Wednesday, July 18, 2012

3 Fun, Interactive Sites!

1. GEONET
Check this site out for awesome geography games from a Social Studies textbook company! It's free :)

2. ACS
Enjoy free games and educational resources on ACS's website. 

"ACS is a congressionally chartered independent membership organization which represents professionals at all degree levels and in all fields of chemistry and sciences that involve chemistry."


Free math, reading, just-for-fun games for elementary aged kids!


Friday, July 13, 2012

Yet another 3 educational technologies...

ABCYA.com





ABCYA.com is a great resource for fun, educational, interactive games for grades K-5 in most every content area.  Games are a great way to motivate kids to learn and apply the knowledge they've learned to activities.  There are also a slew of "just for fun" games that can be used as rewards for good behavior.  It's free and accessible anywhere with internet, and I know from personal experience that kids not only love it but also benefit from it!

ACTIVINSPIRE clickers
Clickers are a great way to boost student participation and accountability, while also observing and analyzing what students are and are not grasping.  The clickers can be assigned by number to each student.  In other words, the teacher can tell which student answered which questions correctly or incorrectly and can thereby pinpoint the problems any given student is having with the material.  This all goes without mentioning that students, especially in the younger grades love the clicker idea.

FASTTMATH
Fasttmath is a fun, interactive way for students, particularly those who are struggling, to strengthen their basic math facts through practice and gaming.  

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Panda and Professor Bunny Suit discuss the Water Cycle

The Water Cycle
by: alliesarah

Tech-Integrated Lesson Plan Rough Draft

Small Business Project

15 Favorite iPad Apps As Selected By Teachers

by K. Walsh on March 25, 2012

Out of 125 responses from teachers indicating their top 3 apps, these are the apps that were listed most often.

Over the last few weeks, we ran a survey asking teachers to tell us about two or three of their favorite iPad apps that they use in an education-related context. Today we share the apps that were listed most often, and include some feedback from teachers regarding why they like them so much.
Teachers Top iPad Apps image by K. Walsh, EmergingEdTech
As it turns out, free apps really outweighed paid apps in our survey responses. Here I list eleven free apps that rose to the top of the list when ranked by numbers of votes, followed by four paid apps that performed as well as the lower ranking free apps. Evernote and Dropbox easily rose to the no. 1 & 2 spots in the ranked list, with about 1 out of 3 respondents recommending at least one of these two popular applications.
First, we list the Favorite FREE iPads Apps that teachers indicated they use in their roles are educators:
  1. Evernote
  2. Dropbox
  3. Neu.Notes
  4. Screen Chomp
  5. TED Videos
  6. EduCreations
  7. iBooks
  8. Skitch
  9. Twitter
  10. Zite
  11. Science360
Following is a little information about each of these apps, and some feedback on why teachers like them.
1. Evernote (link to app in US iTunes store here)
Evernote allows you to easily maintain sets of notes and access them from just about any device, along with additional functionality. Here are some of the teacher’s comments about why they love this app:
- “It makes my life simpler!  Who couldn’t use an app that allows you to clip information from the web, connect to a drawing tool, (Skitch), take notes, has its own email AND syncs all your information seamlessly with your computer, phone and ipad!”
- “I don’t even know where to start. I love this App. I know it was on last year’s list but it is my top App. I use it to store job related info, … snapshots, urls, and mainly just keep me organized!”
- “I save all kinds of resources for myself and to share. I am able to organize them and file them.”

2. Dropbox (link to app in US iTunes store here)Another highly popular app, teacher’s love this one too. Dropbox allows you to synch files between multiple devices so you can easily get to them regardless of which device you’re on, and provides 2GB of storage for free.
- “It allows me to keep all my files in one secure place. When necessary I can share a specific folder with a class and allow for a quick and secure transfer of files.”
- “I use it to transfer/access files between my computer and iPad.  I love it because it is an easy way to access files – using email can clutter my inbox and make is difficult to organize.”

3. Neu.Notes (link to app in US iTunes store here)Take hand written notes and drawing on your iPad with great free app for sketching, note taking, mind mapping and more.
- “I use this to write all my notes in class every day.  Love it–just like writing on a whiteboard.”

4. Screen Chomp (link to app in US iTunes store here)This teacher’s comment explains Screen Chomp, and why he or she likes using it in their teaching role:

- “This is a whiteboard that allows you to record what you do, and narrate at the same time. It’s great for anything you want to show students. The file is saved online and you can play it on their site or download the mp4.”

5. TED Videos (link to app in US iTunes store here)
Access TED Talks here, “talks from some of the world’s most fascinating people”.
- “I use the videos from TED to spark discussions in my class, as well as to gather information on subjects I’m getting ready to teach.  Awesome information here!!”

