Today was a pretty good day. Here is how my lesson went:
1. Sponge
2. Review for the Biggest Gainer
3. Lesson 2.1 in our Filling and Wrapping textbooks.
The sponge was fine as was the Biggest Gainer review, but the lesson fromt the book was great! We were able to use manipulatives to find volume and surface area. There was a couple of problems (ie, a few blocks were thrown) but overall, it went very well. It even allowed me to show students the formula for volume…
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Added by Ryan Churchill on April 16, 2009 at 2:30pm —
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In 1995, David Tyack and Larry Cuban published a book entitled,
Tinkering toward Utopia: A Century of Public School Reform . In this book they argued that while numerous innovations had occurred within the American public school system during the Twentieth Century, most of these innovations had occurred around the…
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Added by Andrew Pass on April 16, 2009 at 1:22pm —
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Today was a good day for me. All three of my 90 minute classes went really well. Here was my lesson plan:
1. Sponge
2. Biggest Gainer notes
3. Finish Problem 1.3 (end of Chapter 1 in our Filling and Wrapping books)
4. Start Chapger 2 (problem 2.1)
The notes went well for all three classes--we solved some real world problems involving dividing ribs among people at a family get together and finding out the correct amount to tip at Texas Roadhouse for a bill of…
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Added by Ryan Churchill on April 15, 2009 at 3:57pm —
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First I have to confess I did vote for Obama, so my dissappointment in the statements of the New Education Secretary is leaving a bit of a sour taste in my mouth.
"Secretary Duncan also noted that the budget overview includes a $500 million grant program for a new federal-state-local partnership to improve retention and graduation rates, particularly for low-income college students. Funds would support research into what works to help increase college completion." Wow, didn't that…
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Added by Kelley Irish on April 15, 2009 at 3:00pm —
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How bizarre would it be if a school had a pencil lab? You know, a place where classes went to use pencils, instead of having pencils available in the classroom. What about a textbook lab? Should schools have "pencil teachers" or "textbook teachers"?
If pencil labs/teachers and textbook labs/teachers sound so ridiculous why do we still have computer labs? As the First Decade of the Twenty First Century comes to an end we've come to a point when technology (computers) should not be…
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Added by Andrew Pass on April 15, 2009 at 2:29pm —
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Illinois Association for Gifted Children (IAGC)
http://www.iagcgifted.org
Springfield Gifted Day - April 29, 2009
Mark your calendars and plan to join hundreds of gifted and talented children, their parents, and their teachers from across Illinois for Springfield Day 2009 in Springfield, our state capital. Last year over 1,000 parents, students, and teachers participated and the state funded $2 million for gifted education.
This is the first time in five…
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Added by IAGCGifted on April 15, 2009 at 11:49am —
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Every year, students receive a daily planner before the start of school. Depending on the grade level, some teachers will spend a day showing students how to effectively plan their week. For most, this is a practical tool that has worked for many years. However, it is also a tool that many students lose. What if it was…
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Added by Andrew Marcinek on April 15, 2009 at 10:28am —
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I am very eager to get my class of 24 Year 2 students interacting with the world wide web.
A year 3 teacher is doing wiki's with his class. Although a great idea and tool it would be much too tricky for my class.
A prac teacher I had back in 2007 had a fantastic website solely for his Year 5 class. Its fundamental functions were a blog for each of the thirty students nicely contained within the website itself and a place for their work to be uploaded whether it were…
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Added by Mr Maloney on April 15, 2009 at 12:20am —
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If there is one thing students and teachers despise it's clutter. One way teachers create clutter is asking students to print out a current event. Students print out weekly current events, read and summarize it, have it graded and then throw it out. I found more current events lying on my floor or in my trash than any other classroom document. Cringing already teachers? Fear…
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Added by Andrew Marcinek on April 14, 2009 at 6:27pm —
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I recently participated as an Expert Advisor and Judge for the
Net Generation Education Project, and it was an incredible endeavor. “Technology in education” is a concept that is thrown around a lot lately, but seeing it in real action as I did during this project was amazing. Prior, I would have no clue that 300 students from various schools, separated into random groups, from around the world could truly collaborate on this type of task and…
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Added by Nathan Koenecke on April 14, 2009 at 5:29pm —
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Today was a little more difficult than yesterday. The students seemed to have a bit more energy and seemed to be a bit more talkative. Nevertheless, here's how the day's lesson went:
1. Sponge. 1 problem over what we were doing in the Biggest Gainer and one over what we are currently covering in our CMP 2 books (that is, surface area).
