The following information was sent to me through the ed tech listserv. It is practical ways to integrate technology into your classroom…
A few quick uses are:
Ø have students go onto CNN to check the current news
Ø using www.dictionary.com when writing on the computer
Ø making use of www.askjeeves.com and www.yahooligans (for younger students)when doing a search
Ø Having students create their own review quizzes using www.funbrain.com They can register for a user name and then study with this great testing tool.Teachers can create review material to help students prepare fro a test as well. FunBrian will email you each time a student uses your test (and let you know their score too)
Ø Use Filamentality ( www.filamentality.com ) to create hotlists of
Ø Quality web sites for your students so that they don't wander around needlessly when gathering research- you can also create Scavenger Hunts and Web Quests using Filamentality. It is VERY user friendly.
Ø make use of an online survey site to poll student opinions I use www.zoomerang.com
Ø direct students towards an online graph creation site http://nces.ed.gov/nceskids/Graphing/
Ø keep your eye on Education World (an online education ezine) . There's a wealth of ideas there...it's updated weekly: www.educationworld.com
Ø post a weekly classroom newsletter (for free!) using Schoolnotes.com All you need to do is register for a username/password. It's great way to keep
Ø your parents (and students) in the loop http://www.schoolnotes.com
Ø Take a look at the American Memory site. There are lots of ideas about how to use primary sources in the classroom. http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/amhome.html
Ø Check the PBS site for tons of great lesson plan ideas and resources. http://www.pbs.org/
Ø Stenhouse Publishing posts many of their education books online. Read them there! Books by Janet Allen, Chris Tovanni,Rick Wormeli and more. This is a great resource for professional development. http://www.stenhouse.com/pdfbooks.htm
Ø Midlink Magazine provides links to great online project work that you can involve your students in: http://www.cs.ucf.edu/~MidLink/
Ø Students love to email students in other places. Find those who want to hook up with you on ePals (76,662 classrooms in 176 countries are
Ø involved)
Professional Development Specialist
Research Curriculum Unit
Mississippi State University
Phone: 662-325-8553
E-mail: rab3@ra.msstate.edu
Homepage: http://www.msstate.edu/~rab3
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