MSM 219: Rat holes about electronics.

Presented in collaboration with the Association for Middle Level Education.

Jokes You Can Use:

A biology teacher wished to demonstrate to his students the harmful effects of alcohol on living organisms. For his experiment, he showed them a beaker with pond water in which there was a thriving civilization of worms. When he added some alcohol into the beaker the worms doubled-up and died.
“Now,” he said,” what do you learn from this?”
An eager student gave his answer.
“Well the answer is obvious,” he said ” if you drink alcohol, you’ll never have worms.”

The following 15 Police Comments were taken from actual police car videos around the country.

#15 “Relax, the handcuffs are tight because they’re new. They’ll stretch after you wear them a while.”

# 14 “If you take your hands off the car, I’ll make your birth certificate a worthless document.”

#13 “If you run, you’ll only go to jail tired.”

#12 “Can you run faster than 1200 feet per second? Because that’s the
speed of the bullet that’ll be chasing you.”

#11 “You don’t know how fast you were going? I guess that means I can
write anything I want to on the ticket, huh?”

#10 “Yes, sir, you can talk to the shift supervisor, but I don’t think
it will help. Oh, did I mention that I’m the shift supervisor?”

#9 “Warning! You want a warning? O. K., I’m warning you not to do that
again or I’ll give you another ticket.”

#8 “The answer to this last question will determine whether you are
drunk or not. Was Mickey Mouse a cat or a dog?”

#7 “Fair? You want me to be fair? Listen, fair is a place where you go
to ride on rides, eat cotton candy, and corn dogs and step in monkey poo. ”

#6 “Yeah, we have a quota. Two more tickets and my wife gets a toaster oven.”

#5 “In God we trust, all others we run through NCIC.”

#4 “How big were those ‘Just two beers’ you say you had?”

#3 “No sir, we don’t have quotas anymore. We used to, but now we’re allowed to write as many tickets as we can.”

#2 “I’m glad to hear that chief (of Police) Hawker is a personal friend
of yours. So you know someone who can post your bail.”

#1 “You didn’t think we give pretty women tickets? You’re right, we don’t. Sign here.”

Eileen Award:

 

  • Scoopit:
  • Twitter:   Aaron Morris, Chris Billings
  • Facebook:
  • Google+:  Lori Anderson,
  • iTunes:
  • eMail:

Advisory:

Old Man Toilet Paper Roll Faces

http://twentytwowords.com/2012/09/10/17-bizarre-ugly-and-awesome-old-man-faces-made-out-of-toilet-paper-rolls/

Middle School Science Minute

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

RABBITS IN THE CLASSROOM

This podcast is based on the Question of the Month Column, from the Scope on Safety Section of the September 2012 issue of Science Scope magazine, a magazine for middle school science teachers, published by the National Science Teachers Association.  It was written by Ken Roy.

This month’s question deals with letting rabbits run free in the middle school classroom.  Ken shares advice from the Humane Society of the United States and the American Association for Laboratory Animal Sciences.

From the Twitterverse:

* Jason Eifling ‏@jeifling
Clifford has it? RT@Ron_Peck: 65 Ways to Say “Good for You” http://su.pr/1MOXas #edchat #elemchat #mschat #midleved
 Teachers.Net ‏@TeachersNet
When Students ask, “Why Do We Need to Know This??” http://teachers.net/gazette/wordpress/editor/why-do-we-need-to-know-this/ @edchat #mschat
* Beth Lisowski ‏@MrsLTech
Cutting class begins in middle school, survey finds http://sbne.ws/r/boTN #mschat #edchat
* Maria Angala ‏@TeacherSol
New smartphone app tackles bullying http://abclocal.go.com/kfsn/story?section=news/education&id=8804202 #bullying #mschat #edchat
* Eye On Education ‏@eyeoneducation
16 Websites Every Teacher Should Know About @medkh9 #edchat #teaching #ntchat #edstuff
* Dr. Joan McGettigan ‏@drmcgettigan
How to Build Happy Brains http://zite.to/PjC04R  #midleved #isedchat #cpchat
* Richard Byrne ‏@rmbyrne
MapFab is a Fabulous Map Creation Tool http://ow.ly/dFuF8
 Distance Education ‏@onlinecourse
How to Transition Your Traditional Classroom to the Web – http://dedu.org/bAiORu
* TeacherVision ‏@TeacherVision
Sixth Grade Open House Ideas for Teachers: http://su.pr/5ahTOB  #midleved
* Terie Engelbrecht ‏@mrsebiology
Formative Assessment Strategies http://goo.gl/Dx2mJ  #edchat #midleved #elemchat
Image will appear as a link Engaging Educators ‏@engaginged
RT @principaldiff: CCSS in the Middle Grades Classroom http://sco.lt/8NClBR  #ccchat #commoncore #mschat
* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom
5 Effective Reading Instruction Strategies For Any Grade http://zite.to/NPjxQY  via @zite #fhuedu508
* Erin Klein ‏@KleinErin
Student Introduction to ClassDojo (classroom management tool): http://goo.gl/Wemh1  via @youtube cc@ClassDojo

Teacher review of ClassDogo:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qh2nv6UXmec&feature=related

* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom
4 Ways We Can Connect With Parents #fhuedu610 #fhuedu642 http://tinyurl.com/9ms3p5t
* Monte Tatom ‏@drmmtatom
Getting to Know Your Students Through Poetry | Edutopia #fhuedu508 http://tinyurl.com/8v4fh77

Resources:

Free Electoral Maps

http://www.c-spanclassroom.org/Special-Offers.aspx

2012 Electoral Voting Map:  Frequent updates.
http://electoral-vote.com/

YouTube Launches “Star Search” for Teachers

Starting today and running through October 1st, YouTube is  looking to identify tenYouTube EDU Gurus.
YouTube has partnered with Khan Academy to run this contest. The ten chosen finalists will receive $1,000 toward for video production equipment, attend a three day workshop with Khan academy staff, and have work featured on YouTube EDU. To enter you have to submit video samples and answer two short essay questions (responses limited to 200 words).
http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2012/09/youtube-launches-star-search-for.html

MemStash

Stop forgetting. Start Remembering.

  • Simply highlight any text you want to remember, and click the bookmark “Stash It”.
  • We’ll email or SMS you 10 minutes, 24 hours, and 7 days later to make sure you memorize it.
  • Optional: Push your notes automatically to your Evernote account.

Save everything. Remember everything.

http://memstash.co/

Vintage Book Posters

http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/09/11/vintage-ads-for-libraries-and-reading/

Web Spotlight:

David Byrne on How Music and Creativity Work

Among the book’s most fascinating insights is a counterintuitive model for howcreativity works, from a chapter titled “Creation in Reverse” — a kind of reformulation of McLuhan’s famous aphorism “the medium is the message”into a somewhat less pedantic but no less purposeful “the medium shapes the message”:
http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/09/13/david-byrne-how-music-works/

Banned from school:

1. Pogs

2. Dictionaries

3. A Hat With Toy Soldiers on It

4. Silly Bandz, Slap Bracelets, and Cancer Awareness Bands

5. Air Jordans

6. “Mom” and “Dad”

7. Peanuts

8. Jamie Oliver

9. Vegetables

10. Skinny Jeans

http://www.worldsstrangest.com/mental-floss/10-things-public-schools-have-banned/

 

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:

 

 

 

AMLE Affiliate Conferences:

 

 

 

Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

Classroom 2.0’s Ning Blog: Archived content is available.

