MSM 628: The Standards Are The Same

Summary:

Shawn and Troy talk about summer work, History Resources, and more. Dave shares the powerful advantages of Zoos and Aquariums. 

Jokes:  

Now that all the Horses are housed can I say they are 

  • Stabilized?

A towel gets wetter as it dries.


A constipated pathological liar told me he wasn’t feeling well. I could tell he was full of crap!


What creature is smarter than a talking parrot? 

  • A spelling bee.

Someone asked me, what’s the ninth letter of the alphabet? 

  • It was a complete guess, but I was right.

Can anyone tell me if you need a current license to drive an electric car?


Came home to find two guys stealing my gate. 

  • Didn’t want to say anything in case they took a fence.

I’ve been trying to come up with a dad joke about momentum . . . 

  • but I just can’t seem to get it going.

I used to be addicted to deli meats but I quit cold turkey


My local newspaper is running a competition where you can win a holiday for you and a friend in Dubai.- I was going to enter but I don’t have any friends in Dubai!


I must have a prodigious quantity of mind; it takes me as much as a week sometimes to make it up.

— Mark Twain, “The Innocents Abroad”


I’d like to do some drawings of bread, but I can’t find a roll model.


People often ask me why I wanted to be a Film Editor. 

  • Well – to cut a long story short…

I used to work for an origami company but they folded.


For Sale: Thick layer of dust.

  • As seen on TV.

Eileen Award

  • Laundon Tucker

Middle School Science Minute  

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

K12Science Podcast:  Field Trips to Zoos and Aquariums

I was recently reading the January/February 2024 issue of “Connected Science Learning” a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.

In this issue, I read an article written by Benjamin Krause Recchia and T.J. McKenna. The article was entitled, “Field Trips to Zoos and Aquariums: Solving Pedagogical Challenges Using the Next Generation Science Standards.”

Though zoos and aquariums have become increasingly focused on conservation education, their unique and diverse learning opportunities have been underused.  Active learning pedagogy aligned with the Next Generation Science Standards can facilitate expansion of education at zoos and aquariums beyond their conservation education niche.

http://k12science.net/field-trips-to-zoos-and-aquariums/

Reports from the Front Lines

  • History Day for my nephew
  • Moodle Stuff
  • Letters for Parents
  • Summer is getting busier
    • AI Training
    • Annual Training
    • Phishing Training
    • Hiring
  • Summer Fun
    • Pedal Boat

The Social Web

Modern Men’s Guide  @ModernMenGuide

Six Male Personalities of Modern Men Explained: (What Each Type Brings to the Table) Open Thread –

Susie Dent  @susie_dent

Word of the day is ‘bang-a-bonk’ (19th century): to sit lazily on a river bank and forget the world for a while.  

Mr H5P  @mrh5p

How to create a ‘Sort the Paragraphs’ activity in #H5P To see the finished example and more tutorials, check out http://mrh5p.com and subscribe to the H5P Builders newsletter. https://mrh5p.com/h5p-examples/how-to-make-a-sort-the-paragraphs-activity-with-h5p/

#instructionaldesign

elisabetta lando  @LandoEli

Flipped learning for maths using H5P – interesting to see how long it takes to prepare. The pay off is a substantial increase in grades and good student evaluation as well as everything ready to go for next year #LearningatCity24

jeffowski@mastodon.worldChurch of Jeff@jeffowski@mastodon.world

We take responsibility for our actions at the time we perform our actions, not at the time we get caught.

@simonsinek

tom_geraghty@mastodon.onlinetom_geraghty@tom_geraghty@mastodon.online

The Pac-Man rule is: “When standing as a group of people, always leave room for one person to join your group.”

The Pac-Man rule provides the actual physical space for someone to join a conversation, and it also sends a strong visual signal that *you are welcome here.*

https://

psychsafety.co.uk/the-pac-man-

rule/

the pac man rule

GossiTheDogKevin Beaumont@GossiTheDog@cyberplace.social

Since it’s come up again – if you use new Outlook and Mail in Windows 11, it automatically syncs all your email and contacts into Microsoft’s cloud – even if you use a third party mail provider.

There’s no option to decline.

Pretty obviously, consider the risk.

https://support.microsoft.com/en-gb/office/sync-your-account-in-outlook-to-the-microsoft-cloud-985f9e19-d308-4e85-9d1d-0c6f32f8e981

Strategies:  

“I Can’t Hear You with All of Your Talking”

I was demoing a student writing conference for a group of teachers. They specifically asked me to work with a student named Estrella. Her teacher found conferring with Estrella extra challenging – no matter what the teacher tried, Estrella remained quiet and seemed disconnected. So I gave it a try, even though I doubted I could make any further inroads with her.

