MSM 278:  Random Facts, Write about Maths.

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

 

Jokes You Can Use:

 

http://www.buzzfeed.com/patricksmith/really-really-bad-puns

 

Random Facts

  1. You can’t hum while pinching your nose.
  2. Russia has a larger surface area than Pluto.
  3. Anne Frank and Martin Luther King Jr. were born in the same year.
  4. People currently graduating college have never been alive while The Simpsons wasn’t on TV.
  5. Oxford University is older than the Aztec Empire.
  6. There are more fake flamingos in the world than real flamingos.
  7. The fax machine was invented the same year people were traveling the Oregon Trail.
  8. 1998 is as far away as 2030.
  9. France was still executing people with a guillotine when the first Star Wars film came out.
  10. There are more public libraries than McDonald’s in the U.S.

Eileen Award:

  • Twitter: Adnan Iftekhar, Kyle S., Mike Paul
  • Google+: Patrick Brule

 

Advisory:

Spread of Baby Names

Enter a gender (Male or Female) and a name and watch the prevalence of the name spread across the country (or not). Watch the statistics at the bottom for total number of babies with that name. Hold your mouse over a state to get the numbers for that state.

http://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/interactive/2014/mar/03/how-baby-names-spread-across-the-us-interactive-map

http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2014/07/an-interactive-look-at-history-and.html?m=1

 

Jobs Charted by State and Salary

The chart below shows what people do and what they get paid. These vary depending on where you live. Select a state in the drop-down menu, and use the slider to adjust the median annual salary.

 

http://flowingdata.com/2014/07/02/jobs-charted-by-state-and-salary/

 

Middle School Science Minute

byDave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

 

Neuroscience-Career Opportunites

 

This is the fourth in a four part series on neuroscience with special guest Aneesha Badrinarayan, Outreach Programs Manager with the Ann Arbor Hands-On Museum, in Ann Arbor, MI. You can visit the Ann Arbor Hands-On Museum online at:

http://www.aahom.org

 

In this podcast, we look at the question of “How do you prepare for a degree in neuroscience and what are the career opportunities?”

 

http://k12science.net/Podcast/Podcast/Entries/2014/7/3_Middle_School_Science_Minute-Neuroscience_Career_Opportunities.html

From the Twitterverse:

Lisa Dabbs ‏@teachingwthsoul 33mRT@connect2jamie: MT@ShellTerrell: Join NOW! Keynote:RemixED: The Power of Remix with@amyburvall   #RSCON5#TLChat
Todd Bloch ‏@blocht574 36mHow can we make middle school kids think Wow! School!?#mschat 5yo daughter brought awesome book home from librarypic.twitter.com/ddGNoTo4NK
Kevin Cummins@edgalaxy_com 51mHundreds of creative writing ideas for teachershttp://brev.is/Xom3
Kevin Cummins ‏@edgalaxy_com 1hTop 5 iPad apps for busy educatorshttp://brev.is/59j2
cbeyerle ‏@cbeyerle 2hEducators Are Ditching Traditional Conferences for Blogs and Twitter#satchathttp://www.opencolleges.edu.au/informed/news/why-educators-are-ditching-traditional-conferences-for-blogs-and-twitter/?utm_content=buffer60aef&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer …
VoiceThread ‏@voicethread 4m#VoiceThread is getting a NEW look and feel. Join us for a demo on 7/23 to see for yourself: #edchat#edtech
Monte Tatom@drmmtatom · Jul 2Video compilation for#ISTE2014#ISTEAPLN &#OLI14http://youtu.be/J2SFJvYxG_4?a
Monte Tatom@drmmtatom · Jul 10Teachers’ Ultimate Directory of Free Image Sources  http://feedly.com/k/1q1w32s ~#edwebchat#tn_teta#fhuedu642#fhuedu320 =>@MSMatters
Monte Tatom@drmmtatom · Jul 107 PD tips for your instructional technology integration plan  http://feedly.com/k/TUNl2a ~#ISTEAPLN#tn_teta#fhuedu642 =>@MSMatters
Monte Tatom@drmmtatom · Jul 915-Year-Old explains the key to developing a#PLN http://feedly.com/k/TSvxol ~#fhuedu642#ISTEAPLN#tn_teta =>@MSMatters
#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

 

Strategies:

Using Writing in Mathematics to Deepen Student Learning

“Writing in mathematics gives me a window into my students’ thoughts that I don’t normally get when they just compute problems. It shows me their roadblocks, and it also gives me, as a teacher, a road map.”

Section One gives a brief background that answers the question you may be wondering: Why write in mathematics? Section Two describes the existing role of writing in the mathematics curriculum, and Section Three provides strategies and ideas to put into practice right away.

 

http://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED544239.pdf

Anchor Charts

Useful or just pretty?

http://teachingexperiment.com/2013/11/anchor-charts-all-levels/

School-Wide Twitter Chats

Have you ever had a student say to you, “Wow, this is so much fun, do we have to stop?” This is the kind of excitement that children have shared with teachers after participating in the New Zealand school-wide Twitter chat called Kidsedchatnz.

Kidsedchatnz is a weekly Twitter chat between New Zealand classes and students, every Thursday at 2:00-3:00PM. It is organised by seven New Zealand teachers via Twitter, each taking a turn to run the chats.

These chats give students an authentic audience for sharing and reflecting on their learning. They connect with other classes and students throughout the country, sharing ideas and thoughts while developing their reading, writing, and thinking skills.

http://www.edutopia.org/blog/school-wide-twitter-chats-stephen-baker

http://www.worldtimebuddy.com/new-zealand-wellington-to-est

 

Resources:

daFont

Tons of fonts. (Look just above the download button for licensing information. Some are free, some are not.)

The Stencil, Army one could be useful and is donationware.

There are several “School” fonts available as well. Many of these are Free for Personal Use.

The fonts presented on this website are their authors’ property, and are either freeware, shareware, demo versions or public domain. The licence mentioned above the download button is just an indication. Please look at the readme-files in the archives or check the indicated author’s website for details, and contact him if in doubt.

If no author/licence is indicated that’s because we don’t have information, that doesn’t mean it’s free.

http://www.dafont.com

 

Shooloo

Large repository of Common Core Math Word Problems.

https://fun.shooloo.org/

 

Classroom Icebreakers

http://www.worksheetlibrary.com/teachingtips/icebreakers.html

What was there

Ties historical photos to Google Maps.

http://www.whatwasthere.com/

Web Spotlight:

The Secret of Effective Motivation

By AMY WRZESNIEWSKI and BARRY SCHWARTZ

 

THERE are two kinds of motive for engaging in any activity: internal and instrumental. If a scientist conducts research because she wants to discover important facts about the world, that’s an internal motive, since discovering facts is inherently related to the activity of research. If she conducts research because she wants to achieve scholarly renown, that’s an instrumental motive, since the relation between fame and research is not so inherent.

 

There is a temptation among educators and instructors to use whatever motivational tools are available to recruit participants or improve performance.

…for students uninterested in learning, financial incentives for good attendance or pizza parties for high performance may prompt them to participate, but it may result in less well-educated students.

 

The same goes for motivating teachers themselves. We wring our hands when they “teach to the test” because we fear that it detracts from actual educating. It is possible that teachers do this because of an over reliance on accountability that transforms the instrumental consequences of good teaching (things like salary bonuses) into instrumental motives. Accountability is important, but structured crudely, it can create the very behavior (such as poor teaching) that it is designed to prevent.

http://mobile.nytimes.com/2014/07/06/opinion/sunday/the-secret-of-effective-motivation.html?referrer=&_r=0

Death of expertise

Today, any assertion of expertise produces an explosion of anger from certain quarters of the American public, who immediately complain that such claims are nothing more than fallacious “appeals to authority,” sure signs of dreadful “elitism,” and an obvious effort to use credentials to stifle the dialogue required by a “real” democracy.

 

I fear we are witnessing the “death of expertise”: a Google-fueled, Wikipedia-based, blog-sodden collapse of any division between professionals and laymen, students and teachers, knowers and wonderers – in other words, between those of any achievement in an area and those with none at all.

 

To take but one horrifying example, we live today in an advanced post-industrial country that is now fighting a resurgence of whooping cough — a scourge nearly eliminated a century ago — merely because otherwise intelligent people have been second-guessing their doctors and refusing to vaccinate their kids after reading stuff written by people who know exactly zip about medicine.

 

There’s also that immutable problem known as “human nature.” It has a name now: it’s called the Dunning-Kruger effect, which says, in sum, that the dumber you are, the more confident you are that you’re not actually dumb.

 

Expertise is necessary, and it’s not going away. Unless we return it to a healthy role in public policy, we’re going to have stupider and less productive arguments every day.

 

http://thefederalist.com/2014/01/17/the-death-of-expertise/

Random Thoughts . . .

 

Personal Web Site

 

MSM 277:  eHe’s got eSkeletons in e’s Closet!  

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

 

Jokes You Can Use:

 

How much does a pirate pay for corn?

A buccaneer

 

What do Eskimos get from sitting on the ice too long?

Polaroids

 

Why did the pirate go to the Caribbean?

He wanted some arr and arr.

 

What’s it called when you loan money to a bison?

A buffaloan.

 

Two atoms are walking down the street together. The first atom turns and says, “Hey, you just stole an electron from me!”

“Are you sure?” asks the second atom.

To which the first atom replies, “Yeah, I’m positive!”