MSM 210: What’s Wrong With The Teenage Mind . . . ?

 AMLE Feature:

No specific AMLE Feature this week. Look for more to come.

Jokes You Can Use:

Boss: I’ve noticed that you go out and get your haircut during work hours.

Employee: It grows during work hours.

Boss: It also grows during non-work hours.

Employee: I didn’t get it all cut.

 

What did the leftovers say when put into the freezer?

Foiled again.

 

What’s another name for a nursery?

Bawlroom.

 

Eileen Award:

 

  • Annie Murphy Paul
  • Alise Herrara
  • Joe Webb
  • Sara Davenport Sisk

Advisory:

World of Coins

http://twentytwowords.com/2012/06/09/a-world-map-made-of-the-worlds-coins/

 

Food Tweeting Around the World

http://foodmood.in/

Challenges

http://twentytwowords.com/2012/06/11/10-bets-youll-always-win-unless-the-other-bettor-has-seen-this-video-too/

 

Fun with Visual Charades and Narrated Slideshows Based on Fairy Tales

In their recently published article, “Five-Picture Charades: A Flexible Model for Technology Training in Digital Media Tools and Teaching Strategies,” in the journal Contemporary Issues in Technology and Teacher Education, Curby Alexander and Tom Hammond present a persuasive case for using “visual charades” as a learning activity with students involving media and creativity.

http://www.speedofcreativity.org/2012/06/06/fun-with-visual-charades-and-narrated-slideshows-based-on-fairy-tales-edtech4u/

Middle School Science Minute  

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

 

In the Spring Edition of “Green Teacher,” Emily Harris wrote an article entitled, “Fostering Students’ Water Wisdom.”  The purpose of the article was to bring water awareness into the classroom and contribute to a better global future.

 

She says that teachers play a vital role in helping foster an early appreciation of this most precious resource.  For this reason, WaterCan developed curriculum resources in both English and French which can be freely downloaded from the “Water Wisdom Portal” at:

http://www.watercan.com/students

 

She then goes on to share one of her favorite lesson plans for 7th – 8th grade students, entitled “Water Around the World.”  This class project introduces students to water usage, and to data gathering and analysis.

 

Dave’s Water Cycle Song:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yw275056JtA

 

Hey Dave, what do you think about this?  

“Voyager 1 Spaceship to Break Out of Solar System, Into Outer Spacehttp://abcn.ws/N0eYA8”  

From the Twitterverse:

Stephanie Sandifer @ssandifer

#ISTE12 Daily #edtech is out! http://bit.ly/irlKEQ ▸ Top stories today via
@MfgStories @TinaKotlarek

Terie Engelbrecht @mrsebiology

CoboCards: http://goo.gl/izGkb Free online flashcard making site #edchat #edtech
#elearning

Jerry Blumengarten @cybraryman1

My Parent Involvement – Engagement sites: http://tinyurl.com/48yvpey #Satchat

Terie Engelbrecht @mrsebiology

Infogram: http://goo.gl/ZO4xJ Web tool to create infographics #edchat #edtech
#elearning

Diane Ravitch @DianeRavitch

Why do some school districts have to be reformed and saved again and again?
http://dianeravitch.net/2012/05/18/289/

tomshepp @tomshepp

21 Map Creation Tools for Students and Teachers http://flpbd.it/P5apj #edtech
#elearning

Mental Floss @mental_floss

25 Brand Names People Incorrectly Use as Generic Terms — http://goo.gl/edBLf

CharlieTravers 4‏@TimeTravel

Great free education resources on #Myresourcecloud http://www.myresourcecloud.net
#edtools #edchat #elt #esl #homeschool

ninok eyiz @eyizibra

“@DianeRavitch: Student test scores are not a measure of great teachers. Unless you are
a Pearson stockholder. #greatteachers” #fb

Lucy Gray @elemenous

Checking out “For ISTE Attendees: Global Education Summit Update” http://ning.it/Nvex3b
#globaled12

Brenda Dyck @bdyck

Very worth reading: A Memorial Day Lesson in Citizenship
http://speedchange.blogspot.ca/2012/05/memorial-day-lesson-in-citizenship.html?m=1
@drcarlapeck

Ian Jukes @ijukes

Job Outlook and Starting Salaries for New Grads http://bit.ly/NuYSAU

ABC News @ABC

13 Hidden Airline Rules http://abcn.ws/MEMgAH

Smhearty @Smhearty

Report: Apple Prepping Separate Podcast App — AppAdvice http://zite.to/KAmdR0 via
@zite

Same3Guys.com @Same3Guys

Apple launching Podcast app with iOS 6 http://ow.ly/bCBaQ Is this good or bad for podcast
creators?

 News:

Thompson: The Humiliation Of High-Stakes Standardized Testing

Virtually all of my students volunteered accounts of the testing indignities that have been dumped on them, but I am particularly haunted by Jeremy, as I will call him.  This brilliant Native American gave into depression when stakes were attached to weekly benchmark assessments, meaning that half of class time was lost to testing.  In my non-tested class, Jeremy would periodically wave a standardized math or English test that he was supposed to have turned in for a grade.  “This is what they think of us,” he would moan. Like nearly 40%  of that semester’s sophomores, Jeremy dropped out was driven out by the test prep which drove out teaching and learning.

http://scholasticadministrator.typepad.com/thisweekineducation/2012/06/thompson-pearson-anti-testing-rally-illuminates-the-essence-of-bubble-in-testing.html 

Future Shock

I’ll have more to say on the iPad later but one can’t help being struck by the volume and vehemence of apparently technologically sophisticated people inveighing against the iPad.

http://speirs.org/blog/2010/1/29/future-shock.html

 

Computers Grade Essays Fast … But Not Always Well

by MOLLY BLOOM

 

Imagine a school where every child gets instant, personalized writing help for a fraction of the cost of hiring a human teacher — and where a computer, not a person, grades a student’s essays.

Perelman says any student who can read can be taught to score very highly on a machine-graded test.

Shermis ran the Gettysburg Address through one of the earlier-generation computer grading programs, one usually used to evaluate the writing abilities of college freshmen.

Suffice it to say, Abe did not ace the test.

The computer graders he uses give students instant feedback on every draft. Pence says there’s no way he and his red teacher’s pen could do that. And quicker responses, he says, lead to more writing.

“The quantity drives the quality up,” Pence says. “It’s kind of the old bicycle thing — the best way to learn how to ride a bicycle is to ride a bicycle. And the best way to get better at writing is to write and receive consistent, timely feedback.”

http://www.npr.org/2012/06/07/154452475/computers-grade-essays-fast-but-not-always-well?ft=1&f=1019

 

What’s Wrong With the Teenage Mind?

