Scrible - Bookmark, Annotate and Create Bibliographies
I may have just found a competitor for Delicious when it comes to using a bookmarklet on your desktop. I encourage you to check out Scrible. While I don't think that I has quite the same social bookmarking capabilities that Delicious has, it does offer some pretty amazing tools that I find useful and that I could encourage my students to use. Scrible offers the ability to do things like highlight, annotate, use sticky notes and change the font of websites that you bookmark. The greatest part of all that is once you bookmark it and save it to Scrible, that is how the webpage will look to you the next time you visit it. Imagine all the research time that is saved when you can highlight and take notes right on a page as you are researching it. Save it and come back to it later and the notes are still there. Scrible also has a feature that allows you create bibliographies while you work. I recommend checking this one out. It have great potential for our students.
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Every Stock Photo
Every Stock Photo - Image Search Engine
For all of us out there struggling to find that exact image that we want that is also legal to use, I just read an article about www.everystockphoto.com. Every Stock Photo is a photo search engine that searches for images that either have a CC license or that are in the public domain and gets the images from all over the internet. No longer are we limited to the few photos that we can find using Google images. While Flickr is a great resource, Every Stock Photo is now another place to look. In addition, it is potentially a great tool to introduce to our students to show them the wide variety of images that are available with appropriate licensing, however I did read a couples reviews that questioned the results of some of the searches.
For all of us out there struggling to find that exact image that we want that is also legal to use, I just read an article about www.everystockphoto.com. Every Stock Photo is a photo search engine that searches for images that either have a CC license or that are in the public domain and gets the images from all over the internet. No longer are we limited to the few photos that we can find using Google images. While Flickr is a great resource, Every Stock Photo is now another place to look. In addition, it is potentially a great tool to introduce to our students to show them the wide variety of images that are available with appropriate licensing, however I did read a couples reviews that questioned the results of some of the searches.
Thursday, May 23, 2013
5 Great Activities from Read Write Think
5 Great Activities from Read Write Think
Have I mentioned how much I love getting the RSS feed from Free Technology 4 Teachers each day? If you haven't subscribed to it, I highly recommend checking it out. This article is about the website Read Write Think. I has a lot of great resources for elementary teachers. Now I thought that would exclude me, but I quickly found a few useful things and I know that many of you reading this blog will be able to find something useful too.
The article highlights 5 things that you can do with the website. Obviously most of them have to do with writing, but one option I found I thought I could really have some fun with. This was a Trading Card creator. There are so many things that I can do as a social studies teacher with this program. Now is the perfect time of year for me to check it out and have my students create some trading cards.
Anyway, hopefully there is something there that you can find useful. On a separate note, I came across the website Toondoo this morning while searching for a way for my students to create political cartoons. I recommend checking it out too. It is not quite as user friendly as something like GoAnimate but it will get the job done and students don't have to be artists to create their own cartoons.
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
The Top 10+ Sites for a Successful 1:1 Laptop Program: Experiences from the Trenches
The Top 10+ Sites for a Successful 1:1 Laptop Program: Experiences from the Trenches
I read this article found on the Free technology for Teachers blog that I subscribe to. I s a list of websites used regularly by a school in Rock Valley, Iowa. This school is has a 1:1 laptop to student ratio. I am really sharing this article because it has links to 10 plus different technology sites that many of you many find interesting. Let me highlight a couple of them.
One site that you might want to check out if you make tutorials for your students is Screencast-o-matic. This site seems easy to work with and you just record anything that you have on your screen. Once completed you can upload your videos to YouTube.
Another site worth checking out would be Penzu. Penzu is a free online journal or diary. This is something that I thought could be used with student writing and a way that it can be done at school or at home without needing to take home any materials, or forget any materials either.
Again, I highly recommend that you check out all the sites listed in the article. As I looked them over I found myself add several of them to my Delicious account.
If any of you already use any of these sites and have any feedback for us, I'd love to hear it.
Monday, May 13, 2013
Play Games or Create Your Own Through YoYo Games
Play Games or Create Your Own Through YoYo Games
Ok, so even I can admit that my last Blog was kind of boring. I think that some of you are going to love this website. YoYo Games has a tool that lets you develop your own video games. It is called Game Maker 8. There are 3 different versions. A basic free version or a couple different upgrades that aren't very expensive, $50 and $100.