I modeled a strategy for Estrella, I decided to pause and say nothing for what felt like an eternity – about 30 seconds. We could see that Estrella was thinking. Then she began to take what I taught and use it. A light bulb lit up in our heads. We realized that simply saying nothing and giving each individual student  the time they need to process and act could be incredibly powerful.

I’ve learned that silence is not just the absence of noise – it’s a powerful pedagogical strategy that fosters an environment of mutual respect, active engagement, and collective discovery.

“Silence is the space that allows us to listen. Silence helps to create belonging.”

https://www.middleweb.com/50917/i-cant-hear-you-with-all-of-your-talking

Ditch the Drill and Choose to Thrill: Personalization with Student Choice

Agency in the classroom is about giving students more control over their learning through greater autonomy and purpose. Many factors drive it, but the underlying premise is to move learners from a state of engagement to empowerment so that they exert more ownership over their learning. While there are many high-agency strategies to choose from when personalizing, choice stands out.

  1. Choice in content: Students can choose to learn the content with the teacher in small groups or independently through a flipped lesson or self-pacing task (reading, video, notes, slides, etc.). No matter the path chosen, checks for understanding along the way inform the student of their understanding. 
  2. Choice in the process: Students can choose scaffolded and relevant tasks to complete in a must-do/may-do format, choice board, or playlist. While they work, the teacher uses data or evidence to pull individuals for intensive support.
  3. Choice in product: With a well-designed rubric, students choose how to demonstrate learning through creating a product.  For examples, click HERE and HERE

https://esheninger.blogspot.com/2024/06/ditch-drill-and-choose-to-thrill.html

Resources:  

Comic Book +

Welcome to the main page of our massive public domain comic book archive. True gems to download or read online. So many, it is impossible to read them all!

The majority of our books belong to what has been termed the Golden Age of Comics. This began primarily with newspaper reprints and then “went up, up and away” with the introduction of Superman. Styles changed, new genres superseded old and then a new era dawned, the Silver Age of Comics, of which we also have many examples.

For what was once a massive industry, the publishers and their successors often took little care of their work. Many of the comics were either not copyrighted correctly, or the copyright was not renewed. Through this oversight thousands of comic books lapsed into what is called the “Public Domain”, which means that there is now no legal owner. That is why we can bring you all of these FREE and LEGALLY!

So take our word for it, if you browse around you are certain to spend a great many happy hours here!

https://comicbookplus.com/?cid=1507

Journeys In Film

We transform entertainment media into educational media by designing and publishing cost-free, educational resources for teachers to accompany carefully chosen feature films and documentaries while meeting mandated standards in all core subjects. Selected films are used as springboards for lesson plans in subjects ranging from math, science, language arts, and social studies to specific topics that have become critical for students to learn.

Journeys in Film’s programs engage students in meaningful examinations of human rights, poverty and hunger, stereotyping and racism, environmental issues, global health, immigration, and gender roles.  Our teaching methods are successful in broadening perspectives, teaching for global competency, encouraging empathy, and building new paradigms for best practices in education.  

We also develop discussion guides for films that don’t necessarily lend themselves to academic standards, but cover topics and themes that are valuable for classroom discussions and in other settings, such as after school clubs, community screenings and University classes.

https://journeysinfilm.org

DARESAYCheck-in generator

https://checkin.daresay.io

Open RSS

https://openrss.org

Amnesia

Amnesia is an interactive learning experience. You can choose to learn about a specific topic, which will take you to a relevant time and place, or you can directly enter a time and place to explore. Select an option to start your journey.

https://www.playamnesia.com

AXIS:  The Culture Translator

Tall Order

What it is: Socks that come up to your shin are the true marker of a stylish individual, according to Gen Alpha and Gen Z.

Why it marks a generational divide: Many readers might remember that in the early 2000s, socks seemed to get shorter and shorter, until “no-show” socks became the norm. Today, many agree that the most stylish socks hit much higher on the leg. Visible white crew socks extending over a pair of black leggings, sometimes even paired with a gigantic pair of open-toed slides, are worn by teens without an ounce of shame—a look that Millennials would have probably called “cringe.” Crew socks have become a sign that the wearer is aware of current trends. But while Gen Z might say they’ve grown used to never seeing their ankles, many Millennials seem to be attached to the socks of their youth.