 

“What was he thinking?” It’s the familiar cry of bewildered parents trying to understand why their teenagers act the way they do.

How does the boy who can thoughtfully explain the reasons never to drink and drive end up in a drunken crash? Why does the girl who knows all about birth control find herself pregnant by a boy she doesn’t even like? What happened to the gifted, imaginative child who excelled through high school but then dropped out of college, drifted from job to job and now lives in his parents’ basement?

What happens when children reach puberty earlier and adulthood later? The answer is: a good deal of teenage weirdness.

Becoming an adult means leaving the world of your parents and starting to make your way toward the future that you will share with your peers. Puberty not only turns on the motivational and emotional system with new force, it also turns it away from the family and toward the world of equals.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203806504577181351486558984.html

 

Tools:

Quipper

Quipper produces entertaining and educational quiz apps. We also allows users to create their own apps! Also available on iOS and Android.

http://www.quipper.com/ 

 

Go Class

GoClass is a teaching application for tablet devices that redefines the boundaries of computing in the classroom. Connect with your students like never before, customize and fine-tune your lesson plans on the fly, engage students in new ways and continuously evaluate their understanding while you are in class.

By enriching existing methodologies – rather than replacing them – GoClass empowers you to build on your teaching experience while engaging students in a 21st century learning environment.

*NOTE: They have rights to all materials. 

http://www.goclass.com/guestapp/index.aspx 

Resources:

50 Summer Learning Activities for Kids

Common Sense Media has produced a 16 page guide to summer learning activities.

http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2012/06/50-summer-learning-activities-for-kids.html

 

 Summer Reading List

Summer, with its steady supply of barbecues, picnics, parties, and other heavy doses of sociality, makes the need for a well-timed antidote of solitude more urgent than any other season, and what better solitary escape than a good book? It’s time for the annual Brain Pickings summer reading list for cognitive sunshine. Gathered here, in no particular order, are 10 recent and forthcoming books to infuse your season’s well-measured you-moments with a wealth of cross-disciplinary stimulation.

http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/06/11/summer-reading-list-2012/

Web Spotlight:

TIMMS/PISA vs. Entrepreneural Spirit:  

http://zhaolearning.com/2012/06/06/test-scores-vs-entrepreneurship-pisa-timss-and-confidence/

 

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:

 

 

 

AMLE Affiliate Conferences:

 

 

 

Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

MSM 207 Hanging Out

Jokes You Can Use:

All visual jokes today.  (Go see the Google+ recording.)  

On Our Mind:

Kathy Hunt-Ullock 1951-2012
AMLE Remarks:  “Kathy Hunt-Ullock passed away on Saturday, May 19, surrounded by family and friends. She was a well-loved member of the AMLE family, developing friendships along the way as she espoused doing what’s best for middle grades students. She will be greatly missed by all of us in the middle level education community.”
Kathy’s Website

Virtual Presentations:

MiddleTalk:  9 Dangerous Things & Book Club this summer

9 Dangerous things you were taught in school:
1. The people in charge have all the answers.
That’s why they are so wealthy and happy and healthy and powerful—ask any teacher.

2. Learning ends when you leave the classroom.
Your fort building, trail forging, frog catching, friend making, game playing, and drawing won’t earn you any extra credit. Just watch TV.

3. The best and brightest follow the rules.
You will be rewarded for your subordination, just not as much as your superiors, who, of course, have their own rules.

4. What the books say is always true.
Now go read your “world is flat” chapter. There will be a test.

5. There is a very clear, single path to success.
It’s called college. Everyone can join the top 1% if they do well enough in school and ignore the basic math problem inherent in that idea.

6. Behaving yourself is as important as getting good marks.
Whistle-blowing, questioning the status quo, and thinking your own thoughts are no-nos. Be quiet and get back on the assembly line.

7. Standardized tests measure your value.
By value, I’m talking about future earning potential, not anything else that might have other kinds of value.

8. Days off are always more fun than sitting in the classroom.
You are trained from a young age to base your life around dribbles of allocated vacation. Be grateful for them.

9. The purpose of your education is your future career.
And so you will be taught to be a good worker. You have to teach yourself how to be something more.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/jessicahagy/2012/05/02/nine-dangerous-things-you-were-taught-in-school/2/

 

Eileen Award:

  • Twitter People:  Gary Johnston, Jeff Trudell, Aric Haley, Michael Jones, Connect Michigan (Michigan Public Service Commission), and @HeyLeeAnn!

Advisory:

New Computer Algorithm Knows Your Phony Smile [VIDEO]

Can you tell whether a smile is real or not?
http://mashable.com/2012/05/25/algorithm-smile/

Middle School Science Minute

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

In the April/May, 2012 issue of Science Scope, a publication of the National Science Teachers Association, two articles dealt with the topic of misconceptions

In the first article, “Misunderstanding Misconceptions,” Page Keeley defines the term misconceptions.  In the second article, “Investigating Students’ Ideas About the Flow of Matter and Energy in Living Systems,” authors Melanie Taylor, Kimberly Cohen, R. Keith Esch, and P. Sean Smith give examples of student misconceptions and provide the corresponding correct ideas.  The topic of this podcast mainly focuses in on the process of photosynthesis.

 

From the Twitterverse:

* Ron Peck ‏@Ron_Peck
Pls help @cybraryman1 get to #ISTE12 by assisting the #istenewbie12 project -> #cpchat #edchat #edcampphillyYay! We are at 70% of our #ISTE12 Newbie Project goal and payday is near. Plz help @cybraryman1 get to ISTE. #edchat
iPad Plaza ‏@iPadPlaza
Apple iPad May Be Getting Microsoft Office Soon http://sns.mx/gnlDy1 #iPad
* Jeff Johnson ‏@ipadeducators
iBooks & grade7: http://ow.ly/bah12 #ipaded #ipadedchat #abed
* Eric Sheninger ‏@NMHS_Principal
Think-Pair-Share Variations by @kathyperret http://buff.ly/KGb0t1
* Jeff Russell ‏@jrussellteacher
A Standardized Composition Test http://pulse.me/s/9EpL9
* ABC News ‏@ABC
10 Cheap Gizmos and Ordinary Items Every Traveler Needs http://abcn.ws/JBuPX7
* pammoran ‏@pammoran
Why one shot “national” tests of any kind fail as authentic assessments of and for learning http://j.mp/JBjLV3 shared by @saorog
* Carol A. Josel ‏@schoolwise
‘Facebook parenting’ is destroying our children’s privacy http://www.cnn.com/2012/05/25/opinion/sultan-miller-facebook-parenting/index.html #cnn
* Maggie Cary ‏@maggiecary
How to Handle the Class Clown:
* World and Everything ‏@TWERadio
A Memorial Day edition of ‘The World & Everything in It’: Guarding the Tomb of the Unknowns, 150th anniv. of Taps, more http://ow.ly/basz5
* LeeAnn ‏@HeyLeeAnn
Grockit Launches Learnist, a Pinterest for Education http://zite.to/LtePR0 via @zite
 Larry Ferlazzo ‏@Larryferlazzo
How NOT To Prepare A Student For A Standardized Test“Parents Describe Why and How They are Engaged in Their Children’s Learning”
* Bill Ivey ‏@bivey
MT @plugusin: from @teachingquality: The Sad Irony Behind Teacher Leadership – http://ow.ly/b0MrM <Is it an irony deliberately created?
* Steven W. Anderson ‏@web20classroom
From @timbuckteeth-5 Tools For The Global Educator:
*Neil deGrasse Tyson‏@neiltysonKnowing how to think empowers you far beyond those who know only what to think.

