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Tomas V

The Why Here | Why Now Project by Brooke Bryan: collecting sights, sounds, and stories ... - 0 views

shared by Tomas V on 21 May 10 - Cached
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    based on oral history interviews. modules.
Tomas V

Endangered Language Alliance - 2 views

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    An urban initiative for endangered language research and conservation
Tomas V

Rhymesayers Entertainment :: Home - 1 views

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    This site is a good example of design aesthetics and layout for a home page. Featured content, blog (news) feed, social networking links, etc. Just one idea of the "modern" look.
Jonathan Lederman

Mind42.com - 1 views

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    This is a flow chart for useful Web 2.0 utilities
Jonathan Lederman

Writing With Web Logs - 0 views

  • If the fear of giving students an open forum to publish to their personal Web pages without an editor's approval keeps schools from exploring Web logs, consider that self-publishing encourages ownership and responsibility for content. UserLand COO John Robb notes, "Web logs are attached to an individual in the way a discussion board isn't. There are rules to using a Web log. If students break them, they can lose their site."
  • Creating online communities where student writing takes center stage means inviting audiences to read and reflect on published work. For educators, this involves reaching out into virtual and professional communities for collaborative opportunities. For instance, working writers and journalists could volunteer to serve as editors of student blogs. Additionally, alliances between K-12 and higher education would benefit preservice teachers who could gain valuable teaching and technology experience responding to student blogs, while students would benefit from having reliable readers critiquing and encouraging their work.
  • Content management platforms on which blogs are built make this entire process easier and more efficient. But while new uses of Web-based applications can make writing more real for students, educators will still need to consider how to evaluate what happens when students write online.
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  • Start slowly by asking students to post once a week in response to a specific assignment. Allow them to customize and personalize their site as much as their Web log application and school policies will allow. With that freedom comes responsibility, so spend a class drafting the rules for publishing to their sites. Have each student sign a copy, and keep it on file.
  • Optimize the journal format by evaluating student writing over time, not just in one high-pressure testing event. Schedule several formal assessments during the school year at which time you can give a term grade that will be averaged with grades from subsequent evaluations.
  • Co-authors Stephen Valentine, a finalist in this year's T&L Ed Tech Leaders of the Year program, and Gray Smith write about this challenge in Writing in a Wired World: Improving Student Writing Using a Computer, forthcoming from Teacher Created Materials. To encourage substantive discussion in student message board communication, they've developed conversation assessments using a five-point rubric that outlines the key criteria for determining a student's grade, including use of evidence, engagement with the text, and whether or not a student responded thoughtfully.
  • Use models. Bookmark examples of well-written blogs. Take a class period to discuss what an effective post looks like. The same goes for examples of helpful reader response. If you use discussion board features to workshop students' writing, you also need to guide and reward the difficult work of learning how to give constructive criticism.
Jonathan Lederman

Cybraryman Internet Catalogue For Educational Web Sites - Websites for Educators, Paren... - 0 views

shared by Jonathan Lederman on 05 May 10 - Cached
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    The internet catalogue for students, teachers, administrators & parents. Over 20,000 relevant links personally selected by an educator/author with over 30 years of experience.  This web site endeavors to identify useful or interesting resources. However, I can provide no warranty as to the accuracy, value or appropriateness of information found on any particular website. Online resources may change or disappear at any time and I cannot be responsible for these factors outside of my control.
Jonathan Lederman

The Lost Languages, Found in New York - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • In an effort to keep those voices alive, Professor Kaufman has helped start a project, the Endangered Language Alliance, to identify and record dying languages, many of which have no written alphabet, and encourage native speakers to teach them to compatriots.
  • “It’s hard to use a word like preserve with a language,” said Robert Holman, who teaches at Columbia and New York University and is working with Professor Kaufman on the alliance. “It’s not like putting jelly in a jar. A language is used. Language is consciousness. Everybody wants to speak English, but those lullabies that allow you to go to sleep at night and dream — that’s what we’re talking about.”
Tomas V

Intangible Cultural Heritage | - 2 views

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    This is site about intangible cultural heritage in newfoundland...includes community profiles and topic collections.
Jonathan Lederman

Higher Education Reimagined With Online Courseware - Education Life - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Marian C. Diamond
  • eaching anatomy at the University of California, Berkeley, for 50 years
  • Videos of her anatomy course, Integrative Biology 131, have been viewed nearly 1.5 million times on YouTube, where they have been available since 2005 to anyone with an Internet connection. Some of the world’s foremost scholars are up there for viewing, tuition free. From Yale, you can tune into an economics class by a professor with his own home-price index, Robert Shiller, or a course by the Milton scholar John Rogers. The undisputed rock star academic is Walter H. G. Lewin of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who flies across the room to demonstrate that a pendulum swings no faster or slower when there is an added mass (Professor Lewin) hanging at the end.
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  • M.I.T. OpenCourseWare Initiative helped usher in the “open educational resources” movement, with its ethos of sharing knowledge via free online educational offerings, including podcasts and videos of lectures, syllabuses and downloadable textbooks. The movement has also helped dislodge higher education from its brick-and-mortar moorings.
  • Ithaka S+R, a nonprofit service that helps academic institutions use technology for research and teaching.
  • If the mission of the university is the creation of knowledge (via research) and the dissemination of knowledge (via teaching and publishing), then it stands to reason that giving that knowledge away fits neatly with that mission.
  • Open University, the distance-learning behemoth based in England, has vastly increased its visibility with open courses, which frequently show up in the Top 5 downloads on Apple’s iTunes U, a portal to institutions’ free courseware as well as marketing material. The Open University’s free offerings have been downloaded more than 16 million times, with 89 percent of those downloads outside the U.K., says Martin Bean, vice chancellor of the university. Some 6,000 students started out with a free online course before registering for a paid online course.
  • given higher education unprecedented reach.
  • what has it taught us?
  • material on the Internet may be free, but getting it there definitely isn’t. The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the principal financial backer of the open educational movement, has spent more than $110 million over the past eight years, with more than $14 million going to M.I.T. The cost of re-creating the educational experience is high.
  • Yale has spent $30,000 to $40,000 for each course it puts online. This includes the cost of the videographer, generating a transcript and providing what Diana E. E. Kleiner, who runs Open Yale Courses, calls “quality assurance.” By next fall, Yale will have reached its initial goal of putting up 36 courses, and has plans to add more.
  • $150 million has been spent on open education over the past decade, and more money is coming in from other sources, including $8 million contributed last year by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
Jonathan Lederman

CyberFrequencies: How Kids Use Technology vs. Public Schools - 0 views

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    "Many public schools still don't have reliable Internet. Teachers are super lucky if they have a few working computers in their classroom. Kids in lower socio-economic neighborhoods can't get consistent Internet connection at home. When those kids step out of high school will they be prepared for the 21st century work force?"
Tomas V

Create : Communicate : Collaborate | PlaceStories - 2 views

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    PlaceStories is a software system for managing digital media, creating digital stories and publishing online through Google Maps. They allow for communities to tell their own story. Through their system they allow for communities to upload and post content to google maps.
Tomas V

Music Downloads, MP3 Downloads, MP3 songs from eMusic.com - 3 views

shared by Tomas V on 19 Apr 10 - Cached
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    galleries of related web-materials for artists; user reviews/feedback; sharing of playlists & recommendations; integration with Facebook
Tomas V

MapMyGlobe (BETA) - 1 views

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    Interesting site that allows for pages to be created at certain place markers. In those pages you can edit the content to include text and photos. These pages or frames act like slides in a powerpoint presentation.
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