 

What do you do with epileptic lettuce?

Seizure salad

What kind of guns do Bees use?

BeeBee Guns

 

Advisory:

A few minutes with … a kid who helps the homeless

Robby Eimers spends his Saturdays like a lot of 12-year-olds, heading to baseball games or handing out meals to 150 homeless people.

Whoa. Wait. Say what?

 

http://www.freep.com/article/20140615/NEWS/306150058/1001/news

 

Middle School Science Minute

byDave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

 

Neuroscience for MS Teachers

 

This is the third in a four part series on neuroscience with special guest Aneesha Badrinarayan, Outreach Programs Manager with the Ann Arbor Hands-On Museum, in Ann Arbor, MI. You can visit the Ann Arbor Hands-On Museum online at:

http://www.aahom.org

 

In this podcast, we look at the question of “Why is neuroscience important for middle school science teachers?”

From the Twitterverse:

Richard Byrne ‏@rmbyrne 26m

DayBoard is my new favorite Chrome extension.http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2014/06/use-this-extension-to-see-your-to-do.html …

Conrad Hackett ‏@conradhackett 6h

Most commonly spoken language in U.S. after English & Spanish 1980: Italian
Today: Chinese
http://pewrsr.ch/1ew3jaw

Picard Tips@PicardTips 2h

Picard management tip: Stirring up competition between crew members is the opposite of your job.

Joshua Starr ‏@mcpssuper 2h

D.C. Dumping Test Scores From Its Teacher Evaluationshttp://huff.to/1kT3wmP via@HuffPostEdu I have the same question as@rweingarten

Joy Kirr ‏@JoyKirr 3h

There are schools trying#geniushour for Teachers… 🙂http://www.livebinders.com/play/play/829279?tabid=c8f80340-fdc2-a6a9-3d08-2d47b465259c … WIN!#satchat@cjracek

Scott McLeod ‏@mcleod 3h

DI: Countdown to ISTE 12: Drama / theater education blogs (aka THE PUSH 2014) #edtech

Shawn Storm ‏@sstorm01 3h

90% of engagement occurs when the Ss know you care, the other 10% are the Ss that want to know you care#satchat

Sue Gorman ‏@sjgorman 3h

Google Gesture App Translates Sign Language Into Spoken Languagehttp://mashable.com/2014/06/20/google-gesture-app/#:eyJzIjoidCIsImkiOiJfdm52MmlpMmFpd2R0Z3VraCJ9 … via@mashable#udl

Shelley Rolston ‏@shelleyrolston1 14h

The Art of Teaching is the Art of Assisting Discovery
http://explore.noodle.org/post/34653845769/mark-van-doren-in-liberal-education …#GeniusHour#bced

Pilar Pamblanco ‏@englishteach8 4h

Top story: Google Is Putting $50 Million Toward Getting Girls to Codehttp://mashable.com/2014/06/20/google-made-with-code …, see morehttp://tweetedtimes.com/englishteach8

Scott McLeod@mcleod 8m

Online Education Has Become a Joke |@rogerschankhttp://bit.ly/1rj6M09

Monte Tatom@drmmtatom · Jun 18

Watch Google Classroom in Action | EdTech Magazine  http://feedly.com/k/1lDBgcd ~#fhuedu642#tn_teta#ISTEAPLN#edwebchat =>@MSMatters

#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

 

Strategies:

20 WORDS THAT ONCE MEANT SOMETHING VERY DIFFERENT

 

Words change meaning over time in ways that might surprise you. We sometimes notice words changing meaning under our noses (e.g., unique coming to mean “very unusual” rather than “one of a kind”) — and it can be disconcerting. How in the world are we all going to communicate effectively if we allow words to shift in meaning like that?

The good news: History tells us that we’ll be fine. Words have been changing meaning — sometimes radically — as long as there have been words and speakers to speak them. Here is just a small sampling of words you may not have realized didn’t always mean what they mean today.

http://ideas.ted.com/2014/06/18/20-words-that-once-meant-something-very-different/

 

Visual Note Taking

Visual notetaking is a process of representing ideas non-linguistically. (That’s a fancy of way of saying, “drawing pictures.”) Visual notetaking can include concept mapping, but also more artistic ways of visually capturing and representing ideas. On the simpler side of the visual notetaking continuum, visual notes can be used to create narrated art. On the complex end of the spectrum, some visual notetaking applications support the creation of whiteboard animation videos which include audio narration synchronized to screencasts of drawings. Visual or graphic facilitation can be used at meetings to summarize presentations and guide discussions. Whether simple or complex, visual notes can be used to more deeply process information as well as communicate it to others with images.

http://www.speedofcreativity.org/2014/06/19/inspired-by-ipadpalooza-2014-visual-notetaking/

http://www.slideshare.net/wfryer/visual-notetaking-with-ipads-june-2014

 

Resources:

Etymonline

This is a map of the wheel-ruts of modern English. Etymologies are not definitions; they’re explanations of what our words meant and how they sounded 600 or 2,000 years ago.

The dates beside a word indicate the earliest year for which there is a surviving written record of that word (in English, unless otherwise indicated). This should be taken as approximate, especially before about 1700, since a word may have been used in conversation for hundreds of years before it turns up in a manuscript that has had the good fortune to survive the centuries.

The basic sources of this work are Weekley’s “An Etymological Dictionary of Modern English,” Klein’s “A Comprehensive Etymological Dictionary of the English Language,” “Oxford English Dictionary” (second edition), “Barnhart Dictionary of Etymology,” Holthausen’s “Etymologisches Wörterbuch der Englischen Sprache,” and Kipfer and Chapman’s “Dictionary of American Slang.” A full list of print sources used in this compilation can be found here.

Since this dictionary went up, it has benefited from the suggestions of dozens of people I have never met, from around the world. Tremendous thanks and appreciation to all of you.

 

http://www.etymonline.com/

 

eSkeletons

eSkeletons provides an interactive environment in which to examine and learn about skeletal anatomy. The purpose of this site is to enable you to view the bones of both human and non-human primates and to gather information about them from our osteology database.

 

Tips for viewing the eSkeletons website:

  • Your screen resolution should be set to at least 800 x 600 pixels and color quality set at “highest.” For best results, set the screen resolution to 1024 x 768 or greater.
  • eSkeletons is compatible with the following internet browsers: Firefox 2.0 or higher, Internet Explorer 7.0 or higher, and Safari. For the best viewing experience, we recommend using web standards compliant browsers.
  • Make sure JavaScript is enabled. You can check this setting in the Preferences dialog box under the Edit menu.
  • Some functions of eSkeletons require QuickTime 3.0 or higher.

 

http://www.eskeletons.org/

 

Invasion of America

Between 1776 and the present, the United States seized roughly one eighth of the habitable world by treaty and executive order. Explore how it acquired North America in this interactive map of every Native American land cession since the birth of the nation.

http://invasionofamerica.ehistory.org/

http://www.ehistory.org/

 

Library of Congress

The Library of Congress offers classroom materials and professional development to help teachers effectively use primary sources from the Library’s vast digital collections in their teaching.

Find Library of Congress lesson plans and more that meet Common Core standards, state content standards, and the standards of national organizations.

http://www.loc.gov/teachers/

Web Spotlight:

No one can credibly argue that teachers are trained well enough to be effective and efficient in today’s classrooms

 

http://dangerouslyirrelevant.org/2014/06/no-one-can-credibly-argue-that-teachers-are-trained-well-enough-to-be-effective-and-efficient-in-todays-classrooms.html

40 Before and After Shots That Demonstrate the Power of Visual Effects

 

http://twistedsifter.com/2014/06/before-and-after-shots-of-visual-effects-in-film/

11 facts about US teachers and schools that put the education reform debate in context

The debate over teacher compensation and job security and its relationship to student performance is incredibly bitter and divisive, featuring two competing sides with drastically competing narratives and visions of education. One good place to start with the issue, however, is with some basic facts. Here are eleven.

http://www.vox.com/2014/6/16/5810438/11-facts-about-americas-teachers-and-schools

 

Blog? Wiki? Website?

One of the questions that I am asked on a fairly frequent basis is, “should I create a blog, a wiki, or a website for my classroom?” Each platform serves a slightly different purpose. Years ago I created a small set of slides to outline the features of each platform. Yesterday, I rediscovered those slides and found that they are still useful.

http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2014/06/blog-wiki-or-website-key-points-to.html#.U6WanY1dXSd

Random Thoughts . . .

eCommunity for Moodle

 

Personal Web Site

 

MSM 276:  Picture (almost) Perfect!

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

 

Jokes You Can Use:

 

An eight-year-old kid says to his dad, “When I grow up, I want to be a musician.”

The dad says, “I am sorry — can’t have it both ways.”

 

At a party of professionals, a Doctor was having difficulty socializing. Everyone wanted to describe their symptoms, and get an opinion about diagnosis. The Doctor turned to a Lawyer acquaintance, and asked, “How do you handle people who want advice outside of the office?”

“Simple,” answered the Lawyer, “I send them a bill. That stops it.”

The next day, the Doctor, still feeling a bit reserved about what he had just finished doing, opened his mailbox to send the bills; there sat a bill from the Lawyer.

 

Mum, what are you cooking??

It’s bean soup!

I don’t care what it has been; I just want to know what it is now!!

A history teacher and his wife were sitting at a table, the wife asked “Anything new at work”, and he replied”, no, I am teaching History”.