 

 

News:

Educators Use Mobile Devices More Than General Public

Principals and administrators are also more likely to use those devices than the teachers and librarians they oversee, the report says, though teachers are also more frequent users of those tools than the general public.
“For many of us, we cannot truly appreciate the value of a new technology tool until we have realized a direct benefit from its use in our personal or work life,” said Julie Evans, the president and CEO of Project Tomorrow, the Irvine, Calif.-based nonprofit education research organization that conducts the Speak Up survey, in a statement. “That’s the same for educators.”
Administrators who used smartphones or tablets were found roughly twice as likely to consider a bring-your-own-technology approach for students at their campuses, pilot such a policy, or work in a school or district that provided students mobile devices for educational use.
http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/DigitalEducation/2012/05/educators_more_likely_to_use_m.html

How summer increases the achievement gap

Much of the discussion about the wide discrepancies in educational achievement between poor and affluent students is focused on what schools and teachers should be doing to close it. But researchers are gathering more evidence suggesting that summer—when students are typically out of contact with their schools and teachers—is one of the root causes of the gap.
http://hechingered.org/content/how-summer-increases-the-achievement-gap_5072/

 

Our Principal’s Reaction To Being Included In The Wash. Post’s List Of Top High Schools

Two years ago we were on a list of schools described as ‘dropout factories.’ And now, two years later, without doing anything substantially different, we are listed among the top nine percent of high schools in the country only because a different metric was used.  This seems to be a blatant example of how these types of quantitative evaluations lack substance.”)
http://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2012/05/20/our-principals-reaction-to-being-included-in-the-wash-posts-list-of-top-high-schools/

 

Standards would immerse Arizona students in science

Arizona is one of 26 states leading a nationwide initiative aimed at improving science education by requiring a deeper understanding of key concepts and incorporating science and technology in all subjects.
The new standards are based on a framework developed by the National Research Council with input from the National Science Teachers Association and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
The science standards are separate from but align with the new Common Core State Standards that Arizona will implement in English and math.
Under Next Generation, students will be expected to tackle actual problems — for example, a jammed-up school-bus lane — using engineering concepts.
Adding more hands-on projects will be a big change for teachers
Kaufmann said the next step will be to create a national science exam, which is probably at least five years away.
“I have to tell you, until there is a test that counts, science is still is not going to be as important, especially in the elementary grades.”
http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/2012/05/17/20120517arizona-science-standards.html

Student Principals (Contributed by Ron King)


How would students run the show if given a chance?
http://groups.diigo.com/site/redirect_item/student-principals-5342100

Resources:

Mr. Rogers talks sarcastically about children and consumerism

Apparently, kids and consumerism is nothing new.
http://twentytwowords.com/2012/05/25/mr-rogers-talks-sarcastically-about-children-and-consumerism/

Web Citizenship and Media Literacy Curriculum (Contributed by Ron King via Diigo)
http://groups.diigo.com/site/redirect_item/digital-literacy-and-citizenship-curriculum-for-grades-6-8-5342096

Play me a story?

Playfic, the online community that lets you write, remix, share, and play interactive text-based games with the world.
There is definitely a learning curve with the site.
http://playfic.com/

Burn Note

Burn Note lets you send messages that are deleted after they are read.
You can use Burn Note to send a password or have an off-the-record conversation with a friend.
https://burnnote.com/#/

Readlists

What’s a Readlist? A group of web pages—articles, recipes, course materials, anything—bundled into an e-book you can send to your Kindle, iPad, or iPhone.
http://readlists.com/

Easy Web Calendar

Localendar is great for Churches, Schools, Teams, Non-Profits, Families, and Webmasters that need a free web calendar
http://www.localendar.com/elsie

Web Spotlight:

Honesty In The Computer Lab

The reason I’m writing about this today is because of a guest column written by researcher Dan Ariely in The Wall Street Journal today — Why We Lie. It’s an excerpt from his newest book.
I’ve found that when I remember to apply my own version of that method — before we head to the lab, I take less than a minute to remind people why it’s important to listen to the English audio for their own development and because I want to be able to trust them — it’s hardly ever an issue. After that 40 second “spiel,” I also ask people to raise their hands if they commit to staying only on the assigned sites.
http://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2012/05/25/honesty-in-the-computer-lab/

 

Knowledge Graph

The Knowledge Graph enables you to search for things, people or places that Google knows about—landmarks, celebrities, cities, sports teams, buildings, geographical features, movies, celestial objects, works of art and more—and instantly get information that’s relevant to your query. This is a critical first step towards building the next generation of search, which taps into the collective intelligence of the web and understands the world a bit more like people do.
http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2012/05/introducing-knowledge-graph-things-not.html

Strategies:

Project-Based Learning: Success Start to Finish

http://www.edutopia.org/stw-project-based-learning-best-practices

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:


AMLE Affiliate Conferences:


Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

View the video of the recording here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XtMMxnQFY1c

MSM 206: Dry Hands, Warm Heart?

Jokes You Can Use:

Auntie Matilta won’t kiss you with that dirty face!

That’s what I’m hoping.

 

Girl: I need a new dress

Dad: Why?

Girl: The girl in my class has the same one.

Dad: Why does that mean you need a new dress.

Girl: It’s cheaper than switching colleges.

 

On Our Mind:

ISTE Noob-ness!

Wrapping up the year yet?

 

Eileen Award:

  • Jeffry Prickett – Facebook & Twitter
  • Pamela Schneider – Facebook

 

Advisory:

How to Use a Paper Towel:

http://www.ted.com/talks/joe_smith_how_to_use_a_paper_towel.html

and

http://creativewealthprinciples.com/archives/285

 

The Other Side of the World

http://www.antipodemap.com/

 

Olympic Torch Relay Route

http://www.london2012.com/torch-relay/route/ 

Middle School Science Minute

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

 

Drying Hands in the Lab.  

In the March, 2012 issue of Science Scope, a publication of the National Science Teachers Association, the safety question of the month was “Are there any alternatives to paper towels for students to wash and dry their hands with at the end of lab?”

 

Ken Roy, director of environmental health and safety for Glastonbury Public Schools in Glastonbury, Connecticut provides a great answer.  If you would like more information on science safety, you can purchase Ken’s book, “The NSTA Ready-Reference Guide to Safer Science,” through the NSTA bookstore.  Please visit:

http://www.nsta.org/store/product_detail.aspx?id=10.2505/9781933531281

 

 

From the Twitterverse:

Diane Ravitch @DianeRavitch

If you want your eyes to bulge at the money lavished on charters, go to
http://kenmlibby.com.