6. EduCreations (link to app in US iTunes store here)
Educreations turns your iPad into a recordable whiteboard.
- “The ultimate screencasting app for teachers AND for students–teachers can flip classrooms and students can build demonstrations of thinking/knowledge. GREAT app!”
- “I can draw and create lessons on my iPad and I can find other user’s lessons.”

7. iBooks (link to app in US iTunes store here)Apple’s electronic books app is included with iOS 5 (already installed on new iPads). I thought this teacher’s comment showed an interesting approach to the use of this tool, and this can be done more easily for a PDF – you can open a PDF in iBooks once you have it open on the iPad and it will be saved there until you delete it (when you have a PDF open on the iPad, click the ‘send to’ icon and you should have an ‘Open In …’ iBooks option if you have iBooks installed).

- “This is a perfect app for a classroom teacher.  If you want kids to share their writing with one another, all you need to do is take their Word document (or PDF), upload it to a site like 2epub.com, convert it, put it in your Dropbox and then open it in iBooks.  Think of the power of all those books on the iBooks shelves… and they’re all written by your students!”

8. Skitch (link to app in US iTunes store here)“Mark up photos, screenshots, maps, and webpages then share them with anyone you like” (from iTunes store description).
- “It is great for annotating pictures, maps, or screenshots.  Simple to use and syncs with Evernote.”

9. Twitter (link to app in US iTunes store here)The insanely popular microblogging platform offers it’s own free iPad app.

- “I use this app to stay up to date on new educational technology, trends in education, trends and ideas in gifted education, and am researching and brainstorming how to incorporate Twitter with my students next year.”

10. Zite (link to app in US iTunes store here)“Zite is a free personalized magazine for your iPad that automatically learns what you like and gets smarter every time you use it” (from iTunes store description).
- “Gathering web articles on many different topics for educational professional development.”
- “Keeps me up to date on news and blogs–love the easy set up and format.”

11. Science 360 (link to app in US iTunes store here).
“The National Science Foundation’s (NSF) Science360 for iPad provides easy access to engaging science and engineering images and video from around the globe and a news feed featuring breaking news from NSF-funded institutions” (from iTunes store description).
- “I like to use these videos to reinforce ideas of what my students are learning.  This helps me pull them up quickly and use apple TV to watch them.”
- “The app has a good visual field when you open it so you have a good idea what the topic is and if you can tell if it’s a video.  I use it with my 3rd grade reading group mostly as a behavior modification.”
So there you have the top free apps chosen. To round out survey results, there were also a handful of paid apps that ranked the same as the lower entries in the top listing above.

The Favorite PAID iPads Apps that teachers indicated they use in their roles are educators:
12. Alge-Bingo (link to app in US iTunes store here)
Students can develop their algebraic equation solving skills through playing a Bingo game. Created by a high school math teacher with over 25 years of experience in the classroom. ($ .99)
- “For Algebra students to learn and review their equation-solving skills. It is addicting and a fun way to get my kids to learn!”

13. SplashTop (link to app in US iTunes store here)
A very popular remote desktop app that let’s you access your desktop PCs or macs and run the apps on them. ($2.99)
- “This app allows me to control my PC computer through my iPad. I am also able to use the iPad as a slate. This allows me to use my IWB remotely from across the classroom.”

14. Explain Everything (link to app in US iTunes store here)
This iPad presentation tool is easy-to-use, letting you annotate, animate, and narrate explanations and presentations. ($2.99)
- “This is a great, low-cost app that enables you to draw and annotate on the screen, while narrating or recording explanations. You can import photos, PDF and slides on which you can draw and then you can export in multiple formats. Great app when you need to quickly explain something that requires a sketch or drawing and it’s easy to share to your cloud storage or YouTube.”

15. NoteTaker HD (link to app in US iTunes store here)
Capture and manage handwritten notes and diagrams. ($4.99)
- “This is the preferred note taking app for our students. It is very easy to use and has a great interface.”

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Another 3...

1. Promethean Boards

Promethean Boards are "Smart" Whiteboards with interactive capabilities that "bring together formative assessment, resources, and dynamic lesson development and delivery tools." Promethean Boards use multimedia devices and have internet capabilities.  They engage children in lesson more than a standard white/blackboard lecture, and allow children to actively engage in the material.







2. BLiSS SiM
An image of BLiSS Sim for iPad
The BLiSS SiM is a free educational app developed by the Classroom of the Future, a NASA sponsored project.  the app helps students develop an "Earth-like" solution for oxygen, water, and food.  It presents the situation of extreme conditions on Earth, or housing humans in space. A very fun, unique app for kids interested in space!


3. EmergingEDTech
Gamification of Education picture image
Gaming curriculum for Higher Education
Source: http://www.emergingedtech.com/
Gaming:
1. heightens student engagement
2. motivates students
3. allow students to experience real life situations without danger

Pepe sings!

