Monday, December 5, 2011

Link O'the Month: Google Lit Trips

Google Lit Trips are amazing teaching tools created using Google Earth. Google Earth, self described as a satellite imagery-based mapping product, puts the whole world on a student's computer. It enables users to "fly" from space to street level to find geographic information and explore places around the world. More to the point, and one of my favorite descriptions, is from About.com: GoogleEarth is a map of the world on steroids. To download and learn more, http://earth.google.com/.

(If anyone out there has NOT explored Google Earth, take my advice and set aside some time! Once you start to explore, you really cannot stop. I have given many unplanned minutes to GoogleEarth!)

Developed by Jerome Burg, a Google Lit Trip combines educational reading material with virtual road trips using GoogleEarth’s interactive technology and satellite imagery. Viewers can “fly” from place to place as they explore setting from the reading. The site enables users to download ready-made trips, categorized by grade level. There are approximately 40 trips, with new ones added often. For more informaiton, check out Steve Hargadon's A Great Mashup and
Bring Travel Tales to Life from Edutopia.

One of my favorites on the site is Robert McCloskey’s Make Way for Ducklings, offering a pictorial tour of the fictitious Mallard family as they waddle through the streets of Boston. The tour include questions and prompts that encourage thought-provoking discussion. Another favorite, for older students, is Kahled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner. The authentic pictures pull the viewer into the story as they follow the hero, Amir.

Google Lit Trips is a great tool for engaging students in their reading! In addition, participating on the virtual tour engages students…creating an experience that can feel very real to the students.

One of the best ways for students to develop an understanding of their reading and make themselves part of the learning is to create their own lit trip . I usually start by having students create a “Life Trip”…An auto-biographical exploration of where they’ve been, where they would love to go and/or places they’d like to visit!!


Friday, November 11, 2011

A Lesson for Teachers

A fellow educator recently said to me:  can you just SHOW me what you mean?  WHAT should I do with the kids? 

I thought about that and decied, why not create a lesson ?  In trying to pick just ONE lesson to share, I had a tough time!  Pod/vodcasts? Wikis? Blogs? Digital stories? Online sharing? Finally, I decided, why not share a lesson FOR EDUCATORS that outlines how to create an online learning experience?

View this for vodcast for more information:

Resources:
Lesson Plan Overview -page 1 (screen shot)
Lesson Plan Overview -page 2 (screen shot)
Rubric (screen shot)
The experience was very rewarding for me- and for the educators invovled. At first, they were extrememely intimidated when they saw samples of digital stories, blogs, wikis and pod/vodcasts- thinking they could not possibly create and/or maintian one!! However, as they worked through the process, they were intrigued and motivated to press on!

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Link(s) O'the Month: Digital Timelines

Timelines are graphic organizers that can be used as a tool to explore and discover a sequence of events. Online timelines provide an interactive opportunity for students to create, share, and collaborate. Here are a few to try:

  Enjoy ~ and Happy Creating!
 
 

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Link(s) O'the Month: PPT alternatives

When creating visual content, PowerPoint is not always the best answer or most effective tool. Don’t get me wrong– I would never argue that PowerPoint doesn't have its merits. Over the years, most of us have jumped on the PPT presentation wagon at one time or another: we’ve used it to visually support oral presentations; we’ve used it as a stand-alone teaching aid; we’ve even encouraged students to use it to create content. But what happens when PowerPoint becomes


 
boring… monotonous…predictable...

 
GOOD NEWS! There are lots of online web tools that can serve as alternatives to ppt for creating and delivering content. Here are just a few:

Enjoy ~ and Happy Creating!

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Link O'the Month: Illuminations

Illuminations

http://illuminations.nctm.org

Illuminations provides “standards-based resources that improve the teaching and learning of mathematics for all students” and provides “materials that illuminate the vision for school mathematics”. The site is a product of NCTM (National Council of Teachers of Mathematics) and Verizon’s Thinkfinity.

There are over 105 activities! Use the search page to explore activities by grade level and/or keyword. For example:
~Algebra Tiles ~Data Grapher & Advanced Data Grapher

~Calculation Nation ~Interactive Geometry Dictionary

~Computing Pie ~Shape Tool

~Conic Section Explorer ~Turtle Pond (length and angle measure)

~and much more!!!

Enjoy ~ and Happy Computing!

Tara L. Parr, Technology Integration K-12

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Link O'the Month: Glogster


Glogster’s tagline is “Poster Yourself!”
Glogster EDU: http://www.edu.glogster.com/
As per the website, Glogster empowers educators and students with the technology to create GLOGS, online multimedia posters, with text, photos, videos, graphics, sounds, drawings, links, data attachments and more.

Posters can be marked public or private; in addition, teachers can manage student accounts and share within their classroom only. Glogs can be tagged into many categories: including current events, economics, math, reading, etc.
Enjoy ~ and Happy Creating!

Tara L. Parr, Technology Integration K-12

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Link O'the Month: Tagxedo

Tagxedo
http://www.tagxedo.com/
From the website: Tagxedo turns words -- famous speeches, news articles, slogans and themes, even websites -- into a visually stunning tag cloud, words individually sized appropriately to highlight the frequencies of occurrence within the body of text. The site is similar to another favorite, Wordle (http://www.worlde.com/). The difference is Tagxedo word clouds can take the form of a shape (ie map of the US, Abraham Lincoln, footprint.) Tagxedo’s are also easy to download & save and import into other programs!

Enjoy ~ and Happy Creating!

Tara L. Parr, Technology Integration K-12

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Link O'the Month: Snappy Words

Snappy Words
http://www.snappywords.com/

Snappy Words is a free online interactive English dictionary and thesaurus that helps you find the meanings of words and draw connections to associated words.

Input a word to create a color-coded web of related words, phrases, and definitions. Plus, the word web is interactive! Users can hover over any word to gain its definition; they can click and drag to explore other branches of the web; or double-click to generate new branches!

Enjoy ~ and Happy Creating!

Tara L. Parr,
Technology Integration K-12