Clay Shirky @cshirky

Kickstart Roominate: Dollhouse kit for girls that includes circuit components:
lights, fans, buzzers, etc. http://kck.st/KtNGho

Mental Floss @mental_floss

In 2010, 3.9 million 911 calls in New York City were the result of inadvertent
cellphone use. That’s a lot of butt dials. (via @TheWeek)

Miguel Guhlin @mguhlin

90+ iPad and iPod Apps For High School | MyWeb4Ed http://dlvr.it/1bCgdy
iPad, apps key to unlocking communication barrier with autistic students | Fox
News http://dlvr.it/1bCfTJ

Ron Peck @Ron_Peck

Pls help @cybraryman1 get to #ISTE12 by assisting the #istenewbie12 project
-> http://bit.ly/fWRqnh #cpchat #edchat #edcampphilly

Jennifer Dorman @cliotech

DropKey app encrypts Mac files, free through Sunday http://pulse.me/s/9nM8p

Steve 2‏@learn2

Michigan Gov. Signs Cyber School Measure Into Law

Distance Education @onlinecourse

Are You At Risk of Getting Fired? Seven Signs Your Job is On the Line –
http://dedu.org/aJAx06

Ian Jukes @ijukes

Homeschool Is the Future http://bit.ly/JpF67N

Angela Maiers @AngelaMaiers

Here’s Nine Things Successful People Do Differently http://goo.gl/ya77b via
@ScottScanlon

Scott McLeod @mcleod

New bookmark: Videogames can encourage good behavior in youth http://bit.ly/KiBz7t

russeltarr @russeltarr

Abandoned Places In The World #geography: http://tinyurl.com/43hzvpd

AMLE @AMLEnews

MT @middleweb Wonderful reflection by @stephpbader on lurking, stage fright in
connected communities http://bit.ly/LjI9j0 #edchat #midleved

internet4classrooms @internet4classr

20 Calming Apps For Stressed-Out Students (And Teachers) http://ow.ly/aYJ0b
#midleved #edchat

News:

 

Homeschool Is The Future

Since the 1970s, public school education scores, stats, and student achievements have been steadily decreasing. From a declining graduation rate to slipping ACT scores, American students are slowly ceasing to measure up on a global scale. Incidentally, also since the 1970s, homeschooling has steadily been on the rise in America. It seems that with America’s public school system in a decline, more and more parents are turning to homeschooling as a solution. The surprising part? When it comes time to perform, homeschoolers are blowing everyone else out of the water. Homeschoolers have begun to show steady achievement in their test scores, graduation rates, and collegiate performance. Homeschoolers also test higher in analyses of maturity, communication skills, and general socializatiion. What does this mean? It means that homeschoolers are getting ready to dominate the future of America.

http://www.collegeathome.com/blog/2012/03/09/homeschool-is-the-future/

 

Dartmouth Researchers Are Learning How Exercise Affects the Brain

Exercise clears the mind. It gets the blood pumping and more oxygen is delivered to the brain. This is familiar territory, but Dartmouth’s David Bucci thinks there is much more going on.

From his studies, Bucci and his collaborators have revealed important new findings:

  • The effects of exercise are different on memory as well as on the brain, depending on whether the exerciser is an adolescent or an adult.
  • A gene has been identified which seems to mediate the degree to which exercise has a beneficial effect. This has implications for the potential use of exercise as an intervention for mental illness.

 

http://now.dartmouth.edu/2012/05/dartmouth-researchers-are-learning-how-exercise-affects-the-brain/

 

 

Are today’s students truly ‘tech savvy’?

It is difficult to prove that the Generation Y and young people today are not more technologically adapted than their older counterparts.

They may sometimes display an unhealthy level of dependence on their mobile phone, become bored easily when taught in school how to use basic commands in Microsoft Word and be called upon often to fix the problem with the printer, but are all members of this age bracket clued-up and comfortable with technology?

According to the research, there was little evidence that today’s students demand modern technology when entering university that the academic institution cannot provide. Technological integration is expanding, however in terms of study, students may not be as reliant on it to learn as we stereotype them to be.

http://www.zdnet.com/blog/igeneration/are-todays-students-truly-tech-savvy/16147

 

Congrats to Mike Muir, AMLE President-Elect!

Resources:

 

iPad Resource Links

http://www.21innovate.com/ipadipod.html

 

Documentaries On-Line

Watch free documentaries online! Full videos are available. Educate yourself with thousands of good documentaries about diverse subjects. The newest, latest, best and greatest top documentaries online can be watched here for free.

http://www.documentaryz.com/

 

 

A Twenty-One Protest Song Salute

[Warning to parents and teachers: Some songs contain profanity. Also, Moyers & Company and Public Affairs Television do not endorse any advertisements or promotional links contained within the embedded videos.]

http://billmoyers.com/content/a-twenty-one-protest-song-salute/

Web Spotlight:

iWitness

IWitness is an online application that gives educators and students access to search, watch, and learn from more than 1,000 video testimonies of Holocaust survivors and other witnesses.

http://iwitness.usc.edu/SFI/Default.aspx

 

Graduation Speeches

 

http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2011/06/10/best-commencement-graduation-speeches/

http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/05/18/commencement-speeches-2/

Strategies:

The Graphic Classroom

The Graphic Classroom is a resource for teachers and librarians to help them stock high quality, educational-worthy, graphic novels and comics in their classroom or school library. I read and review every graphic novel or comic on this blog and give it a rating as to appropriateness for the classroom.

http://www.graphicclassroom.org/

 

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:

 

AMLE Affiliate Conferences:

 

Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

MSM 205: Split or Steal?

Jokes You Can Use:

“I haven’t slept for days.”
How come?
I only sleep at night.

On Our Mind:

ESL objectives, Professional Development & How to Win Friends and Influence People.
#PLNfail
Congrats to all the EMU students who were dismissed today . . .

Eileen Award:

  • Jeffry Prickett (Facebook & Twitter)
  • Eleanor Ricardo

Advisory:

Food

http://twentytwowords.com/2012/04/25/chart-showing-the-10-companies-that-own-most-of-the-food-products-we-buy/

Split or Steal

Here’s the deal. £13,600 are on the line. Each contestant must choose Split or Steal. If they both choose Split, they each get half of the money. If one chooses Split and the other Steal, the one who chose Steal gets all the money. And if they both choose Steal, nobody gets any money.
Before they choose, they are allowed to discuss their plan together. It is a battle of wits, combining both logic and the ability to read and manipulate one’s opponent. Check out how one ingenious contestant chose to let this scenario play out…

http://twentytwowords.com/2012/04/28/split-or-steal-a-creative-and-kind-use-of-logic-and-manipulation/

Middle School Science Minute

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

The topic is Reading Ladders and Science.  “Climb on up and enjoy the podcast.”