LRT – Song Festival

Centenary studio of song fest.  “Dainų diena Kaune „Miškais kalnai žaliuoja“. Ved. Gerūta Griniūtė. Tiesioginė transliacija iš Kauno Dainų slėnio (subtitruota, su vertimu į gestų k.).”  Day of songs in Kaunas “Mountains are green with forests”. Lead Geruta Griniūtė. Live broadcast from the Kaunas Valley of Songs (subtitled, with translation into sign language).  https://www.lrt.lt/mediateka/tiesiogiai/lrt-televizija  

Web Spotlight: 

How France Adopts An Open Source-Based Education Strategy – Free of Big Tech

France’s move towards a comprehensive open source-based education strategy, 2023-2027. The aim is to achieve digital sovereignty and reduce dependence on big tech companies like Microsoft and Google, which are widely used in education systems, including in Denmark.

Kauffmann said that France has never officially embraced big tech in schools, which makes the project easier, and that the public generally is skeptic towards monopolies and the abuse of private data. The country is thus undergoing a cultural shift in the digital education sector, promoting the use of free, open, and interoperable code, data, and content, referred to as “digital commons”. This approach encompasses not only free licenses but also community involvement and governance.

“One of the key actions is to offer authoring tools to our teacher and tools based on open source software. No Google Classrooms. Not Microsoft Teams. We have chosen Moodle Elea as a learning management system,” explained Alexis Kauffmann who also pointed to other tools to learn to code and mathematics like Jupyter. They have there an app platform with open-source tools like Nextcloud, Big Blue Button, and Collaboration. They even have their own ‘github’ (owned by Microsoft) called La Forge, where teachers share code.

“I am not saying it is easy. The biggest obstacle is political courage to resist the lobbyists both at a national and European level,” he said and pointed to other risks like the quality of big tech’s products, being isolated in Europa, and artificial intelligence. 

https://dataethics.eu/how-france-adopts-an-open-source-based-education-strategy-free-of-big-tech

Random Thoughts . . .  

[BFTP] The one question I’m asking at ISTE 2013

https://dangerouslyirrelevant.org/2024/06/bftp-the-one-question-im-asking-at-iste-2013.html

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 627: Ennui, Embarrassment, Envy, and Anxiety

Summary:

Shawn and Troy share summer plans, hint, Moodle is involved, resources and more. Dave goes National on the park. 

Jokes:  

I have decided to give up tap dancing, it’s too dangerous.

I fell off and twisted my ankle in the sink.


Did you know you should never brush your teeth with your left hand?

Because a toothbrush is much more effective


I have a friend who always uses stilts. 

  • I look up to him

I just burned 2000 calories in 20 minutes.


Did you hear what the sun did to the couple that was out riding on a bicycle built for two?

Tanned em.


Sad to ponder but every belief has a lie in it.


I got into a fight with 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9.

  • The odds were against me.


Middle School Science Minute  

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

K12Science Podcast:  National Parks

I was recently reading the May/June 2024 issue of “The Science Teacher” a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.

In this issue, I read the “Right to the Source” section written by Danna Bell.  This section included an article entitled, “See America and Its National Parks.”

Today over 300 million people annually visit the 429 individual designated properties that are managed by the National Park Service, covering 85 million acres in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and the territories.

http://k12science.net/national-parks/

Reports from the Front Lines

  • Gettin’ Busy w/Moodle

English-Latin Medical Terminology Glossary:  https://moodle.net/resource/32qmKBha/english-latin-vocabulary-glossary-of-medical-terminology  

Michigan History Day:  https://moodle.net/resource/Ve30t2dV/michigan-history-day-2025  

Michigan Social Studies Olympiad:  Coming Soon  

  • 8th Grade Celebration
  • Apple Conference

The Social Web

Rothmus   @Rothmus

Image

Fixing Education  @FixingEducation

Breaking Education News NEW: Massive brawl breaks out at a Los Angeles high school graduation for students on probation. The incident happened at the Walt Disney Concert Hall in downtown LA when someone jumped off a 2nd-story balcony to target one of the students.

https://twitter.com/i/status/1803405886494310853

Susie Dent  @susie_dent

A pretty etymology to kick off the day: the ‘daisy’ takes its name from the Old English ‘dæges ēage’, ‘day’s eye’, because the flower opens its petals at dawn and slowly closes its ‘eye’ again at dusk.

NCMLE  @NCMiddle

The  @NCMiddle  ‘Middle School Matters’ Conference planning is well underway!  We heard your feedback and are preparing to make 2025 the best yet!   Stay tuned for exciting details coming soon…

John R. Sowash  @jrsowash

Exciting news, Google Docs is adding tabs!  Now you can organize multiple docs into a handy notebook just like in Google Sheets. Get ready for this game-changing update coming soon to everyone!  Details: https://bit.ly/3JnSB9Z

Resources:  

Atomic Hands

https://www.youtube.com/@atomichands

AXIS The Culture Translator

Inside Out 2

What it is: Inside Out 2, the sequel to Disney-Pixar’s movie about anthropomorphized feelings, made more money worldwide on opening weekend than any animated film ever.