Eileen Award:

  • Twitter: Julie Brannon, Tanya Knight, Sharon Ricks

Advisory:

Character

 

Podcast 276 - Google Docs 2014-06-14 12-43-15 2014-06-14 12-43-20

 

 

 

Do we really want to send the message to young adolescents that character is nonrecoverable, lost with a single mistake? Or do we want to send messages about learning from mistakes – even really bad ones – and personal growth? I think the latter…

http://dangerouslyirrelevant.org/2014/06/does-your-educational-organization-believe-in-redemption.html

Guide dog lands spot in yearbook next to girl he takes care of: ‘They’re such a great team’

Taxi can alert family and teachers when Rachel is about to experience a seizure. “He predicts she’s going to have a seizure up to an hour and half before it happens,” Teresa explains. “It seems to be a smell that the body emits, but until dogs can talk we can never know for sure.”

http://www.today.com/pets/guide-dog-lands-spot-yearbook-next-girl-he-takes-care-2D79784040

Artist brightens random people’s days with fake classifieds on bulletin boards

Ukranian artist Nastya Vinokurova has been leaving drawings around Kiev that appear to be classified ads. Upon further examination, it becomes apparent that they’re not real estate listings or job postings or anything for sale, but are actually unique little drawings with notes inviting passersby to take one home…

http://twentytwowords.com/artist-brightens-random-peoples-days-with-fake-classifieds-on-bulletin-boards-8-pics/

Middle School Science Minute

byDave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

 

This is the second in a four part series on neuroscience with special guest Aneesha Badrinarayan, Outreach Programs Manager with the Ann Arbor Hands-On Museum, in Ann Arbor, MI. You can visit the Ann Arbor Hands-On Museum online at:

http://www.aahom.org

In this podcast, we look at the question of “What is the application of Neuroscience?”

 

From the Twitterverse:

For @mrrexine #ndedchat pic.twitter.com/PuEGWeSK1L

— Craig Nansen (@cnansen) May 31, 2014

 

Leigh Zeitz (@zeitz) ‏@zeitz 12m

I did a theatrical performance about puns. It was a play on words.

Deanna Mascle ‏@deannamascle 45m

Comparison of Blogging Services for Teachers |@scoopit via@knolinfoshttp://sco.lt/5u1u0P  Alternate:  https://docs.google.com/document/d/1XEyLTbUfKusx5apVU1r_SJvu_wTeBfiBTr4tHtDLj3I/pub

Socrative@Socrative 27m

26 Free Tools for Your 1-to-1 Classroom | WeAreTeachers http://www.weareteachers.com/hot-topics/special-reports/26-essential-free-tools-for-your-1-to-1-classroom#.U5pThFdtXFM.twitter …

Diane Ravitch ‏@DianeRavitch 41m

Robert Balfanz: How to Cut Dropout Rateshttp://wp.me/p2odLa-83a

David Bydlowski ‏@k12science 49m

Oakland County Parks is accepting applications for Part time employment for Seasonal Program Specialists – Nature…http://fb.me/1bWEAHegX

Scott McLeod ‏@mcleod 1h

Technology Will Not Replace Teachershttp://linkd.in/SVqnrn #edtech

Doug Peterson ‏@dougpete 1h

7 Ways Quiet Leaders Get the Most From Talkers | Leadership Freak – Mozilla Firefoxhttp://ow.ly/y140i

MiddleWeb ‏@middleweb 2h

MWSmartBrief:@tweenteacher on dancing w/math; student health; STEM gets Maker muscles; iRules; Kidding Aroundhttp://r.smartbrief.com/resp/fRbXCimBnyavstkIaqbvhTaltoAj?format=standard …@amle

Michele McWilliams ‏@M2McW 2h

This is great!@Don_Jacobs: Got to love that@Joe_Mazza guy! Always sharing ideas -home-school connectionspic.twitter.com/6UI9V2s64i


#satchat

Carol A. Josel ‏@schoolwise 2h

‘Cool’ kids in middle school struggle in their 20s, study findshttp://fw.to/ssJEMJL

Carol A. Josel @schoolwise 2h

A troubled trial run for new Common Core tests | Hechinger Report:http://hechingerreport.org/content/troubled-trial-run-new-common-core-tests_16321/#.U5xAkK_F8yo.twitter …

Alec Couros@courosa 14h

Awesome. RT@cnansen: For@mrrexine#ndedchatpic.twitter.com/hDGTIQIBCA

Monte Tatom@drmmtatom · Jun 13

10 Entry Points For Next-Gen Learning  http://feedly.com/k/1kvNbEu ~#fhuedu642#fhucid#tn_teta#ISTEAPLN was#sigadmin =>@MSMatters

#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

 

Strategies:

Powtoon

We provide all the animation tools you’ll ever need to immediately begin creating your own professional-looking animated explainer videos and animated presentations. From start to finish, you’ll be guided through a surprisingly simple process, resulting in eye-catching videos that will hook your audience without fail.

Maybe you made a PowToon video just to watch all by yourself and never show anyone else…but we sincerely doubt it. You want to get your amazing new animation out to as many people as possible! Fortunately, our easy export system gets your PowToon animated video on YouTube or downloaded to your computer to do with as you wish in just a couple clicks.

All subscription plans are automatically renewed, but can be cancelled at anytime.

http://www.powtoon.com/

http://www.powtoon.com/pricing/edu/

 

Resources:

 

Historypin

Historypin is a way for millions of people to come together, from across different generations, cultures and places, to share small glimpses of the past and to build up the huge story of human history.

Everyone has history to share: whether its sitting in yellowed albums in the attic, collected in piles of crackly tapes, conserved in the 1000s of archives all over the world or passed down in memories and old stories.

Each of these pieces of history finds a home on Historypin, where everyone has the chance to see it, add to it, learn from it, debate it and use it to build up a more complete understanding of the world.

 

http://www.historypin.com/

 

Web Spotlight:

Images from the Museum of New Zealand

Over 14,000 images are available under a Creative Commons licence CC BY-NC-ND. If you aren’t familiar with Creative Commons it can look a little complicated, but what it means is you can use those images if attribute the image (we help you do that at each download page). You can’t make money from using the image, and you can’t change the image. Might sound a little restrictive but there is plenty you can still do, like use it in your homework, on your blog, print it and hang it on your wall…

But even better are the 17,000 images that downloadable for any use, any use at all. These images have no known copyright restrictions. Again it would be good if you attributed the original maker of the work, and link to the page on Collections Online so others can find it, but that isn’t mandatory.

http://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/explore

http://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/

How (Not) to Talk to Kids About High-Stakes Tests

By day, I’m a calm, mild-mannered middle school teacher who would do just about anything to motivate my students to do their best work and fall in love with learning. I praise their achievements and efforts, not just their high scores, and then watch those scores improve.

By night, I am the mom of two daughters, and much of my hard-won professional acumen goes out the window.

Defenders believe rigorous tests lead to better teaching and better learning only when the tests have sharp teeth: Students, educators, principals, and even whole schools face dire consequences if kids don’t do well. It’s a giant experiment, involving millions of children.

1. Going negative just does not work very well.

2. Praising hard work, not high scores, is more effective.

3. Stereotypes matter.

 

So the takeaway for parents and teachers swept into the vortex of testing mania? Inspire students by helping them to see that their hard work has a purpose that will improve their lives and the lives of those around them. Build up students’ confidence by teaching them to work hard to improve their skills. Praise their tenacity and curiosity, not just their high scores.

 

http://www.rewireme.com/explorations/talk-kids-high-stakes-tests/#sthash.aP67okS6.y7GwnHh9.dpbs

Random Thoughts . . .

ISTE 2014

 

eCommunity for Moodle

 

Personal Web Site

 

MSM 275:  Top Ten Baby!  We’re Baaaaaaak!  But what about the Common Core?

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

 

Jokes You Can Use:

 

TEACHER: Why are you late, Frank?

FRANK: Because of the sign.

TEACHER: What sign?

FRANK: The one that says, “School Ahead, Go Slow.”

 

A man in a bar is enjoying his soda when he hears a voice say, “You look great!” He looks around, but there is nobody near him. He hears the voice again: “No, really, you look just terrific!” Again he looks around. Nobody. A few minutes pass, and again he hears the voice: “Is that a new shirt or something? Because you look absolutely stunning!” At this point the man realizes that the voice is coming from a dish of nuts on the bar. “Hey,” the man calls to the Soda clerk, “What’s with these nuts?” “Oh,” the Soda clerk answers, “they’re complimentary.”

Q. What is it called when you dream in color?

A. A pigment of your imagination

 

How many ducks would there be, if you saw two ducks in front of two ducks, two ducks between two ducks, and two ducks behind two ducks?

How do you make a bandstand?

Eileen Award:

  • Twitter:  Lee Ann Jung

Advisory:

Drawing out things songs that don’t make sense

 

http://www.buzzfeed.com/nathanwpyle/nonsensical-lyrics-explained-by-gifs

 

What Your Handwriting Says About You

Have your students write about a simple topic.

http://www.buzzfeed.com/celestinomark/what-your-hand-writing-says-about-you

What do you need for one bedroom housing?