In the March, 2012 issue of Science Scope, a publication of the National Science Teachers Association, Colleen Sheehy and Karina Clemmons shared an article entitled, “Opening the door to science instruction for all through literature.”

The article focused on a strategy called “reading ladders.”  The vision for reading ladders came from envisioning different levels of text difficulty to be different rungs on a ladder.  Teachers can use the idea of reading ladders as a metaphor and framework when employing text to enhance and supplement inquiry-based science instruction.

They provide a very good example of reading ladders in which they show how themed picture books, children’s books, and young adult literature novels can be used to build content knowledge and enhance science instruction.

From the Twitterverse:

50 resources for #iPad use in the classroom zite.to/L1EOng via @zite ~ @msmatters #fhuedu642 #mLearning #edtech

Social Media For Administrators [Blog Posts] #fhuedu642 #edtech ~ Great for @msmatters listeners tinyurl.com/d5lh5jm

25 Ways To Use #iPads In The Classroom by Degree of Difficulty | Edudemic #mLearning #edtech => @msmatters tinyurl.com/ctnwk5y

* Scott McLeod ‏ @mcleod
New bookmark: Backward Design – Digital Learning Toolbox

New bookmark: What’s the “problem” with MOOCs?

DangIrrel: Nurture your kids’ passions, even if they’re making Pokemon game walkthrough videos #edtech

* Nancy White ‏ @NancyW
RT @cmt1 How Do You Create A Culture Of Innovation? http://zite.to/IHQBqu via @zite #edchat #education #edchat
* Terie Engelbrecht ‏ @mrsebiology
RT @NMHS_Principal: Creating Assignments That Work for Digital Learning Environments http://j.mp/IZsCAe #edtech #edchat #elearning
* Will Richardson ‏ @willrich45
Depressing figures on the appeal of teaching in the US #edchat #edreform
* Mark Barnes ‏ @markbarnes19
Neat ideas “@technolit: Creative classroom seating ideas: http://tinyurl.com/7r82ldo via The Big Fresh enewsletter from @ChoiceLiteracy
* Miguel Guhlin ‏ @mguhlin
Ways to Evaluate Educational Apps ipad http://dlvr.it/1WsJ2W
* E-Learning Council ‏ @learningcouncil
RT @stileskelly 50 Best Sources of Free Education Online #edchat #edtech http://j.mp/Jyz5nk More sources for an information junkie!
* Terie Engelbrecht ‏ @mrsebiology
Formative Assessment Strategies List: http://goo.gl/R1z7X #edchat #midleved #elemchat
* Tweeter of Wit ‏ @TweeterofWit
@Kill_Weather: INSTALLING SUMMER….. ███████████████░░░░░░░░░░░░░░ 44% DONE. Installation failed. 404 error: Season not found. #iwn
* russeltarr ‏ @russeltarr
Evidence that IQ tests provide a very limited definition of “intelligence”: http://tinyurl.com/3wrm5cz
* Chris Christensen ‏ @christensen143
New website aims to guide educators through education technology maze #edtech
21h ☆ Lee Kolbert ‏ @TeachaKidd
25 educators to follow on Twitter. http://www.mathgametime.com/blog/2012/05/top-25-teachers-educators-on-twitter/
Watch for #midleved on Twitter!

News:

Change the World

by Vickie Davis – Cool Cat Teacher
We CAN change the world, say my ninth grade students Kerrie and Madison. These girls chose to animate a song using Nomad Paint brushes on touch screen (Lenovo m90z) computers and a Bamboo tablet for their Freshman project (see assignment here). They each animated half of this film. There is a definite improvement in their abilities as each half of the film progresses.
http://coolcatteacher.blogspot.com/2012/05/we-can-change-world-one-child-at-time.html

Parents who sued school over son’s punishment for cheating receive hate messages

Jack Berghouse doesn’t dispute that his son, a sophomore at Sequoia High School, copied someone else’s homework. But the Redwood City father believes the school district was wrong to kick his teenager out of an English honors class for the offense, and his decision to sue has embroiled the family in a public, opinionated debate.
Berghouse believes the punishment is disproportionate to the offense and will jeopardize the academic future of his son, who he said has a chance at attending an Ivy League school.
“He knows it’s wrong,” he said of his son. “You cannot imagine the mental and emotional penalty that has been inflicted upon him. We’ve offered several penalties, anything other than being kicked out of the English program.”
The parents suggested, for example, that their son could work as an after-school teacher’s assistant for the rest of the school year, Berghouse said.

http://www.mercurynews.com/san-mateo-county-times/ci_20493867/parents-who-sued-school-over-sons-punishment-cheating
and the follow up:
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/opinion-la/la-ol-school-cheat-20120427,0,1656872.story

Evaluate Me, Please

I want to know what works and what doesn’t. Like my students, I thrive on feedback. So evaluate me, please. But let’s lay down a few ground rules.

  • I teach children, not targets or standards, so please don’t walk into my classroom expecting to see me teaching a specific skill at an exact moment in time. That’s not how it works here.
  • Don’t assume you know my kids as well as I do. That little boy with his back to me? Yeah, I know he’s off-task, but six months ago he would’ve thrown a desk when he was angry. Now he just turns his back. If I leave him alone, he’ll calm down and eventually apologize. If I say something to him now he’ll explode. Ask me about it later, but right now, trust that I know my kids.
  • If you want to know how far I’ve taken my students, then look at where they were when they came in my room and where they are when they leave. I do good work, but I can’t bring a child who is three years behind up to grade level in one year. If I could, believe me I would.
  • Understand that social and emotional growth can’t be measured on a test, but they are measured in real life. When we meet, let’s talk about how my kids have progressed in these areas as well.
  • Join in. Ask questions. Talk to my kids. You’ll learn a lot more by being part of the learning than you will sitting in judgment in the back of the room.
  • Talk to me. You bring a different perspective to my room. Ask questions, offer suggestions, but don’t forget to point out my strengths.
  • Remember that every year is different. What was an area of strength last year may be an area of struggle this year. Don’t assume it’s because I’ve slacked off or done something wrong. Make me feel safe enough to ask for support.
  • Build a climate of collaboration and trust. My students don’t learn in isolation, and neither do I.
  • By all means, hold me accountable for what I do within the classroom.