The website also has tons of different games that you can currently play that have been developed by other people. This product sounds like it could be a winner for many of us. No longer will your students complain that assignments are boring and that they only like video games. Now they can create their own video game based on whatever topic you are covering in class. Go check it out.
How to Grow Your Own Film Academy
How to Grow Your Own Film Academy
I saw this article Edutopia and it caught my attention. I think that film making for students is a great way for many to express their creativity and for some to do things in front of students that they would never do in person.
Actually I was about 1/3 of the way thorugh the article and about to give up on it when I saw these lines. "Once he recognized the instructional value of digital storytelling, Bentley began taking advantage of local expertise to learn more about the craft of filmmaking." (Boss) I was then hooked. can this article give me more about a topic that is being introduced in our class this week. Well, the answer was not really. However, I did find a lot of useful information about how to use filmmaking in the classroom and some suggestions as to where to start if you wanted to create some type of after school club. Several teachers at our building have been pushing our principal to allow our middle school students to produce video announcements. Maybe this article will convince me to push a little bit harder. We have talked about making it an elective class for some students to take. I think if I can come up with a list of educational and informational videos that we could produce for the students body, I might have a case.
Do any of your schools have student produced video announcements?
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
eduClipper Is What Teachers Want Pinterest To Be
eduClipper Is What Teachers Want Pinterest To Be
Ok. So this may come as a shock to you all, but I'm not really a Pinterest kind of guy. Whatever that means. But I do know what Pinterest is and I do know several people that get a lot of ideas for both their everyday lives and their classrooms from Pinterest, so I saw this article and thought that I had to share it.
This idea of eduClipper sounds amazing. I wonder if it is like a combination of Delicious and Pinterest on steroids. It seems that the users will be able to bookmark sites like with Delicious but then also add PPT, PDF, images and video to the site. That sounds great and what an amazing tool to be able to share with colleagues. The article also mentions that Google Drive documents can be added to eduClipper boards but that the truly amazing part that teachers will love is that you can create classes with class boards and allow students to access these class boards. Teachers will have control over what can be shared and control over the comments that are posted.
I can't wait to check this out in more detail. I guess it is getting added to my long list of things that I want to do with my classes. By the way, that list is getting so long that I am being to wonder where I should even start. C'mon technology, slow down!!!!! :)
Nearpod Homework - A New Option for Sharing Lessons Over iPads
Nearpod Homework - A New Option for Sharing Lessons Over iPads
I came across this article on a feed that I subscribe to called Free Technology for Teachers. It is about a service for iPad users that delivers lesson and polls and other things to your students. It is called Nearpod. Unfortunately I do not have an iPad classroom but there are a few that are being piloted in our district and one of my closest friends and colleagues teachers in one. So this obviously caught my attention and I forwarded the story on to him.
Nearpod is now available as Nearpod Homework and teachers can send their students presentations and assignments that students can work on at home or in class. The great thing about it is that a report is also generated for the teacher to see how their students are responding to the assignments.
I realize that there are plenty of other websites that teachers can use that do similar things but I thought that this is a great way to streamline many of those sites into one neatly delivered service for your iPad classroom.
Any of you that teach in an iPad classroom might want to take the time to check out Nearpod.
Anybody already using this service and want to give feedback?
Monday, May 6, 2013
Is the Cell Phone the New Pencil?
Edutopia
This article really grabbed my attention because it jumped out with a statement about the poor writing skills of students today. I was hooked. Where are they going with this because cell phones and texting surely are not helping our students become better writers. I know that I see it all the time in assignments that are turned in to me. One minute the essay makes sense and the next minute it is like I am reading a text. OMG did they really just put that in their paper:)
After the initial "hook" the article went on to say that "the students we teach today write more than any generation in human history." (Grabill) Where are they going with this? Ok, I can buy that idea, but they surely don't write the best. The article gave evidence supporting that our students write nearly as much for their own personal fulfillment as they do for homework assignments. I can agree with that. They email, text and Facebook and they definitely do that more than they spend on any of my writing assignments. The findings were important, but the biggest surprise to the author was that the statistics pointed to how much students use handheld devices as there main writing tool. Why not allow students to use their cell phones in class. They might even use them for something worth while like taking notes or writing their papers, as awkward as that may be. We have a generation of students that have grown up with cell phones. It is time to use them to our advantage and as a tool of engagement for our students.
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