Why it’s a breakout success story: It’s been a while since the beloved animation studio had an uncontested hit. Continuing the story of Riley from the first movie, Inside Out 2 explores the conflict that comes with puberty and its new associated emotions: Ennui, Embarrassment, Envy, and Anxiety. 

A Cautionary Tale

What it is: US Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy is urging Congress to require a warning label on social media platforms.

Why it’s such a big deal: Public concern over teen technology use has reached a fever pitch. During his tenure as Surgeon General, Dr. Murthy has issued warnings about the loneliness crisis and the teen mental health crisis—and emerging research connects social media to both of these big issues. 

     In the 19th century, McMunn’s Elixir was pushed as a remedy to sleeplessness, anxiety, pain, frustration, and generally unpleasant feelings. For some people, it worked as advertised! The downside was that it was actually pure opium, so the side-effects were… well, the standard side-effects of taking opium.  

     It’s easy to look back at the past and laugh at how silly those people were. How could they not know that giving opium concoctions was a bad idea? And while we have the advantage of hindsight, it took time to learn exactly why taking pure opium was a bad idea. With regard to emerging research on the effects of social media, we might be in the middle of a similar process.

How to spot manipulated videos, including deepfakes and shallowfakes

Manipulated videos are becoming more pervasive online and often spread misinformation and disinformation. 

Misinformation is when a person shares deceptive or false information unintentionally, while disinformation is shared with the intent to deceive.

Some altered videos may seem harmless, such as ones that appear to show celebrities performing stunts. Other times, there could be a nefarious intention behind the videos — like when a world leader’s likeness is copied for political or propaganda purposes.

https://www.verifythis.com/article/news/verify/fact-sheets-verify/how-to-spot-manipulated-videos-deepfakes-shallowfakes/536-ee3b260f-fe31-4bab-b13f-e6e168c8b2ca

You’re Dead To Me – BBC Podcasts

The comedy podcast that takes history seriously. Greg Jenner brings together the best names in comedy and history to learn and laugh about the past.  Updated: weekly

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p07mdbhg

Web Spotlight: 

Charles Plumb

https://medium.com/jacob-morgan/this-is-the-true-story-of-charles-plumb-5eeb7eba334e

Extinct Languages 

An extinct language may be narrowly defined as a language with no native speakers and no descendant languages.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_languages_by_time_of_extinction

Inside the debate over The Anxious Generation

https://www.platformer.news/anxious-generation-jonathan-haidt-debate-critique

Surgeon General: Why I’m Calling for a Warning Label on Social Media Platforms

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/17/opinion/social-media-health-warning.html#:~:text=Dr.%20Vivek%20H.%20Murthy%20is,Public%20Health%20Service%20Commissioned%20Corps.

The Surgeon General’s Fear-Mongering, Unconstitutional Effort to Label Social Media

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2024/06/no-online-speech-should-not-have-warning-labels

Pessimists Archive: Surgeon General

https://newsletter.pessimistsarchive.org/p/when-the-surgeon-general-warned-about

Random Thoughts . . .  

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 626: I Need More Information and Sometimes You Have to Check, Ya Know?

Summary:

Shawn and Troy talk about ending the year, summer plans, and more. Dave discusses the importance of Math in Science. 

Jokes:  

Manatees should all be named Hugh.


Why does Harry Potter struggle telling his Cooking Pot and Best Friend apart?

  • They’re both Cauldron

Why do pirates not know the alphabet? 

  • They always get stuck at “C”.

Sometimes I tuck my knees into my chest and lean forward.  

  • That’s just how I roll.

Six-Factor Authentication is when, in order to check your account balance, you need to show how you’re connected to Kevin Bacon.


What’s the best thing about elevator jokes? They work on so many levels.


I just swapped our bed for a trampoline. 

  • My wife hit the ceiling.

Never buy flowers from a monk. 

  • Only you can prevent florist friars.

I went to an outdoor restaurant in the rain once. 

  • It took me two hours to finish my soup. 

I made a bicycle by folding up some paper in my desk drawer. It doesn’t move though – it’s a stationery bike.


There’s a new type of broom out, it’s sweeping the nation.



Middle School Science Minute  

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

K12Science Podcast:  The Importance of Math in Science

I was recently reading the May/June 2024 issue of “Science & Children” a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.

In this issue, I read the “Science 101” section written by Matt Bobrowsky.  He wrote an article entitled, “What Activity Can I Use to Illustrate the Importance of Math in Science?”