Have your students write out how much they think that they would need to make per hour to afford one bedroom housing in your area. This is based upon a 40 hour work week and working 52 weeks a year. This can be extended by having the work out the math to include a vacation. Students could also figure out if they moved how that could impact what they need to make.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2014/04/22/what-youd-need-to-make-in-every-county-in-america-to-afford-a-decent-one-bedroom/

Middle School Science Minute

byDave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

 

This is the first in a four part series on neuroscience with special guest Aneesha Badrinarayan, Outreach Programs Manager with the Ann Arbor Hands-On Museum, in Ann Arbor, MI. You can visit the Ann Arbor Hands-On Museum online at:

http://www.aahom.org

 

In this podcast, we look at the question of “What is Neuroscience?”

From the Twitterverse:

Teach For America ‏@TeachForAmerica 5m

Does handwriting matter?http://bddy.me/1p6DSSU via@nytimes

KEtheredge ‏@ketheredge 10h

.@coolcatteacher I#WorkWonders by using OneNote to create a collaborative textbook w/ my Sshttp://firstclasslearning.wordpress.com/2011/07/13/the-count-of-monte-cristo-mock-trial/ …pic.twitter.com/iMF2o7w7kk

Education Radio @BAMRadioNetwork 

The Two Hidden Social Qualities of Effective Educators   @besmonte@coolcatteacher http://tinyurl.com/plyt8k4 #edchat

David Bydlowski ‏@k12science 16m

Guitar Building Teaches Oregon Students Math, Science, and History     http://theworldlink.com/news/local/education/a-lesson-in-diddley-bows/article_af21b3b0-ea7d-11e3-b64d-001a4bcf887a.html …

Lisa Fusco ‏@LisaFusco 1h

The 8 Skills Students Must Have For The Future: This year’s “The Learning Curve” report from Pearson takes a l…http://goo.gl/Fbjgpi

Liz Davis ‏@lizdavis2 12h

Resilience is a process  not a trait: TY@saratruebridgepic.twitter.com/R5EnnqeGlq#edchat#colchat#livedchat#sunchat#paesspchat#satchatwc

SimonGoss ‏@TheSimonGoss 6h

http://tinyurl.com/kmawmoz #inf530 innovations for the next ten years.pic.twitter.com/M0fVimO1Dk

Diane Ravitch ‏@DianeRavitch 3h

Students in Ipswich, Mass., Request Payment for Taking Field Testshttp://wp.me/p2odLa-80Y

Ewan McIntosh ‏@ewanmcintosh 4h

Reading D-Day Landing Sites Then And Now: 11 Striking Images That Bring The Past And Present Together:  http://huff.to/1q52adx

sara wilkie ‏@sewilkie Jun 6

How are we learning from our Ss?“@ijukes: Students Explain Assgnmnts That Got Their Attentionhttp://www.teachthought.com/teaching/46-students-explain-assignments-got-attention-year/ …pic.twitter.com/oNxmGEKZlR

Monte Tatom@drmmtatom · 22h

A Simple Idea That Just Might Revolutionize Education ~#sigadmin#tn_teta#fhuedu642 =>@MSMatters http://zite.to/1jUMFPZ

Monte Tatom@drmmtatom · 23h

A Simple Guide to Create Narrated Comic Books Using#iPad ~#fhuedu642#tn_teta#edwebchat =>@MSMatters http://zite.to/1uqpa9h

Monte Tatom@drmmtatom · 24h

Why iOS 8 will be a big deal to educators ~#fhuedu642#fhuedu320#tn_teta#edwebchat =>@MSMatters http://zite.to/1i8nnhM

#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

Resources:

What We Can Learn from Oklahoma’s Repeal of Common Core

http://www.speedofcreativity.org/2014/06/06/what-we-can-learn-from-oklahomas-repeal-of-common-core/

ExamTime Introduces New Options for Tracking Your Own Study Habits

ExamTime is a neat service that students can use to create flashcards, mind maps, and practice quizzes to help them study.

The most significant of the new ExamTime features is the new performance tracking option. Performance tracking allows students to keep track of how they scored on practice quizzes, monitor which flashcards they know and which they need to spend more time with, and track their comprehension of nodes of their mind maps.

http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2014/05/examtime-introduces-new-options-for.html#.U5MXEZRdX70

 

Video: A New Version Of “I’m Just A Bill” That’s More Cynical & More Accurate

 

http://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2014/05/22/video-a-new-version-of-im-just-a-bill-thats-more-cynical-more-accurate/

Web Spotlight:

 

SAMR Model

  • Substitution
  • Augmentation
  • Modification
  • Redefinition

http://www.hippasus.com/rrpweblog/archives/2014/04/27/FrameworksForEducationalTechnology_SAMRAndTheEdTechQuintet_CAIS.pdf

The Problem with Outcome-Oriented Evaluations

“When we play poker, we control our decision-making process but not how the cards come down. If you correctly detect an opponent’s bluff, but he gets a lucky card and wins the hand anyway, you should be pleased rather than angry, because you played the hand as well as you could. The irony is that by being less focused on your results, you may achieve better ones.”

 

Smart decisions and strong performance do not always beget good results; the more factors in-between our actions and the desired outcome, the less predictive power the outcome can give us.

 

Better policy would focus on school and teacher inputs. For example, we should agree on a set of clear and specific best teaching practices (with the caveat that they’d have to be sufficiently flexible to allow for different teaching styles) on which to base teacher evaluations.

http://34justice.com/2014/05/19/the-problem-with-outcome-oriented-evaluations/

Random Thoughts . . .

 

eCommunity for Moodle

 

Personal Web Site

 

 

MSM 274:  The length of a paycheck correlated with the amount of time spent listening to podcasts . . .

 

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

Jokes You Can Use:

Notice to Employees (Includes Part Time Workers)

 

SICKNESS

We will no longer accept your doctors’ statements as proof.

We believe if you are able to go to the doctor, you are able to work.

 

LEAVE OF ABSENCE FOR SURGERY

We are no longer allowing this practice. As long as you are employed here, you will need all of whatever you have and should not consider having anything removed. We hired you as you are, and to have anything removed would certainly make you less than we bargained for. Anyone having operations will be FIRED immediately.

 

PREGNANCY

In the event of extreme pregnancy, you will be allowed to go to the first aid room when the pains are FIVE MINUTES apart. If it is false labor, you will have to take an hour’s leave without pay.

 

DEATH

This will be accepted as an excuse, BUT we would like two weeks notice, as we feel it is your duty to teach someone your job prior to . . . or after death.

 

This new benefit program started yesterday.

The Management

 

What did the spider email to the fly?

Visit my Web site!

An engineer dies and reports to the pearly gates. St. Peter checks his dossier and says, “Ah, you’re an engineer — you’re in the wrong place.” So the engineer reports to the gates of hell and is let in. Pretty soon, the engineer gets dissatisfied with the level of comfort in hell, and starts designing and building improvements. After a while, they’ve got air conditioning, flush toilets and escalators, and the engineer is becoming a pretty popular guy. One day God calls Satan up on the telephone and asks with a sneer, “So, how’s it going down there in hell?” Satan replies, “Hey, things are going great. We’ve got air conditioning, flush toilets and escalators, and there’s no telling what this engineer is going to come up with next.” God replies, “What??? You’ve got an engineer? That’s a mistake — he should never have gotten down there; send him up here.” Satan says, “No way! I like having an engineer on the staff, and I’m keeping him.” God says, “Send him back up here or I’ll sue.” Satan laughs uproariously and answers, “Yeah right. And just where are YOU going to get a lawyer?”

What is worse than a giraffe with a sore neck?

A centipede with athlete’s foot.

 

Where did the kittens go on their class trip?

To a mewseum.

 

A cowboy rides into town on Friday, stays three days and leaves on Friday how does he do it?

The horses name is Friday

Middle Schooler orders pizza. He gets a large. Just before it’s cut, he asks how many pieces.

Eileen Award:

  • Google+: Neil Sandham

Advisory:

 

How Far Your Paycheck Goes, In 356 U.S. Cities

 

http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2014/05/20/313131559/how-far-your-paycheck-goes-in-356-u-s-cities

Caffeine

It’s not just in coffee anymore. From drinks to jerky to gum, caffeine is everywhere. In our latest video, we take a look at the science behind the world’s most popular drug, including why that little molecule keeps you awake and reveal just how much caffeine is too much.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YuJOhpNS0IY

What is “Pretty”?

http://www.whatispretty.com/#/

How the Blind see beauty

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hlcx_q8u_YI#t=27

Citizenship Test

 

http://www.tastefullyoffensive.com/2014/05/americans-get-asked-questions-from-us.html

http://www.uscis.gov/citizenship/teachers/educational-products/100-civics-questions-and-answers-mp3-audio-english-version

Middle School Science Minute

byDave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

 

MIDDLE SCHOOL SCIENCE MINUTE-PLACE-FAMOUS SCIENTISTS

 

I was recently reading the February, 2014 issue of Science Scope, a magazine written for Middle School Science Teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.  In this issue, I was reading the article, “Science Evolving,” written by Elizabeth Chick.

In this article, Chick explains how she developed a yearlong study of famous life scientists to bring together the Common Core for English Language Arts with the Nature of Science, found in the Next Generation Science Standards.

