Mind42, 42 is not only the answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything! 42 means FOR TWO and indicates the collaborative character of mind42, because that is exactly what mind42 is: A collaborative browser-based online mind mapping tool. It allows you to manage all your ideas, whether alone, twosome or working together with the whole world. As mind42 runs inside the browser, installing mind mapping tools is no longer needed - for a hassle-free mindmapping experience. Just open the browser and launch the application when needed - it behaves like a classical desktop application! Mind42 is a web application - however, this doesn't mean yout have to set your comfort aside. Mind42 is a WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) mind map editor supporting keyboard shortcuts, drag and drop, zooming and much more. No forms and lists which are generally used in web application. A real application - within your browser.
anonymous

My Maps - MindMeister - 0 views

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    Online Mind Mapping: MindMeister - free web-based collaborative mind mapping tool for brainstorming and project-managment
Maggie Verster

TWiki - the Open Source Enterprise Wiki and Web 2.0 Application Platform - 12 views

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    "A flexible, powerful, and easy to use enterprise wiki, enterprise collaboration platform, and web application platform. It is a Structured Wiki, typically used to run a project development space, a document management system, a knowledge base, or any other groupware tool, on an intranet, extranet or the Internet. Users without programming skills can create web applications. Developers can extend the functionality of TWiki with Plugins. TWiki fosters information flow within an organization, lets distributed teams work together seamlessly and productively, and eliminates the one-webmaster syndrome of outdated intranet content."
Roseli Serra

Produtividade Ninja - 3 views

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    Very interesting
Susan Oxnevad

3 Free Cool Tools to Curate Content - 9 views

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    Content curation is a great way to find, organize and share useful knowledge efficiently. There are many free digital tools available to help manage web content in flexible ways allowing us to quickly share resources that are accessible online. Use of curation tools is social and will connect us to the ideas of others and help build our professional learning networks.
Desiree Noland

Randomized name/word picker - 6 views

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    Input students' names and will randomly put students into groups
anonymous

Pocket : Queue - 5 views

shared by anonymous on 09 Oct 13 - No Cached
    • anonymous
       
      This is an excellent idea for a district to implement. Teaching teaches how to curate content online to align it with state standards. Does it take time? Yes. But, instead of playing outside consultants and companies to do this, a special committee of well trained and motivated teachers can come together and do this. They can pay them extra for this position. I think this will even motivate more teachers to get digitally ready when they see their colleagues getting payed extra for this kind of stuff. 
  • created an in-house wiki to manage its growing assortment of digital curricula and lessons.
  • dividing material into grade and subject areas, it helps educators unpack state standards and places them into bite-size expectations for what teachers should teach.
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  • Rather than relying on individual educators to sift through endless material, many districts and states are helping to curate and catalog such resources, serving as the librarians of the digital age.
  • "This is curated by teachers, not by someone on the 70th floor of a New York City high-rise. It's simple, but powerful: Teachers tend to trust other teachers."
  • The goal is to provide materials that meld with a teacher's normal workflow-and not to become yet another website to visit. "We're trying to curate good content, letting them know it's been reviewed and meets our standards, while also being mindful that there are a lot of resources out there,"
mbarek Akaddar

Digital access, collaboration a must for students | 15 Essentials for Effective School Technology Management | eSchoolNews.com - 5 views

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    Digital access, collaboration a must for students
Maggie Verster

The Ultimate Dropbox Toolkit & Guide - 8 views

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    Dropbox is an amazing filesharing tool and this guide has things in that boggles my mind- excellent!
Gilmar Mattos