2. Review for Biggest Gainer. We spent about 30 minutes solving problems that were similar to those on the Biggest Gainer post-test. I gave a few…
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Added by Ryan Churchill on April 14, 2009 at 3:30pm —
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Hey, ya'll. Just want to toss out there that one of my favorite networks, Second Life, will be getting a lot of attention at ISTE's NECC come June 27-July 1 this summer.
I'm helping facilitate two 3-hour workshops on the topic, a 3-day running Second Life Playground, and a Birds of a Feather. I'm also helping put together a BOF on the topic of my favorite new VW for kids, Quest Atlantis: I'll be a bizzy bee, for sure. You can see (and register for, if you wish!) all our workshop and…
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Added by Scott Merrick on April 14, 2009 at 12:56pm —
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I built a pageflakes page as my ning dashboard as Mr. Hargadon explained in an older blog post. But now it doesn't work. I created a new ning (it's private) and I tried to get the rss feeds into pageflakes and it keeps giving me an error.
Anyone have any idea what's wrong.
Added by Corey Lynn on April 14, 2009 at 11:39am —
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Vote for my image on ISTE Connect!
Click this Link to vote: (selec the radio button next to this image)
http://tinyurl.com/c9sq4m
This is the image I created using Wordle.org and the theme for funniest Ed Tech photo contest. How many votes can this image get. Let's see if i can get at least 10... Hook a brother up!…
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Added by John Costilla on April 14, 2009 at 11:06am —
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[This is a partial reproduction of the original post at www.EmergingEdTech.com, where I blog about the expanding array of free or low cost web based tools that are being used in instructional environments to better engage students, and to enrich the learning process. Stop by and check out a topic of interest today! - KW]
Today, the Internet abounds with tools that enable people of all levels of creativity to develop “digital…
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Added by Kelly Walsh on April 14, 2009 at 7:30am —
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I'm messing around with NPR's
custom-podcast tool.
Just created a custom-cast that ostensibly will fill up with NPR stories about education and digital culture.
First story that popped up on my iTunes library was about colleges dropping textbooks in favor of e-books.
Here's the link to my mix:…
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Added by Shelly Blake-Plock on April 13, 2009 at 9:59pm —
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eSchool News article last November about a Harvard Ed prof and the
seven skills kids must have before leaving K12. I know this is a rehash of stuff we see everywhere, but I want it in a place I come back to so I can think about it.
1. Problem-solving and critical thinking;
2. Collaboration across…
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Added by Karen Maginnis on April 13, 2009 at 8:40pm —
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Twitter me. I'm a fourth grade teacher looking to do some collaboration work with another fourth grade classroom. Let's plan it for the Fall 2009 school year. Let's start planning early to make it successful for our students.
Added by Eureka McCormick on April 13, 2009 at 5:30pm —
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Today I gave a pre-test for our new Biggest Gainer unit. So, I guess I now need to describe what the "Biggest Gainer" is. The Biggest Gainer is a program here at Western Middle School that the math department uses to help our students review for the CATS standardized test. It is quite simple in idea. It goes through 2-week cycles. In week 1, students start by taking a "Pre-Test" over a unit that they learned this year. The pre-test helps us see where students are lacking in skills within a…
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Added by Ryan Churchill on April 13, 2009 at 3:30pm —
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As readers know, I have begun developing core curriculum content that takes advantage of Web 2.0 resources. These types of resources have the potential to be both engaging and edifying. I'm in the process of completing my second unit on "The Great Gatsby." You'll see more information about the first unit that I developed
here. Both of these units use Google Earth.
Well, when I was contemplating today's blog post, I thought about the act of Piracy…
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Added by Andrew Pass on April 13, 2009 at 3:22pm —
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