 

http://k12science.net/Podcast/Podcast/Entries/2014/3/17_Middle_School_Science_Minute-Place-Famous_Scientists.html

 

From the Twitterverse:

Jason Eifling ‏@jeifling

NPR Launches Database of Best Commencement Speeches Ever#graduation http://zite.to/1odx19S

Will Richardson ‏@willrich45

Posted yesterday: “The Real Stranger Danger”http://buff.ly/1nEbtj5 #edchat#education#parenting#edleadership

Heather Aston@Heather_Aston 

@lparren: Projects to Engage Middle School Readershttp://www.edutopia.org/blog/projects-engage-middle-school-readers-beth-holland via@edutopia#anesu#cisdlib#eastbroncos

Derek McCoy ‏@mccoyderek 1h

50+ Ways a Tablet Can Make You a More Effective Teacherhttp://ow.ly/x4IdG

MiddleWeb ‏@middleweb

RT@CharlesMBlow: This Teen Has Published Two Books Before Graduating From Middle Schoolhttp://huff.to/1lRHQJT #mschat@amle

Monte Tatom@drmmtatom ·

Apple’s Official Guide To Teaching With Apps ~#fhuedu642#fhucid#tn_teta#edwebchat#sigadmin =>@MSMatters http://zite.to/1r0bK5E

Rick Wormeli ‏@RickWormeli 

Unrecoverable zeroes and F’s give students excuse to drop the effort, avoid the learning. Why bother? The brain seeks self-preservation.

Richard Byrne ‏@rmbyrne

Create a Mobile Language Lesson With QR Voicehttp://ow.ly/wYI35

Kerry Walker ‏@kerrywalker55

@TopInventionss: Watermelons are square in Japan so they’re easier to stackpic.twitter.com/pNskulwN0n”wow thinking outside the square

Craig Vroom ‏@Vroom6 10h

10 Ways to Measure A Successful Year, So Far.http://www.fueling-education.com/2014/05/measuring-successful-year-so-far.html?spref=tw …#edchat@justintarte@casas_jimmy@TonySinanis@gcouros

Scott Newcomb@SNewco 11h

RT@mccoyderek: Wonderful Guide to The Use of Rubrics in Educationhttp://ow.ly/3kIhLc #edchat

Monte Tatom@drmmtatom · May 22

Create Your Own Personalized Podcast Using@Voxer via@Joe_Mazza ~#fhuedu642#sigadmin#edwebchat#tn_tetahttp://zite.to/RVT3Aa

Monte Tatom@drmmtatom

Teaching Character: The Choices We Make ~#fhupsy306#fhuedu610http://zite.to/1oW29L7

#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

 

Strategies:

Spurious Correlations

http://www.tylervigen.com/

 

Open Rocket

OpenRocket is a free, fully featured model rocket simulator that allows you to design and simulate your rockets before actually building and flying them.

The main features include:

  • Six-degree-of-freedom flight simulation
  • Automatic design optimization
  • Realtime simulated altitude, velocity and acceleration display
  • Staging and clustering support
  • Cross-platform (Java-based)

http://scholasticadministrator.typepad.com/thisweekineducation/2014/05/quotes-.html#.U4CsUVhdX71

http://openrocket.sourceforge.net

Engaging 6th Graders With Coding

This week I am giving some guest bloggers the opportunity to share their ideas and experiences. This is a post from Alison Franz.

http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2014/05/engaging-6th-graders-with-coding.html#.U4CqY1hdX70

Resources:

 

AMLE Book Clearance

 

http://www.amle.org/Shop/Closeouts.aspx

 

Kaizena

Kaizena allows teachers to provide audio feedback on shared Google Docs. This must be added through the App Store.

https://kaizena.com/

 

Random Thoughts . . .

Kids will still go to physical schools, to socialize and be guided by teachers, but as much, if not more, learning will take place employing carefully designed educational tools in the spirit of today’s Khan Academy –modular learning tailored to a student’s needs.

— Google gurus Eric Schmidt and Jared Cohen pp 21-22 of  THE NEW DIGITAL AGE: Transforming Nations, Businesses, and Our Lives (Vintage)

http://scholasticadministrator.typepad.com/thisweekineducation/2014/05/quotes-.html#.U4CsUVhdX71

 

eCommunity for Moodle

 

Personal Web Site

 

MSM 272:  POST! You gotta fix that. Oh, and get me engaged (not that way).

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

Jokes You Can Use:

During training exercises, the Lieutenant driving down a

muddy back road encountered another car stuck in the mud

with a red-faced colonel at the wheel.

 

“Your jeep stuck, sir?” asked the Lieutenant as he pulled

 

“Nope,” replied the Colonel, coming over and handing him

the keys, “Yours is.”

 

Little Johnny was not paying attention in class so the math teacher called on him and said, “Johnny! What are 5, 2, 28 and 40?” Little Johnny quickly replied, “NBC, CBS, HBO, and Cartoon Network!”

 

Okay, so a Texan rancher comes upon a farmer from Maine. The Texan looks at the Mainer and asks, “Say, how much land you think you got here?” Mainer: ‘Bout 10 acres I’d say.” Texan (boasting): Well, on my lot, it takes me all day to drive completely around my property!” Mainer: “Yep, I got one of them trucks too.”

 

A man put in 10 puns for a pun contest, hoping that at least one of them would win. But sadly, no pun in ten did.

 

Wife: “How’d your doctor appointment go?

Husband: “Well, there’s good news and bad news. My blood pressure’s high and

I’m overweight. But, at the doctor’s suggestion, I’m going to take up golf!”

Wife: “And the good news?”

 

Advisory:

 

Birthday Celebrations Around the World

Warning, could give students some ideas.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IWLGvaeDAlU

 

Positive Messages

https://twitter.com/FHUPrincipal/status/453508594554531840/photo/1

 

Middle School Science Minute

byDave Bydlowski (k12science or davidbydlowski@mac.com)

Place-Based Inquiry

I was recently reading the January, 2014 issue of Science Scope, a magazine written for Middle School Science Teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.  In this issue, I was reading the article, “Using Place-Based Inquiry to Inspire and Motivate Future Scientists,” written by Callin Switzer.

In this article, Callin explains the meaning of scientific inquiry and compares and contrasts place-based education and field-based education.

http://k12science.net/Podcast/Podcast/Entries/2014/2/7_Middle_School_Science_Minute-Place-Based_Inquiry.html

From the Twitterverse:

Karen McMillan ‏@McTeachA Visual Guide to The Use of Google Books for Researchhttp://zite.to/RxezeY  (Very helpful visuals)
iColorType ‏@iColorTypeWhy Should I Attend An EdTech Conference?http://buff.ly/1hUbmAP  #Edtech
Angela Maiers ‏@AngelaMaiersWhy Are There So Many Edcamp First Timers?http://ln.is/buff.ly/1sjI0  via@kristenswanson
KevinHodgson ‏@dogtraxDigital Poets! Web Tools, Apps, & Lesson Ideashttp://flip.it/Eb9HJ
Scott McLeod ‏@mcleod“Prepare for compliance.” Gotta love the heavy hand of government…pic.twitter.com/07gYzFbo3p
Caroline Lucas ‏@CarolineLucasRT@SirKenRobinson: You can’t improve education by alienating teachers < wishing#NUT14 a great#Brighton conferencepic.twitter.com/i1q3jd1FY5
Todd Bloch ‏@blocht574Twitter can be the teachers help desk to everything when used correctly!#NT2t#mschat
Chad Lehman ‏@imcguyClass Tech Tips: 23 Virtual Tools for Tablets (all free!)http://buff.ly/1hVvClx
Dan Callahan ‏@dancallahanHow Should Learning Teams Choose Essential Outcomes? (Via@plugusin)#bpschathttp://www.teachingquality.org/content/how-should-learning-teams-choose-essential-outcomeshow-should-learning-teams-choose …
British Pathé ‏@BritishPatheWe’re pleased to announce the uploading of 85,000 films to YouTube. View and share here:http://www.youtube.com/user/britishpathe …pic.twitter.com/3xOvgAgTrD
Teacher ‏@Primary_EdRT@willrich45: The irony of “personalized” learning is that it gets every child to meet “standardized” outcomes.#edtech#edchat#satchat
Kevin Cummins ‏@edgalaxy_comHundreds of creative writing ideas for teachershttp://brev.is/Xom3
#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

 

Strategies:

 

BookTrack Classroom

Create texts for your students. The texts can include sounds. This could be a reading of the book or background music.

http://cdn.booktrack.com/education-studio/index.html#!/

 

Teaching Academic Content and Literacy to English Learners in Elementary and Middle School

This practice guide provides four recommendations that address what works for English learners during reading and content area instruction. Each recommendation includes extensive examples of activities that can be used to support students as they build the language and literacy skills needed to be successful in school. The recommendations also summarize and rate supporting evidence. This guide is geared toward teachers, administrators, and other educators who want to improve instruction in academic content and literacy for English learners in elementary and middle school.

http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/PracticeGuide.aspx?sid=19

Resources:

Why Doesn’t America Read Anymore?

NPR had a terrific April fool’s joke.

http://www.npr.org/2014/04/01/297690717/why-doesnt-america-read-anymore

Web Spotlight:

More Than Half of Students ‘Engaged’ in School, Says Poll

Students who strongly agree that they have at least one teacher who makes them “feel excited about the future” and that their school is “committed to building the strengths of each student” are 30 times more likely than students who strongly disagree with those statements to show other signs of engagement in the classroom—a key predictor of academic success, according to a report released Wednesday by Gallup Education.

 

http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2014/04/09/28gallup.h33.html?cmp=ENL-EU-NEWS1

Random Thoughts . . .