Fluid Learning - 0 views

  • control is over. This is not about control anymore. This is about finding a way to survive and thrive in chaos.
  • We can’t roll back the clock to an earlier age without computers, without Internet, without the subtle but profound distraction of text messaging. The school is of its time, not out it.
  • The role of the instructor has changed
  • ...14 more annotations...
  • helps the students find the material available online, and helps them to make sense of it, contextualizing and informing their understanding. even as the students continue to work their way through the ever-growing set of information.
  • The instructor facilitates and mentors, as they have always done, but they are no longer the gatekeepers, because there are no gatekeepers, anywhere.
  • the more something is shared, the more valuable it becomes.
  • Education happens everywhere, not just with your nose down in a book, or stuck into a computer screen
  • Many students will never be very computer literate, but every single one of them has a mobile handset, and every single one of them sends text messages.
  • net filtering throws the baby out with the bathwater
  • Services like Twitter get filtered out because they could potentially be disruptive, cutting students off from the amazing learning potential of social messaging. Facebook and MySpace are seen as time-wasters, rather than tools for organizing busy schedules
  • media sites are blocked because the schools don’t have enough bandwidth to support them; Wikipedia is blocked because teachers don’t want students cheating.
  • Filtering, while providing a stopgap, only leaves students painfully aware of how disconnected the classroom is from the real world.
  • the maxim of the 21st century: connection is king
  • Students must be free to connect with instructors
  • difficult for instructors to manage, but it is vital.
  • Connection is expensive, not in dollars, but in time. But for all its drawbacks, connection enriches us enormously.
  • We need to let go, we need to trust ourselves enough to recognize that what we have now, though it worked for a while, is no longer fit for the times.
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    I: Out of Control Our greatest fear, in bringing computers into the classroom, is that we teachers and instructors and lecturers will lose control of the
Ana Luisa

Maintaining A "Good" Class | Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day... - 0 views

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    Tips on how tomaintain a GOOD class
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    Larry's blog has all kinds of lists and ideas for the classroom. It's simply a fantastic resource. Soon, you'll learn how you can get the updates of his blog without even going there!
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    Excellent tips for classes management
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    Excellent
Katia Falcomer

"I'll Work If You Give Me Candy" | Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day... - 2 views

  • “I’ll Work If You Give Me Candy” Filed under classroom practice Students were working on an assignment a couple of weeks ago. “Jack” (who faces a lot of challenges at home, and has been having some difficulties at school), however, was not. I went over to him and asked how it was going, and if he had some questions about what he needed to do. “I’ll work if you give me some candy,” he replied. I told him that wasn’t going to happen, that he was better than that, and that he needed to get to work. I knew that he didn’t like me “bugging him,” and we had made an arrangement a couple of months ago that when he was in this kind of mood I would leave him alone for a few minutes. Often, after that period of time, he would get focused without needing any additional intervention. A few minutes later, though, and Jack still wasn’t doing the assignment. I went over to him to check-in. “I’ll work if you give me some candy,” he repeated. I asked him to go outside where we could talk privately. I asked him if he felt that eating helped him to concentrate. He said yes, it did. I said, “Jack, I want you to be successful.   We all have things that help us concentrate — with me, it’s important to be in a quiet place.   You know there’s a class rule against eating in class, and I certainly don’t feel comfortable with your eating candy. But how about if I give you the option of bringing something besides candy to school and, if you’re having a hard time concentrating, as long as it doesn’t happen too often, you can have the option to eat while you’re working? How does that sound?” He eagerly agreed, we shook hands on the deal, and he went back to class and focused on his work. He’s been working hard since that time, and has not eaten anything in class since we made our agreement. But his knowing that he has the option to do so, I believe, has been a key part of the solution. This is similar to the option I’ve given some students to leave the room when they feel like they’re going to “blow”  — as long as they remain directly outside the door (see When A “Good” Class Goes “Bad” (And Back To “Good” Again!). All of us, particularly students who have family lives which are often out-of-control, function better when we feel we do have a certain level of control over…something. I have individual “deals” with many students in my class, and everybody knows it (we talk pretty explicitly about everybody being different, having different talents and different needs).  Only very, very ocassionally will students actually exercise the power they have in these deals.   Some might think these kinds of arrangements would prompt charges of unfairness from other students.  Surprisingly enough, in my five years of teaching, that has never occurred.  The students who don’t need these deals to focus understand why some do,  and everybody else understands because they have their own special arrangments with me. What kinds of individual “deals” have you made with students in your classes? addthis_url = 'http%3A%2F%2Flarryferlazzo.edublogs.org%2F2009%2F05%2F08%2Fill-work-if-you-give-me-candy%2F'; addthis_title = '%26%238220%3BI%26%238217%3Bll+Work+If+You+Give+Me+Candy%26%238221%3B'; addthis_pub = '';
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