After seeing Patty's website, I got the urge to share my singing dog!

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

3 More Technologies!

Voicethread


This is an awesome technology that records text and voice to create collaborative presentations.  Voicethread is cloud-based and can therefore be accessed anywhere in the world.  It allows users to collaboratively doodle, record voice, add text, video, or picture, and navigate the slides, all without installing software.

Wordle




Wordle is awesome! It's fun; no so much educational, but can be used to create posters rich with vocabulary. I made this wordle in 2 minutes with an excerpt from my blog. :)

Snagit
As someone who loves screenshotting (I screenshotted the wordle above and downloaded it from my desktop into my blog), this is a great technology.  It helps you screen capture, edit, and save on "the cloud!"



Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Unrelated to the course, but just trying out video embedding in my blog! Here's my first time on a trapeze :)

Unit Plan Idea-- Dream Room

3rd Grade Math/Econ

Students will create their own "Dream Room" after they are given a budget and measurement restriction. They will calculate areas and perimeters of each "purchased" item in their room, as well as manage their allotted budgets when making purchases. More to come....

Place Value and Fractions:
3.1          The student will
a)   read and write six-digit numerals and identify the place value and value of each digit;
b)   round whole numbers, 9,999 or less, to the nearest ten, hundred, and thousand; and
c)   compare two whole numbers between 0 and 9,999, using symbols (>, <, or = ) and words (greater than, less than, or equal to).

Computation and Estimation:
3.4          The student will estimate solutions to and solve single-step and multistep problems involving the sum or difference of two whole numbers, each 9,999 or less, with or without regrouping.
3.5          The student will recall multiplication facts through the twelves table, and the corresponding division facts.

Measurement
3.9          The student will estimate and use U.S. Customary and metric units to measure
a)   length to the nearest -inch, inch, foot, yard, centimeter, and meter;

d)   area and perimeter.

3.10        The student will
a)   measure the distance around a polygon in order to determine perimeter; and
b)   count the number of square units needed to cover a given surface in order to determine area.

Economics
3.9          The student will identify examples of making an economic choice and will explain the idea of opportunity cost (what is given up when making a choice).

http://www.doe.virginia.gov/testing/common_core/index.shtml



Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Yet another 3 technologies for your classroom!

1. Dropbox
For my next technology, I'll review one that my professor has recently invited us to try.  Dropbox, like google docs, provides "cloud" storage, so that you can access your documents from any computer that has dropbox capabilities.  This is a great technology for both students and teachers.  As a student, I work on projects and papers on my home computer, my personal laptop, and my laptop at work, as well as on other work computers.  Dropbox provides me the opportunity to seamlessly work on the same document from different computers without having to constantly email myself the updated version of my work.  As a teacher, I foresee using dropbox to collaborate on projects with other teachers, as the work we put in the dropbox would be accessible by any other teachers working on the same project with the dropbox technology.

2. Delicious
Delicious is another nifty web-based way of collecting and sharing ideas and findings.  The website has personal and professional applications, and I could see it be particularly useful in the teaching profession.  For example, all of the teachers on one grade-level team could save and share interesting websites, activities, field trip location ideas, etc. as a collection online.  Each teacher's collections are viewable by the others, so sharing and collaboration is a huge benefit of this technology in the educational profession.

3. TED
TED is a website with a wealth of interesting lecture videos about a variety of topics, including technology, entertainment, design, business, and science. These videos could certainly prove excellent supplements to lessons, though, I caution teachers that some of the videos are of mature content and would not be appropriate in the classroom.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Avatar

Having class this late at night is altering my self-perception...

Saturday, June 2, 2012

PLNs: Personal, Passionate, Professional Learning Networks

Personal (or Professional/Passionate) Learning Networks are proof that technology has immense and enriching effects on how teachers educate. A PLN is a web-based social media forum in which people of similar interests and/or locations can share, reflect, collaborate, and evaluate.  They prove an extremely useful tool in the education system, but are not yet universally used in school systems.


PLNs have the capacity to connect not only teachers in the same building serving the same school, but also teachers in the same county, state, country, and across the world.  Because of their web-based nature, anyone with internet access could benefit from these rich resources.  PLNs offer teachers virtually limitless data, ideas, strategies, projects, and very importantly, support and feedback from the other educators in their circles.  These rich networks strive to accomplish what every education system should-- to exhaust all resources to provide students with the most meaningful, effective education possible.
Once I am a classroom teacher, I will either seek out or create such a PLN.  I predict it begins with a cluster of teachers at my school, but soon will branch out to other schools in Arlington County, and finally (and hopefully) will spread to nearby counties.  A PLN could benefit my class by providing numerous perspectives on each topic of curriculum, as well as various methods of instruction.  This lends opportunity to meaningful differentiation of lesson delivery, a crucial aspect of a successful classroom.  Further, I would be interested to learn about what and how other teachers are teaching. What I would hope would result from my participation in a PLN with fellow educators would be a deeper understanding of the curriculum and an effective manner of instruction, consisting of an amalgamation of my colleagues' ideas and suggestions.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

QR code


In case you also enjoy running outside, here is a great technology for mapping and planning routes around my hometown!