Personal Web Site

 

MSM 271: Nerds, Saving Money, Put it on Paper

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

Jokes You Can Use:

Job Interview Question

You are driving along in your car on a wild, stormy night. You pass by a bus stop, and you see three people waiting for the bus:

 

1. An old lady who looks as if she is about to die.

2. An old friend who once saved your life.

3. The perfect man (or) woman you have been dreaming about.

 

Which one would you choose to offer a ride to, knowing that there could only be one passenger in your car?

 

Think before you continue reading. This is a moral/ethical dilemma that was once actually used as part of a job application.

 

You could pick up the old lady, because she is going to die, and thus you should save her first; or you could take the old friend because he once saved your life, and this would be the perfect chance to pay him back. However, you may never be able to find your perfect dream lover again.

A woman with a headache went to her medicine cabinet to find a bottle of Advil. She did as the bottle said; take two and keep away from children. Soon her headache went away!

Q: Where do cows go on Fridays?

A: To the Moooovies

 

What do you call a big fish who makes you an offer you can’t refuse?

The Codfather.

Eileen Award:

  • Twitter:  Sandra Martin, Carina Soto, Kaley Katherine, Duncan Gunstone

 

Advisory:

Wil Wheaton’s Response to being called a nerd

Wil Wheaton explains to a girl how to handle being called a nerd.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=04WJEEb33CY#t=48

Body Language

Body language affects how others see us, but it may also change how we see ourselves. Social psychologist Amy Cuddy shows how “power posing” — standing in a posture of confidence, even when we don’t feel confident — can affect testosterone and cortisol levels in the brain, and might even have an impact on our chances for success.

http://www.ted.com/talks/amy_cuddy_your_body_language_shapes_who_you_are#t-11094

 

Dining

http://twentytwowords.com/barbarian-eating-different-countries-around-world-7-pics/

Middle School Science Minute

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

MIDDLE SCHOOL SCIENCE MINUTE-STORY ASSESSMENTS

I was recently reading the January, 2014 issue of Science Scope, a magazine written for Middle School Science Teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.  In this issue, I was reading the article, “Every Assessment Tells a Story,” written by Fred Ende.

In this article, Fred shares his design of Story Assessments as a form of evaluation design.  His purpose for designing Story Assessments was to reduce student anxiety.

 

http://k12science.net/Podcast/Podcast/Entries/2014/3/17_Middle_School_Science_Minute-Place-Famous_Scientists.html

From the Twitterverse:

* Marc Prensky ‏@marcprensky

Don’t just use technology to do old things in new ways—use technology to do new things!

* Tobie Taylor Jones ‏@tobiemichele

“It is my belief that as a part of my professional growth plan, I am perpetually in beta.” ~ @datruss Love this!!! #lifelonglearner

* Sue Gorman ‏@sjgorman

Common Core & Ed Tech: More iPad Creativity Tools! http://www.ccedtech.com/2014/04/more-ipad-creativity-tools.html?spref=tw … #ccss #ipaded #wiedu

* Karen McMillan ‏@McTeach

The Science of Memory (and 4 Uncommon Ways to Enhance It) http://zite.to/1ho7jGw  (Fascinating stuff about the brain!)

* Scott Newcomb ‏@SNewco 29m

iPad Apps Separated by Subject Area #edcampmetrodc #edcamppgh #edchat

* Android Central ‏@androidcentral 54m

Best Android Apps for March 2014 http://phon.es/445o  #android

* Youhadonejob ‏@_youhadonejob

I’m not sure Disney has got a grasp on the concept of pirates. pic.twitter.com/HCc3AkJNwZEmbedded image permalink

#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

 

Strategies:

14-Year-Old Proves U.S. Can Save $370 Million by Changing Fonts

Changing the standard typeface used by federal and state governments could save the United States roughly $370 million a year in ink costs, according to a peer-reviewed study by Suvir Mirchandani. The best part of the story? Mirchandani is just 14 years old.

It all started when Mirchandani, a student at Dorseyville Middle School near Pittsburgh, Pa., noticed that he was getting a lot more printed handouts in class than he used to in elementary school. He wondered how wasteful it was, and then discovered just how expensive ink is. At up to $75 an ounce, he points out, it’s twice as expensive as Chanel No. 5 perfume.

http://mashable.com/2014/03/28/save-money-change-fonts/

Want to encourage your students?:

http://www.emerginginvestigators.org/

Resources:

Paper

Create all types of graph paper to print or use as a background for Interactive Whiteboards, presentations, etc.

http://incompetech.com/graphpaper/

OR

http://gridzzly.com/

 

Lingua.ly

  1. Learn

  2. Practice

  3. Read

One free way to learn a new language. There is now a mobile app. Did I mention that it is free?

http://lingua.ly/

Comics in Education

Great resource that is all about using comics in education.

http://www.comicsineducation.com/

 

Scrawlar

Web based whiteboard. No registration required. No app or plugin required. Teacher creates class accounts.

http://www.scrawlar.com/

My Slide Rule

Upgrade your skills. Grow in your career.

Find MOOC’s that will help you grow.

http://www.mysliderule.com/

Web Spotlight:

 

Random Thoughts . . .

Personal Web Site

MSM 270: We’re Baaaaacccckkkk….with Numbers, Yoga & Advisory! Yogurt optional . . .

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

Jokes You Can Use:

A guy walks up to the door of a bar, rolling a wheel along with him. The bouncer says, “Hey, what are you doing with that?”

“Last time I came here, they said we had to have proper IDs and a tire.”

 

The teacher wrote on the blackboard, “I ain’t had no fun all summer.”

“Now Paul,” she said. “What shall I do to correct this?”

“Get a boyfriend.” Paul replied.

 

Dad: “What happened to your eye?”

Tom: “I was staring at a ball from afar, and I was wondering why it was getting bigger and bigger. Then, it hit me.”

 

Stranger: Catch any fish?

Fisherman: Did I! I took 25 out of this stream this morning.

Stranger: Do you know who I am? I’m the game warden.

Fisherman: Do you know who I am? I’m the biggest liar in the country.

Q. What’s the difference between a cat and a comma?

A. A cat has its claws at the end of its paws; a comma is a pause at the end of a clause

 

Why did the owl make everyone laugh?

“Cause he was a hoot!

 

A kindergarten teacher handed out a coloring page to her class. On it was a picture of a duck holding an umbrella. The teacher told her class to color the duck in yellow and the umbrella green, however, Bobby, the class rebel, colored the duck in a bright fire truck red. After seeing this, the teacher asked him: “Bobby, how many times have you see a red duck?” Young Bobby replied with “The same number of times I’ve seen a duck holding an umbrella.”

Eileen Award:

  • Google+: Kris Ham,

 

Advisory:

Yoga

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/low-income-students-combat-stress-mindfulness/

 

58 Everyday Things You Never Knew Had Names

http://www.buzzfeed.com/daves4/58-everyday-things-you-never-knew-had-names

77 Facts That Sound Like Huge Lies But Are Actually Completely True

http://www.buzzfeed.com/daves4/77-facts-that-sound-like-huge-lies-but-are-completely-true

Middle School Science Minute

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

MIDDLE SCHOOL SCIENCE MINUTE-ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS

 

I was recently reading the January, 2014 issue of Science Scope, a magazine written for Middle School Science Teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.  In this issue, I was reading the article, “Supporting Linguistically Diverse Students” written by Joseph Johnson, Randy Yerrick, and Erin Kearney.

In this article, they look six strategies to help provide success for English Language Learners.

 

http://k12science.net/Podcast/Podcast/Entries/2014/1/24_Middle_School_Science_Minute-English_Language_Learners.html

 

From the Twitterverse:

RT @ToddWhitaker: So true. pic.twitter.com/fpMe9FNVjuEmbedded image permalink

* Seymour Simon ‏@seymoursimon 49m

If you’re a teacher and you don’t know what a #hashtag is, you’re missing out on a community of helpful colleagues #teacher

* Ryan Bretag ‏@ryanbretag 19m

Interested in presenting at the Chromebook Institute? Visit here for more info: http://www.chromebookinstitute.com/call-for-proposals/ … #chromebookinst #chromebookedu #gafe

* Shawn Canady ‏@PMCOACH 12h

Trend Alert: 6 Messaging Apps That Let Teens Share (Iffy) Secrets http://zite.to/OZFhLB

* Kevin Cummins ‏@edgalaxy_com 51m

Massive collection of maths ideas and lesson plans. Fractions, Algebra, Space, measurement, and more http://brev.is/b8j2

* CMLACMU ‏@CMLACMU Mar 26

Our sharing circle bringing back all we learned from @MI_MAMSE to our fellow Chipps! pic.twitter.com/jU8THa9AxREmbedded image permalink

* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom Mar 28

4 Reasons Why You Need A Course Syllabus Dashboard http://feedly.com/k/1hDnukd  ~ #highered #fhucid #sigadmin

* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom now

The Strength of Simple Videos http://feedly.com/k/1gBMBrk  ~ #fhuedu642 #fhuedu320 #edwebchat #tn_teta

* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom 4m

Two Great Web Tools to Create Visual Stories http://feedly.com/k/1i3CKYW  ~ #edwebchat #fhucid #fhuedu320

 

#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

 

Strategies:

How to Trick a Child Into Playing the Violin (or Other Boring Things)

the fact is, incentivizing a child’s behavior reduces intrinsic motivation (also HERE). This is even true to the point that offering incentives for an activity that a child likes detracts from his or her enjoyment and makes the child less likely to continue the activity in the future.