Matt summarized 7 ways in which math is not only useful but essential in science:

1.  Being Clear and Precise

2.  Measuring

3.  Modeling and Simulation

4.  Problem-Solving

5.  Discovery of Patterns and Relationships

6.  Verification of Results

7.  Predictive Power 

http://k12science.net/the-importance-of-math-in-science/ 

Reports from the Front Lines

  • OER Moodle
  • Cell Phone Management
    • Cell Phone Hotel
    • Can’t be used in class
    • Parent expectations
  • 8th Grade “Ceremony”
  • Summer Plans

The Social Web

Devon   @devonzuegel

Need to get this flag for my office

The Best@ThebestFigen

https://twitter.com/i/status/1801305532407353827

Susie Dent@susie_dent

This is right up there with ‘palindrome’ not being a palindrome, ‘lisp’ being unsympathetic to those who have one, ‘abbreviation’ being anything but, and ‘dyslexia’ being tricky to spell. Any others?

Shottr  @shottr_cc

Good news! If you have a license, you could now get a token to enable image uploading service via an automated page here: https://shottr.cc/get_token.html

Phyllis Fagell, LCPC  @Pfagell

I don’t have all the answers to the smartphone problem, but my six-year-old niece takes a walkie talkie with her on solo walks to neighbors’ homes, and my brother calls her from HIS walkie talkie when it’s time for her to come home.

Resources:  

Learner Lab

The Science of Learning. Simplified.

The website that helps you and your group get better at getting better.

Learning is the most important skill. Great learners can solve problems, adapt, innovate, and build new skills. The best news: anyone can become a better learner. We dive into the science, connect the dots, and share it in a way that you can understand it and use it.

https://thelearnerlab.com/learner-the-audiobook

Cellphones Turned My Teaching Career From ‘Awesome’ to Exhausting

https://www.edweek.org/teaching-learning/cellphones-turned-my-teaching-career-from-awesome-to-exhausting/2024/06

AXIS The Culture Translator

Fizzing Out

What it is: A new anonymous, private messaging app called Fizz is, perhaps unsurprisingly, wreaking havoc in high schools and colleges.

Why it’s causing trouble: The Stanford students who designed Fizz call it “​​an uplifting digital space for Gen Z.” In reality, it has become a place to spread rumors, cyberbully, and share harmful photos, as one high school in Vermont learned. Apps designed to be anonymous message boards often become havens for the worst impulses of humanity (see: YikYak). These apps can create a catch-22 for teens, who may feel the need to make sure people aren’t talking about them on the app, which, in turn, increases app engagement. Fizz can provide fuel for conversations about integrity and how we behave when no-one is looking, but it’s also a space in culture where parents and trusted adults might advise teens to simply opt out.

Web Spotlight: 

Chuck Jones

This is great: a 25-minute interview with legendary animator Chuck Jones as he sits and draws some of his iconic characters (Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig, Daffy Duck). He told this anecdote about how Steven Spielberg and George Lucas were both influenced by a particular space-themed cartoon of his:

https://kottke.org/24/04/watch-chuck-jones-draw-bugs-bunny-daffy-duck-and-porky-pig

Bonus Link of the Week:  Chad Frye, Illustration Guy has been posting 50th Anniversary of Donald Duck drawings he did during his career at Disney.  You can find them here:  https://www.facebook.com/ChadFryeIllustrationGuy  

Random Thoughts . . .  

The Fediverse

https://alex.kirk.at/2024/06/13/your-wordpress-as-your-personal-mastodon-instance

https://fossacademic.tech/2024/06/12/Maven.html

https://fedi.tips

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 625: The Final Throes

Summary:

Shawn and Troy talk about the end of the year. Dave counts the caterpillars. 

Jokes:  

Regarding spelling, some people are loosing it.


Always do right.  This will gratify some people and astonish the rest.

— Mark Twain


Why didn’t the number 4 get into the nightclub? 

  • Because he is 2 square.

My sea sickness comes in waves.


I bought a new trimmer today.

  • It’s cutting hedge technology.

I’ll tell you what often gets over looked… garden fences.


What type of fabric softener does iron man use?

  • Downey

I’ve been reading all about the concept of infinity and I feel like it’s never going to end.


Why do Norwegians put bar codes on their ships?

  • So when they dock, they can Scandinavian.

I was at the beach and I heard a man in the water yelling “Help, shark! Help!”

I thought to myself that shark isn’t going to help him.


I’ve just been diagnosed with a chronic fear of giants.

  • Fefiphobia.

The Swiss must’ve been pretty confident in their chances of victory if they included a corkscrew in their army knife.



