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Monday, May 25, 2009
WEB Page, great for lesson suplimentation...
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
podcasting - the new classroom?
Lab safety tutorial... Look at my glaring spelling error!!! UGH.. can't correct in now.
Friday, May 8, 2009
Surfing The WEB...What is legit?
In today's world of tabloids and political information-twisting I think is is so important to give students the tools to evaluate the authenticity and reliability of a website. Students want to, and do, believe what they read because they have an emotional response to what they read and fail to understand how to know if it is reasonable or truthful information (and then rumors begin). Giving students the tools to validate a website/source is one way to encourage students to think critically about the world and to be able to justify their actions with facts.
Important resources given in class literature:
http://www.register.com/
http://www.altavista.com/
http://http//www.snopes.com
Sample web pages that could easily mislead:
http://www.martinlutherking.org/
Saturday, May 2, 2009
GOOGLE EARTH is Da Bomb!
Even more exciting is the option of turning our perspective to the sky and looking at the stars, or even virtual tours of other planets! Students can use their deductive skills and go on an historical informational scavenger hunt. I can create a tour with factual information under a pop-up photo and sent students around the world with prompts like "fly to the location of the Gettysburg address".
When thinking about math, students can pick a location of their choice and measure the boundaries. We can bring Google Earth into literacy by visiting the neighborhood where the author grew up, the location of the setting in a story, like the town Esperanza left in the story Esperanza Rising. This gives students some background knowledge and a visual connection to their reading. There are so many things that can be done with Google Earth and I can't wait to use this teaching tool in my science classes!