Evaluate me, please. Just remember my worth shouldn’t be determined by some arbitrary value added model based on subpar standardized tests. It should come from what I do with the students I have each year, from my professional growth, and from formative, ongoing conversations.
http://teachfromtheheart.wordpress.com/2012/04/24/evaluate-me-please/

Resources:

KANEX Pro- AirPlay® Mirroring For VGA Projector

Kanex ATV Pro allows a VGA projector to use Apple AirPlay mirroring from an iPad to Apple TV.  Eliminate the need for expensive HDMI projection equipment upgrades.  Join the thousands of classrooms nationwide that can mirror and stream content direct to a VGA projector via an Apple TV.
http://www.kanexlive.com/atvpro

Technology Integration Matrix Grade Level Index

This page provides a breakdown of videos within the Technology Integration Matrix by grade level. Although you may be primarily interested in a particular level, we encourage you to view the ways in which technology is used in other grade levels. For example, you will find videos of high school classrooms in which the technology tools could be used in the same way with middle school or elementary level students. Some videos involve students from both middle and high school grades and some involve students from both middle and elementary grades. These videos appear in both lists below.
http://fcit.usf.edu/matrix/gradelevel.php

TED-Ed – Insults by Shakespeare

  • Watch
  • Quick Quiz
  • Think
  • Dig Deeper

If you sign in, you can make adjustments on most sections of the page. For example, you can deselect Quick Quiz questions, add Think questions, and add links to the Dig Deeper section.
http://ed.ted.com/lessons/insults-by-shakespeare

Google Education On-Air

https://sites.google.com/site/eduonair/home

Virtual 4T Conference

The Virtual Conference will be held May19th through May 22nd. It is a 24/7 conference and is free and open to any educator.
*Disclosure- I’m presenting a session.
http://4tvirtualcon.soe.umich.edu/
Conference Sessions:
http://4tvirtualcon.soe.umich.edu/?page_id=54
or
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/pub?key=0Amyg3kn2ZRP0dC1yMGxfVV9xTzkwYVIzVDhhbUtfUGc&output=html

Web Spotlight:

Broomstick

I’m Sebastian, a 14 year old Kiwi innovator, Mac app developer, student and tech enthusiast from New Zealand, currently living in Paris.
http://www.zibity.com/broomstick

Dangerously Irrelevant:  Web videos educators should see

http://dangerouslyirrelevant.org/2010/11/12-videos-to-spark-educators-thinking.html

Strategies:

TinkerCad

Design in 3D what you’ve always dreamed of, but never thought possible. Until now.
Join the Tinkercad community and learn how to create your first real things in just a few minutes.
https://tinkercad.com/home/
or

3D Tin

Create 3D models in your browser.
http://www.3dtin.com/

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:


AMLE Affiliate Conferences:


Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

MSM 204: Make Yourself Smarter!

Jokes You Can Use:

 

Johnny Depp is making another Pirates of the Carribean.  It’s “Arrrrgh” Rated . . .
RUTH BUZZI ‏ @Ruth_A_Buzzi

On Our Mind:

Bad Pirate Jokes . . .

 

Eileen Award:

  • Dave Brown
  • Mary Alise Herrera
  • Craig Malkin

Advisory:

Thou Shall Not Commit Logical Fallacies

A logical fallacy is usually what has happened when someone is wrong about something. It’s a flaw in reasoning. They’re like tricks or illusions of thought, and they’re often very sneakily used by politicians and the media to fool people.
Don’t be fooled! This website and poster have been designed to help you identify and call out dodgy logic wherever it may raise its ugly, incoherent head.
If you see someone committing a logical fallacy, link them to the relevant fallacy to school them in thinky awesomeness and win the intellectual affections of those who happen across your comment by appearing clever and interesting e.g. yourlogicalfallacyis.com/strawman (rollover/click icons above).

http://yourlogicalfallacyis.com/

 

Middle School Science Minute

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

The National Science Teachers Association has recently announce its Outstanding Science Trade Books for Students K-12.  In this podcast we look at three more of the books which are very appropriate for students in grades 6 – 8.  They are:

  • Baby Mammoth Mummy Frozen in Time! A Prehistoric Animal’s Journey into the 21st Century
    by Christopher Sloan
  • The Elephant Scientist
    by Caitlin O’Connell and Donna M. Jackson
  • Elephant Talk: The Surprising Science of Elephant Communication
    by Ann Downer

 

 

From the Twitterverse:

* Steve ‏ @2learn2

* Leigh Graves Wolf ‏ @gravesle

* Vicki Davis ‏ @coolcatteacher

  • Have discernment! Some ppl make things up! RT @MichaelCatt: If you believe everything you read, you better not read. Japanese Proverb
* Daniel Pink ‏ @DanielPink

* Jane Balvanz ‏ @JaneBalvanz

  • So, what do those “tenured, lazy” educators do w/ their free time? They seek professional development on Twitter, Monday- Sunday.
* Justin ‏ @justinstallings

* Chris Sousa ‏ @csousanh

  • Free Range Learners – How Students Hunt for Educational Content #edchat #tichat
* Jerry Blumengarten ‏ @cybraryman1

* Ancient Proverbs ‏ @AncientProverbs

  • Excellence is an art won by training & habituation. -Aristotle
* androidinabox.com ‏ @androidinabox

  • The new Ainol Novo 7 Aurora with LG IPS display is now available! Come back and order from the following link for… http://fb.me/1ynxCLnLj
* ABC News ‏ @ABC

* Richard Byrne ‏ @rmbyrne

* edutopia ‏ @edutopia

Don’t forget to check the #midleved on Twitter for middle school PLN connections!

 

 

News:

Can You Make Yourself Smarter?

Psychologists have long regarded intelligence as coming in two flavors: crystallized intelligence, the treasure trove of stored-up information and how-to knowledge (the sort of thing tested on “Jeopardy!” or put to use when you ride a bicycle); and fluid intelligence.

Working memory is more than just the ability to remember a telephone number long enough to dial it; it’s the capacity to manipulate the information you’re holding in your head — to add or subtract those numbers, place them in reverse order or sort them from high to low.
The training tasks generally require only 15 to 25 minutes of work per day, five days a week, and have been found to improve scores on tests of fluid intelligence in as little as four weeks.
But already, people with disorders including attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (A.D.H.D.) and traumatic brain injury have seen benefits from training. Gains can persist for up to eight months after treatment.

If measuring intelligence through matrices seems arbitrary, consider how central pattern recognition is to success in life. If you’re going to find buried treasure in baseball statistics to give your team an edge by signing players unappreciated by others, you’d better be good at matrices. If you want to exploit cycles in the stock market, or find a legal precedent in 10 cases, or for that matter, if you need to suss out a woolly mammoth’s nature to trap, kill and eat it — you’re essentially using the same cognitive skills tested by matrices.

N-back challenges users to remember something — the location of a cat or the sound of a particular letter — that is presented immediately before (1-back), the time before last (2-back), the time before that (3-back), and so on. If you do well at 2-back, the computer moves you up to 3-back. Do well at that, and you’ll jump to 4-back. On the other hand, if you do poorly at any level, you’re nudged down a level. The point is to keep the game just challenging enough that you stay fully engaged.

Jaeggi and Buschkuehl gave progressive matrix tests to students at Bern and then asked them to practice the dual N-back for 20 to 25 minutes a day. When they retested them at the end of a few weeks, they were surprised and delighted to find significant improvement.
Play the free on-line version of the N-back game

The study did have its shortcomings. “We used just one reasoning task to measure their performance,” she says. “We showed improvements in this one fluid-reasoning task, which is usually highly correlated with other measures as well.”

