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anonymous

Let Google Voice Rock the Classroom! - 0 views

  • Get in Character: Let the learners have fun by leaving messages in character.  Perhaps you’re studying historical figures or fictional characters.  Let the learners assume the role and record messages assuming that role.  I’d love to hear what the kids come up with when given this task!
  • Vocabulary: Learners can speak sentences or paragraphs that demonstrate knowledge of vocabulary words.  You could even embed these in a class website, to serve as review/reference materials.
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    "Let Google Voice Rock the Classroom!"... Wow
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    Math Solutions: To demonstrate understanding of a topic or the solution to a problem, the learners can talk it out. When I was a math teacher, I would have loved this as form of assessment that allowed me inside the kids' heads.
anonymous

plus.maths.org - 1 views

  • Plus magazine opens a door to the world of maths, with all its beauty and applications, by providing articles from the top mathematicians and science writers on topics as diverse as art, medicine, cosmology and sport.
anonymous

Building Math Positivity | Edutopia - 2 views

  • Before children can become interested in math, they have to be comfortable with it. They must perceive their environment as physically and psychologically safe before learning can occur. Students build resilience and coping strategies when they learn how to use their academic strengths to build math skills and strategies.
anonymous

HippoCampus - Homework and Study Help - Free help with your algebra, biology, environme... - 0 views

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    wow
anonymous

Industry Pitching Cellphones as a Teaching Tool - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • paid for by Qualcomm, a
  • This is a device kids have, it’s a device they are familiar with and want to take advantage of,” said Shawn Gross, director of Digital Millennial Consulting
  • On Tuesday, Digital Millennial will release findings from its study of four North Carolina schools in low-income neighborhoods, where ninth- and 10th-grade math students were given high-end cellphones running Microsoft’s Windows Mobile software and special programs meant to help them with their algebra studies.
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  • “Texting, ringing, vibrating,” said Janet Bass, a spokeswoman for the American Federation of Teachers, the nation’s second largest teachers’ union. “Cellphones so far haven’t been an educational tool. They’ve been a distraction.” Ms. Bass says it is “almost laughable that the cellphone industry is pushing a study showing that cellphones will make kids smarter,” particularly during a recession that is crushing the budgets of many school districts.
    • anonymous
       
      SOmeone thinking inside the box.
  • Suzette Kliewer, the teacher who administered the Digital Millennial program at Southwest High School in Jacksonville, N.C., said the phones excited her students and made them collaborate and focus on their studies, even outside of school hours. “They took average-level kids and made them into honors-level kids,” she said.But Ms. Kliewer also said that she spent much of her own time at night, and during weekends and holidays, monitoring the students’ phone use and occasionally disconnecting phones remotely when students broke the rules.“You have to be willing to put in the time and be very patient with the technology,” she said.
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    What do you think?
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    Add a comment
anonymous

Labyrinth - 0 views

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    Lure of the Labyrinth is a interactive math game created by Fable Vision, MPT, and MIT. Students take on a monster persona and disguise themselves as monster insiders to maneuver through math problems. As students work through the game, they will work with proportions, fractions, ratios, variables, equations, numbers, and operations.
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