Top Sites of the Week

July 25, 2009

This week I have come across some really great sites. Below are a few of them:

1. Ever wonder about whether of not to use that piece of literature or music. Is it fair use or infringing on the copyright laws. Well here’s a great site to help you through this dilemma.

FAIR USE

  • Help you better understand how to determine the “fairness” of a use under the U.S. Copyright Code.
  • Collect, organize & archive the information you might need to support a fair use evaluation.
  • Provide you with a time-stamped, PDF document for your records [example], which could prove valuable, should you ever be asked by a copyright holder to provide your fair use evaluation and the data you used to support it. [why is this important?]
  • Provide access to educational materials, external copyright resources, and contact information for copyright help at local & national levels.

2. Want to make an online time-line? Then Dipity.com is for you….

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You can create a timeline on the fly with great site or let Dipity do it for you with one click.

3. Digital storytelling is an engaging and authentic tool that uses images, music and other media to tell a story.

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DigiTales ‘ website provides ideas, resources and inspiration for families, individuals, schools, organizations, corporations, churches and everyone else ready to discover the power and magic of merging the art of storytelling with the enchantment of using digital tools. Let all DigiTales StoryKeepers be heard far and wide!

4. Have you ever wanted to give your photo an effect like sepia or make create a wanted poster in a matter of seconds? Tuxpi  takes your photo and transform it with a collection of easy to use effects.

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5. Want a fun and cool way to teach mouse skills? The Feed the Head is for you. This creative and slightly creepy images reinforces exercises like drag and drop, point and click, and click and drag. Try it out! Vectorpark has many other fun sites as well.

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Keeping up with the Kids

July 21, 2009

I just read the excerpt below and had to write about it. The piece is from The Power of Pow! Wham! Children, Digital Media and Our Nation’s Future, Three challenges for the coming Decade by Rima Shore, PH.D.

“In the realm of digital media, researchers (like most other adults) are hard pressed to keep up with children. They follow along somewhat breathlessly as kids make seemingly effortless leaps to new platforms. As children explore the possibilities of Web 2.0 applications, cell phone programs, and podcasts, researchers are debating the impact of decade-old digital games. University of Wisconsin professor Kurt Squire has written, “SimCity is more than a decade old. A generation of youth has grown up with edutainment. Yet, we know very little about what they are learning playing these games (if anything)” (Squire, 2002, p. 4).

In today’s public schools, students are powering down upon entering the school walls instead they should be powering up. They shut off their ipods, cell phones, and if they have a laptop, they can’t get online without a secure proxy. Schools should be tech havens for our students. They should be able to sit in front of the building 24/7 and surf the web. Instead we worry about our signal bleeding through classroom walls. I’ve been in classrooms where the students are huddled under the wireless access point in their room so that more than 2 computers can get online. At some point, we have to stop worrying about policing student’s internet activities and actually teach them how to be responsible and accountable web purveyors.


Top Sites of the Week

July 17, 2009

1. Tech Ease for Mac

Quick answers to real classroom technology questions. An online service of the Educational Technology Clearinghouse.Tech-Ease

2. iWebKit

Iwebkit is the revolutionnairy kit used to create high quality iPhone and iPod touch websites in a few minutes and is based on an LGPL license. In the first 4 months of it’s existance the pack has greatly evolved from a basic idea to a project that has reached worldwide fame!

Here is a sneak peak of what’s new:

  • Your creations load 25% faster by reducing and optimizing the code
  • The easy tutorials and code now has become even simpler by reducing the size of the HTML documents by 20%
  • Awsome new and advanced features offered by no pack in the world like a custom popup and iphone-style form elements
  • A whole new website focusing on ease of use and support with a complete new design and a forum.

3. Brain Honey

Track grades, differentiate instruction, and monitor progress against state standards for classroom, blended, or online learning. BrainHoney is easy to use and free to join.

4. ISTE Observation Tool

The ISTE Classroom Observation Tool (ICOT®) is a FREE online tool that provides a set of questions to guide classroom observations of a number of key components of technology integration.

5. World History for us All

World History for Us All is a powerful, innovative model curriculum for teaching world history in middle and high schools.

  • offers a treasury of teaching units, lesson plans, and resources.
  • presents the human past as a single story rather than unconnected stories of many civilizations.
  • helps teachers meet state and national standards.
  • enables teachers to survey world history without excluding major peoples, regions, or time periods.
  • helps students understand the past by connecting specific subject matter to larger historical patterns.
  • draws on up-to-date historical research.
  • may be readily adapted to a variety of world history programs.



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