3 more education technologies

Last week, I posted about educational uses for iPads, as well as descriptions and uses for certain applications in the classroom.  I chose the iPad off of the "top 100 tools for learning 2011"list compiled by Jane Hart, and, today, will discuss three more technologies from this collection with educational applications.

Prezi





Prezi is a software for developing presentation, which differs from presentation interfaces such as Microsoft PowerPoint in its use of "Zooming User Interface."  In presentations on Prezi, users can pan and zoom in and out of different areas of their virtual presentation, which can consist of text, images, and/or videos.  The relative size and arrangement of each area of the presentation is controlled by the presenter.  Prezi's goal is to set itself apart from other presentation software by providing a more interesting, intuitive method of presenting through a more dimensional visual display.

Audacity


Audacity is a sound recording and editing software with various digital effects and plug-ins.  It can import and export sound-bytes in most formats, including mp3, wav, and aiff.  It provides clear recordings of normal speech, music, and singing and allows for sound filtering.  Audacity could be a great tool for pre-reading and/or pre-writing students and students with reading/writing disabilities or difficulties.  It also could serve the education application of being used in speech therapy.


Storybird



Storybird is a story-creating software that centers around artistic expression.  Students start a story based on a chosen picture.  The technology encourages creativity, while giving users a starting point from which to formulate their stories.  Its online format makes editing and sharing easy, and its vast art collection makes it fun and idea-inspiring, particularly for school-age children.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Reflection 5/29

We're not even halfway through class for the night, but I already have something to reflect upon.  We started class tonight by getting an introduction to html code.  Here's what I did:


<html>
<title> Allie's Intro to HTML </title>
<body>
Welcome to this introductory page.

I'm going to experiment with the color <font color="red"> red. </font>
<div>

I'm going to experiment with the color <font color="red"> red </font> and <font size=+16> size.

</div>


<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Llama" target="new"> A llama </a>
<BR>

<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Llama" target="new" height=200><img src="http://fordlog.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/llama-smile.jpg" height="200"></a>
</body>
</html>

Looks like gibberish, I know, but when opened in Chrome, it's a goofy llama picture hyperlinked to a wikipedia page.

I could definitely see using this knowledge in the classroom.  Rather than walking students step by step on their computers through a computer activity, such as a research project, I could create a website with the instructions hyperlinked to the pages they would need to complete the activity.  This way, most students would be self-sufficient in completing the assignment and could work at their own pace, exploring the links on the webpage I created for them in the order and timeframe that best serves their learning ability. Successful beginning of class, thus far!

Keyboard Shortcuts for Mac Activ Inspire

Here's a nifty table of keyboard shortcuts for Mac computers for those of you who use Activ Inspire for Promethean Boards:
ShortcutWhich Means Press These KeysEffect
Command + Athe command key the A keySelect All (everything on the Inspire screen)
Command + Bthe command key the B keyBrowsers (reveal them or hide them)
Command + Cthe command key the C keyCopy (that which is selected)
Command + Dthe command key the D keyDuplicate (that which is selected; if a page is selected in the page browser, it duplicates the selected flipchart page)
Command + Ethe command key the E keyEraser (invoke the eraser tool)
Command + Fthe command key the F keyFill (invoke the fill tool)
Command + Hthe command key the H keyHide the Application (click the Inspire icon to make it reappear).
Command + Jthe command key the J keyEdit Profile
Command + Mthe command key the M keyMedia (Choose Media To Insert Into Flipchart - such as audio or video)
Command + Nthe command key the N keyNew (create a new flipchart)
Command + Othe command key the O keyOpen (open an existing flipchart)
Command + Pthe command key the P keyPrint Flipchart
Command + Sthe command key the S keySave Flipchart
Command + Tthe command key the T keyText (invoke the text tool)
Command + Uthe command key the U keyCustomize Toolbar (Edit Profile - Commands)
Command + Vthe command key the V keyPaste (whatever was copied, such as with Command + C)
Command + Wthe command key the W keyClose Flipchart
Command + Xthe command key the X keyCut (object has to be selected)
Command + Zthe command key the Z keyUndo what has just been done.
Shift + Command + Athe shift key the command key the A keyDesktop Annotate (click Desktop Annotate on Toolbar, upper left icon, second down, to return to flipchart)
Shift + Command + Cthe shift key the command key the C keyConnectors (invoke the connectors tool)
Source:  http://prometheanboardsbound.pcsstn.com/mac-activinspire-keyboard-shortcuts