A hint comes from THIS article published in the March/April issue of the journal Child Development. Specifically, the authors from Northwestern University ask how they can “motivate children’s sustained engagement in an otherwise boring task.”

kids who were given causally rich information made it through an astounding 4 pegboards. Read that again: interesting information beat stickers! Stickers,for gosh sake!

because causally rich rewards inherently capitalize on children’s intrinsic desire to learn, we suggest that they may be less likely to have this detrimental effect on a child’s overall intrinsic motivation.”

http://geekdad.com/2014/03/trick-a-child-into-violin/

Resources:

Bloom’s Digital Taxonomy Wheel

http://eductechalogy.org/swfapp/blooms/wheel/engage.swf

Classic Books

http://read.gov/books/

Evolution of a Story from Idea to Publication: A Behind-the-Scenes Look

Explains the writing process from a writer.

http://www.jamierubin.net/2014/02/26/evolution-of-a-story-from-idea-to-publication-a-behind-the-scenes-look/

 

Web Spotlight:

Two months in, Eli Broad’s new foundation president still learning the ropes

Reed began two months ago as president of the Broad Foundation, a newly created job. He’ll take over deciding who receives millions of dollars in education grants on behalf of the philanthropist who some say has an inflexible agenda to shape schools.

“It would look like a national system,” said Broad, describing what he would see as a perfect education infrastructure. “Rather than having 14,000 school boards across America, it would get governors involved, big city mayors involved, and it would have a longer school day and a longer school year.”

http://www.scpr.org/blogs/education/2014/03/03/15966/eli-broad-appoints-head-of-philanthropic-education/

 

Virtual autopsy: explore a natural mummy from early Egypt

http://www.britishmuseum.org/whats_on/past_exhibitions/2012/virtual_autopsy.aspx

Free CopyRight Courses

Peer 2 Peer University is again offering some free courses on Copyright and Creative Commons for educators. Copyright for Educators and Creative Commons for Educators begin in March and run through early May. Copyright for Educators has an enrollment limit and requires an application. Creative Commons for Educators does not have an enrollment limit nor does it require an application.

 

Creative Commons for Educators:

The course will run for a period of 7 weeks, as split up to the left and below. Each week has a different task to complete, which is due the following Sunday. Tasks may take anywhere from half an hour to two hours or more, depending on how much effort you and your small group wants to put in that week. Like most things in life– the more time you put into it, the more you will get out of it.

Course break-down

  • 3 March – Week 1: Introduce yourself and your classroom need

  • 10 March – Week 2: Creative Commons in Context

  • 17 March – Week 3: Find the materials with the rights you need

  • 24 March – Week 4: Remix and attribute

  • 31 March – Week 5: Share your work

  • 7 April – Week 6: Collaborate and create

  • 14 April – Week 7: Share your resource about CC

https://p2pu.org/en/courses/1283/creative-commons-for-k-12-educators/

http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2014/02/free-copyright-and-creative-commons.html#.Uxsu1NyxNTN

Good Parenting Skills

http://www.bakadesuyo.com/2013/11/good-parenting-skills/

Random Thoughts . . .

Personal Web Site

MSM 268: Twitter never stops….One linkey dink.

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

Jokes You Can Use:

Q. What do you call a ginger bread man with one leg?

A. Limp biscuit

 

Q. How do you know when a woman is going to say something smart?

A. It will start with “He said…”

 

What did the tired chess player do?

He took the knight off

Q: What do you get when you cross Bambi with a ghost?

A: Bamboo.

 

Q: What’s a haunted chicken?

A: Poultry-geist.

 

Q: Why did the monster eat a light bulb?

A: Because he was in need of a light snack.

 

Q: Why are most monsters covered in wrinkles?-

A: Have you ever tried to iron a monster?

 

Q: What kind of mistakes do ghosts make?

A: Boo boos.

 

Q: Why couldn’t Dracula’s wife get to sleep?

A: Because of his coffin.

 

Q: Why do mummies make excellent spies?

A: They’re good at keeping things under wraps.

Eileen Award:

  • Twitter:  Mark Maudlin, Kip

  • Email: Aaron Atwood

 

Advisory:

Cost of things:

Students are probably pretty aware of Facebook. Recently, Facebook purchased “WhatsApp” for $19 billion. What could they have purchased with that instead?

http://twentytwowords.com/things-that-are-cheaper-than-facebooks-new-acquisition-whatsapp-like-iceland-for-instance/

 

Visiting America

What would you tell visitors from other countries about America?

http://mentalfloss.com/article/55140/10-japanese-travel-tips-visiting-america

 

Would it be OK to have a dance restricted by grades?

http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/top-grades-open-the-door-to-school-dance-in-montgomery/2014/02/03/3bb75640-89df-11e3-916e-e01534b1e132_story.html?wprss=rss_Copy%20of%20local-alexandria-social

 

How Real are Videos

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5qrGOi41iwE

Elie Wiesel’s Acceptance Speech

  • We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented. Sometimes we must interfere.

  • one person of integrity, can make a difference, a difference of life and death.

  • What all these victims need above all is to know that they are not alone; that we are not forgetting them, that when their voices are stifled we shall lend them ours, that while their freedom depends on ours, the quality of our freedom depends on theirs.

http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/1986/wiesel-acceptance.html

Middle School Science Minute

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

 

MIDDLE SCHOOL SCIENCE MINUTE-LABELING CONTAINERS

 

I was recently reading the December, 2013 issue of Science Scope, a magazine written for Middle School Science Teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.  In this issue, I was reading the safety question of the month, written by Ken Roy, director of environmental health and safety for Glastonbury Public Schools in Glastonbury, CT.

The question is:

If I transfer a chemical from its original container to a secondary container, what information do I need on the label of the new container?

http://k12science.net/Podcast/Podcast/Entries/2014/1/10_Middle_School_Science_Minute-Labeling_Containers.html

From the Twitterverse:

* Graphite ‏@Graphite

Teachers, we want to thank you this weekend! Review 1 edtech tool for a $10 gift card or 2 tools for a $25 gift card:

* LaMuth Middle School ‏@LaMuthMS

Highlights of #OMLA2014 including award winners and @RickWormeli handouts. Only missing Sound of Music demo http://ohiomla.org/annual-state-conference/ …

* Scott Newcomb ‏@SNewco 1h

So, you have an iPad…now what? http://www.themobilenative.org/2013/12/so-you-have-ipad.html … #mlearning #edchat

* Digital Learning Day ‏@OfficialDLDay 2h

WOW great chart! @playgroundupris @MelanyStowe Personalization- Differentiation- Individualization #satchat pic.twitter.com/nYYh0SQIoM

* Oakland Schools ‏@OaklandSchools 2h

MI Educators: Margaret Heritage WORKSHOP on “Formative Assessment: An Enabler of Learning” 2/28 http://tinyurl.com/ldwyg6j  #MichEd

* Jerry Blumengarten ‏@cybraryman1

My Exit Slips page http://cybraryman.com/exitslips.html  #satchat

* Maria Popova ‏@brainpicker

The science of how mind-wandering and “positive constructive daydreaming” boost our creativity and social skills http://j.mp/1fGYGXw

* Co.Exist ‏@FastCoExist 5h

This New Girl-Powered Engineering Toy Asks Kids To Design And Wire Their Own Dollhouse http://f-st.co/ugCszK9

* Charlie Love ‏@charlie_love

GameMaker Studio is free to download for a limited time http://zite.to/1p2MEj0

* Alfonso Gonzalez ‏@educatoral

The Flipped Classroom™ Is A Lie @TechedUpTeacher http://feedly.com/e/hWrZX6Tx

* Alfonso Gonzalez ‏@educatoral 10h

Stoodle: Instant Free Virtual Classroom @ktenkely http://feedly.com/e/E38afw4z

Ron King ‏@mthman

MT@rggillespie: 10 Reasons to Greet Students at Door http://goo.gl/QE6gZy  #midleved #mschat @MSMatters

#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.  And as Troy says, “The Twitter never stops!”

 

Strategies:

Inventing the Presidency

When the founders of the United States gathered to create the foundations of the country, they decided on three branches of government, with a president central to the executive branch. Kenneth C. Davis explains why this decision was not necessarily inevitable and what variables were up for debate.

http://ed.ted.com/lessons/inventing-the-american-presidency-kenneth-c-davis

Resources:

How to Add 450+ Fonts to Your Google Documents & Slides

To access and add custom fonts to your Google Drive Documents and Slides select “add fonts” from the bottom of the font selection menu that you’ve always used in Google Drive. Selecting “add fonts” will open up a new menu in which you can mix and match fonts to your heart’s content.

http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2014/02/how-to-add-450-fonts-to-your-google.html#.UwjH2fRdW8t

 

Google Newspaper Archives

Newspapers from around the world. These vary greatly in time periods as well. Lots of applications.

  • Have students research a specific time period and compare how different newspapers reported the events.

  • Have students view a single newspaper over time to see the changes in attitudes, reporting, etc.

  • Have students compare the advertisements in a variety of newspapers.