Middle School Science Minute  

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

K12Science Podcast:  Caterpillars Count

I was recently reading the May/June 2024 issue of “Science Scope,” a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.

In this issue, I read the “Citizen Science” section written by Jill Nugent.  She wrote an article entitled, “Caterpillars Count.”

Caterpillars Count is a citizen science project to monitor the seasonality and abundance of arthropods (including caterpillars) on foliage.  To learn more about this citizen science project visit their website at:

https://caterpillarscount.unc.edu

http://k12science.net/caterpillars-count/

The World from A to Z – 

Reports from the Front Lines

  • The Final Throes
  • Flow
  • Genius Week
  • PowerSchool University
  • List of Shawn’s Free Jobs
    • PCT Course
      • Added an Oncology Communications Module while Troy played with AudioHijack this morning.  
  • Moodle Upgrade

The Social Web

Dr. Joanne Freeman (@jbf1755 on lots o’ platforms) @jbf1755

Quote:  Kierán Suckling  @KieranSuckling

Who thought memorializing the Donner Party with a picnic area was a good idea?

Revolving_Door_Admin  @RAD_is_awesome

With only two days remaining in the school year, I think it only makes sense to do some walkthroughs to make sure that teachers are following our bell-to-bell instruction mandate.

Clive Thompson@clive@saturation.social

In 1963, Bruce McAllister was a high school student …

… whose English teacher insisted that authors filled their stories with symbols …

… and it was the job of the reader to notice and decode these symbols

He thought this was nonsense

So he sent a letter to 150 well-known authors asking if they did this

Fully 75 replied! Ray Bradbury, Saul Bellow, Ayn Rand

Wouter de Jong @drakenvlieg@mastodon.education

To be most effective, retrieval must be repeated again and again, in spaced out sessions so that the recall, rather than becoming a mindless recitation, requires some cognitive efforts.

Solstice School@SummerSchool

We are limiting the Conference to 20 presentations so the earlier the submission the better. Submissions open June 15th and close the 30th! Solstice School will occur July 22-August 4

https://solsticeschool.scholar.social/2024/presenters

Historic Vids  @historyinmemes

Margaret Hamilton, who played the Wicked Witch of the West on The Wizard of Oz, appeared on Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood in 1975 in an effort to convince children there was nothing to fear.

Susie Dent @susie_dent

Etymology of the day is ‘tawdry’, meaning cheap, sordid, or in poor taste. It began as ‘St Audrey’s lace’: ribbons worn as necklaces to honour a 7th-century saint of Ely. Thanks to their often shoddy quality, ‘tawdry laces’ became linked to cheap or disreputable behaviour.

Matt Miller   @jmattmiller

So, make this make sense … “In order to streamline the number of apps educators need to use in their classroom …”  @MIcrosoftFlip  is taking an app available to anyone via web and mobile … and locking it inside of Microsoft Teams. To streamline the number of apps.  

Strategies:  

Make An AI Notebook

https://wondertools.substack.com/p/notebooklm

GET A CLUE: THE SOLO TAXONOMY

https://blog.tcea.org/get-a-clue-the-solo-taxonomy

Resources:  

AXIS The Culture Translator

Slang of the Week

“That’s OP”

While some slang has nebulous origins, it’s pretty clear “that’s OP” comes from the gaming community. “OP” is short for “overpowered,” a way of saying something is too strong, unfair, or unbalanced in a game. “That’s OP” can be used outside of games though, whether it’s to describe a new strategy in a sport, a different way to flirt, or as a reaction to anything that seems, well, overpowered.

Meet ALDO: The Amazing Lesson Design Outline

https://mglinks.org/2024/06/03/meet-aldo-the.html

Video:  Commercial for Beans

It’s that time of the year and you need a short video to capture your kids attention and perhaps imagination.  Try Haynes:  https://youtu.be/eZgD89VYkVc  

Web Spotlight: 

Document: The Symbolism Survey

In 1963, a sixteen-year-old San Diego high school student named Bruce McAllister sent a four-question mimeographed survey to 150 well-known authors of literary, commercial, and science fiction. Did they consciously plant symbols in their work? he asked. Who noticed symbols appearing from their subconscious, and who saw them arrive in their text, unbidden, created in the minds of their readers? When this happened, did the authors mind?

https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2011/12/05/document-the-symbolism-survey

AI Bias in Beauty

  • Despite the growing profusion of AI image generators, they all had remarkably similar responses when The Post directed them to portray a beautiful woman.
  • DALL-E shows thin, ethnically ambiguous women in heavy makeup. Sixty-two percent have a medium skin tone.
  • Midjourney’s women are dressed in flowing gowns, most with low-cut tops. Nearly nine in 10 are light-skinned.
  • Stable Diffusion also shows thin women in flowing attire. Its representation of dark skin tones is highest — at just 18 percent.
  • Asked to show “normal women,” the tools produced images that remained overwhelmingly thin. Midjourney’s depiction of “normal” was especially homogenous: All of the images were thin, and 98 percent had light skin.
  • To see how AI tools handle different body sizes, The Post used OpenAI’s ChatGPT to prompt DALL-E 3 to show a “fat woman.” Despite repeated attempts using explicit language, the tool generated only women with small waists.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/interactive/2024/ai-bias-beautiful-women-ugly-images

Chat GPT For Educators

Cost: $39

Modules: 5

CPE Credit Hours: 12

Embark on an enlightening adventure with our “ChatGPT for Educators” course, a treasure trove for teachers eager to harness the capabilities of ChatGPT AI. This self-paced online course is a beacon for those seeking to enrich their teaching methods, offering a blend of foundational knowledge and advanced techniques. As you delve into the world of ChatGPT, you’ll evolve into a skilled prompt engineer, adept at crafting prompts that revolutionize lesson planning, rubric creation, and assessments. The course is a wellspring of time-saving strategies, empowering you to leverage mega prompts for educational efficiency.

https://tcea.org/courses/chatgpt-for-educators

Random Thoughts . . .  

Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

MSM 624: Manassas? How Did We End Up In Manassas?

Summary:

Shawn and Troy are back. We chat about kid experiences, share some jokes, and lots of resources. Dave voices some change. 

Jokes:  

I have a Zoom joke, but it’s on mute


Shouldn’t the animals in the ca’nine’ family be the ones with nine lives?


Did you know one in five people make up 20% of the population?


Our CISO at work scheduled a meeting about some security topics, and brought a bunch of store-bought cookies to entice people to show up.  

  • I told him I didn’t accept third-party cookies.

I just broke my guitar. It’s okay, I won’t fret


Do I enjoy making courthouse puns? 

  • Guilty

Why is it a bad idea to iron your four-leaf clover? Cause you shouldn’t press your luck.


Is a Nun in heaven called

Nun of the above?


You’ll roux the day when you can’t properly thicken a stew.




Middle School Science Minute  

by Dave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

K12Science Podcast:  Voices for Change

I was recently reading the May/June 2024 issue of “Science Scope,” a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.

In this issue, I read the “Editorial” section written by Patty McGinnis.  She wrote an article entitled, “Raising a Voice for Change.”

Our students can act as change agents.  Involving students in community outreach in which they educate, encourage, and assist families in organizing carpools, planning for weekly meatless meals, and limiting food waste are all actionable things that help the planet.

http://k12science.net/voices-for-change/

Reports from the Front Lines

The Social Web

cyborgneticz@Cyborgneticz

My advisees are apparently giving their thank you cards out like they’re secret messages lmao

cyborgneticz@Cyborgneticz

They keep stopping by to get extra cards to give out
Definitely making this continual aspect of my advisory and teaching

Robert Scoble@Scobleizer

The AI storytellers are coming…

Quote:  Linus ●ᴗ● Ekenstam @LinusEkenstam

Showrunner, AI generated entertainment on the fly. There is just so much to unpack from this release. Fable Simulation has been heads down building since last years release of the AI generated Southpark episode and their paper release. it shows:  https://x.com/i/status/1796446639651278994  

Susie Dent  @susie_dent

‘Mumpsimus’, 16th century: one who insists that they are right (or wronged) when all evidence points to the contrary.

Etymology of the day: ‘explode’ is the poor relative of ‘applaud’; it comes from the Latin for slow hand-clapping an inadequate performer off the stage.  

National Park Service  @NatlParkService

When it’s Sunday night and you have to go back to work in eight hours…

I will not go! A marmot sprawled out and barking as the weekend comes to a close.

Protect your nuts. Ever see a family of squirrels hogtie a hiker with their own backpack straps to get their tiny, but oh so cute, paws on a canister of honey-roasted peanuts? We haven’t either, but there’s always a first time.

A squirrel holding on to a container of nuts.

Resources:  

Archive Buttons

All of the paywall removers in one place

Simply enter the URL of the article and click the archive buttons to remove any paywall.

We all hate paywalls, these paywall removers can help with that.

https://www.archivebuttons.com

Guiding Students in the School AV Club; A Guide for School-Building Audiovisual Coordinators in Organizing and Training Students for Participation in the School AV Program.