  • Have students use the newspapers accounts to develop a setting for a story.

http://news.google.com/newspapers

Video Conference Programs

This database, sponsored by Polycom, Inc., contains programs from content providers such as zoos and museums that offer ISDN or IP based videoconferencing. The Berrien County ISD has researched this information to the best of our knowledge. If you have any corrections or updates, please email them to twice.cc.board@gmail.com.

http://projects.twice.cc/vcpd/searchprogram.php

Web Spotlight:

 

Dating Rules

http://twentytwowords.com/30-rules-for-boyfriends-from-2-little-girls-with-very-high-standards/

 

Connected Educator 2014 Conference

Random Thoughts . . .

Blended Learning. Class I’m taking as a student.

 

MSM 267: Make Shawn feel good, Dave Does the Climate Change …

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

Jokes You Can Use:

 

Did you hear about the farmer who wanted to buy a thousand hens, but didn’t have the money…so…He put them on a layaway plan!

 

A guy was standing at the bottom of the stairs listening to the bells. He decided to go up and meet the ringer. So he raced up the many stairs until finally he was standing not three meters away from quazimodo.

In a soft voice he said “can I ring the bells” as the hunchback pushed his head against the bell

“No training is needed or you will be in danger”

The guy replied to this “C’mon please I’ll be careful”

“Be very careful”

Minutes went by and he pushed the bell with the might of his hands

“Can I ring the bell with my head? “The guy asked

“NO, TRAINING”

“I can do it”

“Ok don’t say you haven’t been warned”

Alas on his first heave he lost balance and when the bell swung back it hit him out the window he fell down the tower to his death. Quazimodo raced down the stairs with all possible speed, when he was at the bottom a small crowd had gathered with a policeman examining the body

He yelled to the crowd

“Does anybody know this man?”

Quazimodo then answered

“No, but his face rings a bell”

Q: Why did the haunted house not like rain?

A: Because it dampened his spirits.

 

Two strands of DNA were walking down the street. One says to the other, “Do these genes make me look fat?

 

Q: What kind of dance does a butcher go to?

A: A meatball

 

Two hydrogen atoms walk into a bar. One says, “I’ve lost my electron.” The other says, “Are you sure?” The first replies, “Yes, I’m positive…”

Q. What did one strawberry say to the other?

A. “If you weren’t so fresh last night, we wouldn’t be in this jam together!”

A cowboy rides into town on Friday, stays three days and leaves on Friday how does he do it?

 

Eileen Award:

  • iTunes:  Sghtblindr

  • Twitter:  Marie Booz

  • Google+: Michael Dettloff

  • Facebook:

 

Advisory:

Different Students

http://www.coolcatteacher.com/videos/autistic-boy-speaks/

Rewritten Book titles

http://www.themillions.com/2014/01/read-me-please-book-titles-rewritten-to-get-more-clicks.html

Middle School Science Minute

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

 

MIDDLE SCHOOL SCIENCE MINUTE-SPECIAL EDUCATION

I was recently reading the December, 2013 issue of Science Scope, a magazine written for Middle School Science Teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.  In this issue, I came upon an article entitled, “Special Education in the Science Classroom: A Co-Teaching Scenario” written by Lisa Dieker, Lisa Finnegan, Kelly Grillo, and Dennis Garland.

In the article they cite five areas that science teachers should consider regarding building a positive, inclusive classroom setting.

1. Both teachers must be involved

2. Reading and vocabulary instruction is critical

3. Teaching students how to write in the science curriculum

4. Using effective grouping and teaching social skills directly

5. Assess learning constantly

http://k12science.net/Podcast/Podcast/Entries/2014/1/3_Middle_School_Science_Minute-Special_Education.html

From the Twitterverse:

* leonie haimson ‏@leoniehaimson

Surprise! MOOC inventor Thrun figures out teaching/learning requires feedback fr/real person! #geniusaward? http://recode.net/2014/01/25/two-years-in-ed-tech-startups-aim-to-boost-retention/ …

* leonie haimson ‏@leoniehaimson

B/c MOOCs don’t work! @anniemurphypaul: Udacity’s new business model: Give free content but charge $150/m tutoring:  http://anniemurphypaul.com/2014/01/will-p

* Smart Apple ‏@Smart_Apple_

10 Reasons Nonreaders Don’t Read and How to Change Their Minds. Excellent article! http://pinterest.com/pin/481111172664686722/ …

* BBC Education ‏@bbceducation

Gove wants tests for four-year-olds http://bbc.in/1i8E2Ta

* NAMLE ‏@NAMLE_MS

What are your thoughts about writing out lesson plans? #NAMLE_MS #midleved #nebedu https://www.teachingchannel.org/blog/2014/01/28/power-of-planning/ …

* U.S. News Education ‏@USNewsEducation

Indiana’s Senate will consider a bill to repeal Common Core and develop the state’s own standards, via @usnews. http://ow.ly/tapSS

* Bill Ferriter ‏@plugusin

A new NC law requires elem. students to take 36 mini-tests to prepare for end of grade tests: http://ow.ly/t6tsJ  #notkidding #edpolicy

* Dan@designthinking ‏@dandesignthink

@lynhilt the original design : ) pic.twitter.com/fhFNYS406p

* David Bydlowski ‏@k12science

MEECS #ClimateChange Workshop February 28, at the Detroit Zoo. @MIMathScience http://www.solutionwhere.com/misdtraining/cw/showcourse.asp?4497 …

Much of North Dakota’s Natural Gas is Going Up in Flames http://www.npr.org/2014/01/30/265396179/much-of-north-dakota-s-natural-gas-is-going-up-in-flames?utm_medium=Email&utm_source=DailyDigest&utm_campaign=20140130 …

Retweeted by Bill Ivey Scott MacClintic ‏@Smacclintic

in case you missed it….later start time leads to improved sleep and functioning in teens http://www.sott.net/article/272793-Later-school-start-times-improve-sleep-and-daytime-functioning-in-adolescents … #caisct #TABSchat

* Diane Ravitch ‏@DianeRavitch 4h

Data Mania: What Gets Measured? http://wp.me/p2odLa-6SM

#mschat every Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time.

 

Strategies:

 

Meryl Streep provides examples of Voice

From the Ellen Show

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A8TSBw5JiWE#t=159

 

Resources:

 

Getty Publications Virtual Library

Free digital backlist titles from the Getty Publications Archives

http://www.getty.edu/publications/virtuallibrary/index.html

 

MetPublications

MetPublications is a portal to the Met’s comprehensive publishing program with 1,300 titles, including books, online publications, and Bulletins and Journals from the last five decades.

MetPublications includes a description and table of contents for most titles, as well as information about the authors, reviews, awards, and links to related Met titles by author and by theme. Current book titles that are in-print may be previewed and fully searched online, with a link to purchase the book. The full contents of almost all other book titles may be read online, searched, or downloaded as a PDF. Many of these out-of-print books will be available for purchase, when rights permit, through print-on-demand capabilities in association with Yale University Press. For the Met’s Bulletin, all but the most recent issue can be downloaded as a PDF. For the Met’sJournal, all individual articles and entire volumes can be downloaded as a PDF.

Readers may also locate works of art from the Met’s collections that are included in every book and periodical title and access the most recent information about these works in Collections.

Readers are also directed to every title located in library catalogues on WATSONLINE and WorldCat.

Please check back frequently for updates and new book titles.

MetPublications is made possible by Hunt & Betsy Lawrence.

 

http://www.metmuseum.org/research/metpublications

Full text online: (395 current choices):

http://www.metmuseum.org/research/metpublications/titles-with-full-text-online?searchtype=F

 

Create Infographics

Nice rundown on different tools to create infographics.

http://www.razorsocial.com/make-your-own-infographic/

 

Down for everyone or just me?

Neat site that will let you know if a web site is down, or just down for you. This can help troubleshoot if a firewall is blocking a site or school filters, etc.

http://www.downforeveryoneorjustme.com/#

Online Timer/Clock

Free, easy to use.

http://www.teachit.co.uk/custom_content/Timer/clock3.html

Web Spotlight:

 

3 Things We Should Stop Doing in Professional Development

by George Couros • January 30, 2014

1.  Creating a detailed agenda

2.  Scheduling back-to-back-to-back-to-back learning

3. Thinking that “collaboration” with others is the only way we learn

 

http://connectedprincipals.com/archives/10156

 

Remind 101 Adds Support for Sending Text Messages to Subgroups

Remind 101 has been busy to start 2014. Earlier this month they introduced the option to download your message history as a PDF. This week they introduced the option to send text messages to subgroups of students and parents.

http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2014/01/remind-101-adds-support-for-sending.html#.Uu55BnddW8s

 

Map: ‘How Much Snow It Typically Takes to Cancel School in the U.S.’

Trubetskoy includes the following clarifications:

  1. In much of the Midwest and Great Plains, school closing often depends more on wind chill and temperature than on snow accumulation (“cold days”). Thus, this map may be misleading in those areas.

  2. Many jurisdictions in California and other western states have significantly varied snowfall, depending on elevation. This makes it difficult to find an “average” number, or often makes it misleading.

  3. Urban areas like Chicago and New York have more resources to clear snow and often need more to cause closings.

  4. Clarification: The lightest green says “any snow” but also includes merely the prediction of snow.

  5. Clarification II: This is snow accumulation over 24 hours/overnight.

  6. Hawaii does get snow! Just… not where people live.

 

http://m.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2014/01/map-how-much-snow-it-typically-takes-to-cancel-school-in-the-us/283470/

Connected Educator 2014 Conference

The Educator’s Un/Conference . . . and 4 Scechs to boot!