The aim of an audio visual program in a school is to facilitate learning by 

improving instruction. The Guide is planned for the teacher or administrator who is 

concerned with the task of organizing and administering the audio visual program at

the elementary through high school levels.

https://eric.ed.gov/?q=ED024271&id=ED024271

A Message to Garcia

“A Message to Garcia is a widely distributed essay written by Elbert Hubbard in 1899, expressing the value of individual initiative and conscientiousness in work. The essay’s primary example is a dramatized version of a daring escapade performed by an American soldier, First Lieutenant Andrew S. Rowan, just before the Spanish–American War.”

Audio:  https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/216-off-the-wall-a-message-to-garcia-and-tim-johnson/id1087110764?i=1000534447128  

Text:  https://courses.csail.mit.edu/6.803/pdf/hubbard1899.pdf  

Chat GPTs modified for fifth grade version:  

Back in 1899, during a big conflict in Cuba, there was a very important guy named Garcia. He lived in the mountains, and it was crucial to talk to him. But he was hard to find, and there was no way to send him a message quickly.

So, the President needed someone brave and smart to deliver a letter to Garcia. They found a guy named Rowan. He took the letter, put it in a special bag, and went on a tough journey to find Garcia. Rowan didn’t complain or ask questions. He just did what he was told.

Rowan’s story teaches us that sometimes, we need to be brave and do things without complaining. We need to be loyal and act quickly when we’re given a task.

Even though Garcia isn’t around anymore, there are still people like him who need our help. But sometimes, it’s hard to find people who will work hard and not waste time. We need more people who are like Rowan, ready to help out without making excuses.

Think about it: If you ask someone for help, will they do it without asking silly questions? Probably not. That’s why we need more people who are willing to do what needs to be done.

So, let’s all try to be like Rowan and help out when we’re needed. That’s what makes the world a better place.

AXIS The Culture Translator

Hanging Up the Cleats

What it is: Some teen athletes will end their athletic careers within the next few months. As Rich Cohen writes in The Atlantic, for parents, this can be a particularly emotional moment.

FindMySense

What it is: “Location sharing” with friends and family members has become totally normalized. But does the practice actually keep us safe?

Why it’s contentious: On one hand there’s the idea that wanting privacy is akin to wanting secrecy—it implies that you have something to hide. On the other hand there’s the idea that the freedom to come and go unobserved is an essential component of human flourishing and happiness. (For more on this tension, check out our new Parent’s Guide to Teen Privacy.) Parents who track their teens’ locations may do so with the hope of averting potential disaster by adding that extra layer of accountability. Still, it begs the question: if character is who you are when nobody’s watching, what happens when you’re always being watched?

National Geographic’s MapMaker website

We’re reaching out to remind you that we’re retiring the older version of National Geographic MapMaker after June 23, 2024. After this date, your saved content and maps made with this older MapMaker will no longer be accessible. But, don’t worry, we’ve created an exciting new MapMaker tool in partnership with Esri. It has expanded and improved capabilities and we can’t wait to see what you make with it!

To assist with this transition, we’re offering a free, virtual webinar hosted by National Geographic staff on June 20, 2024, at 4 PM ET. CLICK HERE TO REGISTER.

Instrument Playground

Generate, play and compose music inspired by instruments across the globe with the help of Google AI

https://artsandculture.google.com/incognito/experiment/instrument-playground/8QFo2oQr2uT3pg?hl=en

Day of AI

We support teachers and educators to run Day of AI activities in their classrooms through curriculum packages and teacher trainings, all of which are available at no cost to participants.

Developed by leading faculty and educators from MIT RAISE (Responsible AI for Social Empowerment and Education), each curriculum features a series of 30-60 minute lessons that engage kids in creative discovery, discussion, and critical thinking as they learn the fundamentals of AI, investigate its societal impacts, and bring grade-relevant applications of artificial intelligence to life through hands-on activities that are accessible to all, even for those with no computer science or technical background.

Our recommended sequence for all students is to begin with the What is AI? lessons to gain a basic understanding of this new technology.  After this introduction, you are free to select the next set of lessons based on your interests or the interests of your students. The ages provided for each level should be used as a guideline only, and educators should feel free to adjust the lesson plans based on their students’ abilities.

https://dayofai.org/curriculum

Try This UDL Higher Order Thinking Strategy

https://www.middleweb.com/50752/try-this-udl-higher-order-thinking-strategy

Web Spotlight: 

Michigan, My Michigan

https://youtu.be/FUtO91e3Apo

Memorial Day was just recent.  One of the ways to connect the past to the present is to find units who served in your neck of the woods and connect it to students in the same region. For example this video featuring Michigan, My Michigan.  

Tech Trends 2024

https://futuretodayinstitute.com/trends

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