For some, the debate is far from settled. Randall Engle, a leading intelligence researcher at the Georgia Tech School of Psychology, views the proposition that I.Q. can be increased through training with a skepticism verging on disdain. “May I remind you of ‘cold fusion’?” he says, referring to the infamous claim, long since discredited, that nuclear fusion could be achieved at room temperature in a desktop device. “People were like, ‘Oh, my God, we’ve solved our energy crisis.’ People were rushing to throw money at that science. Well, not so fast. The military is now preparing to spend millions trying to make soldiers smarter, based on working-memory training. What that one 2008 paper did was to send hundreds of people off on a wild-goose chase, in my opinion.

The most prominent takedown of I.Q. training came in June 2010, when the neuroscientist Adrian Owen published the results of an experiment conducted in coordination with the BBC television show “Bang Goes the Theory.” After inviting British viewers to participate, Owen recruited 11,430 of them to take a battery of I.Q. tests before and after a six-week online program designed to replicate commercially available “brain building” software. (The N-back was not among the tasks offered.) “Although improvements were observed in every one of the cognitive tasks that were trained,” he concluded in the journal Nature, “no evidence was found for transfer effects to untrained tasks, even when those tasks were cognitively closely related.”

While studies of twins suggest that intelligence has a fixed genetic component, at least 20 to 50 percent of the variation in I.Q. is due to other factors, whether social, school or family-based. Even more telling, average I.Q.’s have been rising steadily for a century as access to schooling and technology expands, a phenomenon known as the Flynn Effect.

“We know that height is heavily genetically determined,” Jonides told me during our meeting at the University of Michigan. “But we also know there are powerful environmental influences on height, like nutrition. So the fact that intelligence is partly heritable doesn’t mean you can’t modify it.”

Chein has found, translates into the kind of real-world improvements associated with increases in cognitive capabilities. “We’ve seen, in college kids who do it, improvements in their reading-comprehension scores,” Chein said. “And in a sample of adults, 65 and older, it appears to improve their ability to keep track of what they recently said, so they don’t repeat themselves.”

After eight weeks of training — 75 minutes per day, twice a week — Bunge found that the children in the reasoning group scored, on average, 10 points higher on a nonverbal I.Q. test than they had before the training. Four of the 17 children who played the reasoning games gained an average of more than 20 points. In another study, not yet published, Bunge found improvements in college students preparing to take the LSAT.

Of course, in order to improve, you need to do the training. For some, whether brilliant or not so much, training may simply be too hard — or too boring.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/22/magazine/can-you-make-yourself-smarter.html?_r=2&src=me&ref=magazine

 

Resources:

CorePlanner

CorePlanner:  Resource tool for teachers planning their lessons around the Common Core Standards.
http://coreplanner.com/

Compared to:

http://lessonwriter.com/default.aspx

 

PBS Kids Cyberchase – Dozens of Math Activities

http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2012/04/pbs-kids-cyberchase-dozens-of-math.html

 

3D Toad

Putting a spin on Education.

  • Dissections
  • Animal Skeltons
  • Human Skeltons
  • Music
  • Geology
  • TRX Workout
  • Dental Hygiene
  • Coral
  • Yoga
  • Fossils
  • History
  • Ballet Positions
  • Chemistry
  • Emergency Preparedness – Need Sign-in
  • Dental Program – Need Sign-in
  • Computer Networking

http://www.3dtoad.com/

 

Taylor Mali

Mali, a former teacher and now full-time globe-trotting poet/advocate/recruiter for the teaching profession, has followed up his most successful poem with a book of the same title.  I read it in 2 sittings and it made me feel great— it’s a highly recommended “just-cause” or end-of-year gift for a teacher in your life.
The small, novelty-sized hardcover is broken into 26 vignettes, with several of Mali’s poems mixed in. The book has heart and Mali’s love of teaching shines through. What elevatesWhat Teachers Make above the next paean to teachers on the shelf is Mali’s irreverence and a keen ability to tell big stories with short word counts. He also gave me a few ideas for tweaks in my own classroom, most notably in the chapter titled “No One Leaves My Class Early For Any Reason.” I do need to tighten up about that.
http://transformed.teachingquality.org/blogs/get-fracas/04-2012/taylor-malis-what-teachers-make-book-winner

YouTube Speech: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxsOVK4syxU

Web Spotlight:

33 Animals Who Are Extremely Disappointed In You

Not angry, just disappointed
http://www.buzzfeed.com/expresident/animals-who-are-extremely-disappointed-in-you

The 5 Worst Things a Teacher Can Say to Students

By Dan Brown
5. “I know this may seem pointless but we have to get through it…”
4. “I don’t know what I’m doing.”
3. “The other class did well with this. What’s wrong with you guys?”
2. “You will never be able to (fill in the blank).”
1. “I get paid whether you (fill in the blank) or not.”
http://transformed.teachingquality.org/blogs/get-fracas/04-2012/5-worst-things-teacher-can-say-students

 

Test Scores and Housing Costs

By MOTOKO RICH
Parents hoping to enroll their children in the best public schools have long known that where you live matters and that housing prices can be dictated by the quality of the nearby schools.

That means that a family would have to pay more per year to move into a good public school zone than for their children to attend some private schools. Translated into an average home price, the gap works out to an average of $205,000 more for a home near a high-performing school.

“We think of public education as being free, and we think of the main divide in education between public and private schools,” Mr. Rothwell said in an interview. “But it turns out that it’s actually very expensive to enroll your children in a high- scoring public school.”
http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/04/19/test-scores-and-housing-costs/

 

A Child’s Helping Hand on Portions

MARSHALL REID, 12, a sixth grader from Sanford, N.C., has a know-it-all quality that can drive some teachers crazy. As he does prep work for a Cuban black-bean stew for his family’s supper, he leans over a cutting board with a self-assured smile and a dramatically furrowed brow.
Marshall had been bullied about his weight for years. To fortify himself for school, he took comfort in breakfasts of cans of roast beef hash, plus biscuits and gravy. That year, the school fitness report said his body mass index was 32.3. He was emphatically obese.
he said, “Mom, let’s do the opposite of ‘Super Size Me’ ” — Morgan Spurlock’s documentary about a McDonald’s-only diet for 30 days — “and be healthy for a month. I’m tired of this.”
Marshall’s sister Jordan, now 15, lives on the other side of the somatotype moon: a relentless soccer player, she inhales junk food but remains thin. Marshall’s father was unable to help much. Army Lt. Col. Dan Reid was in Iraq.
They decided to make YouTube videos of Marshall’s new meals, to share with his father and to keep Marshall on track: see Marshall reading labels on a can of peas at the Piggly Wiggly; discussing how to reduce fat and sugar in recipes; boasting about the taste and healthy balance of his meals.
Turns out that the same know-it-all quality that can irk a child’s teachers finds its natural habitat in how-to videos.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/25/dining/a-child-offers-plan-on-portion-control-for-dieters.html

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:


AMLE Affiliate Conferences:


Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.


MSM 203: Crazy after 45 minutes.

Jokes You Can Use:

“Doctor, will I be able to read with these new glasses?”

“Of course, perfectly. Why?”

“Because, I couldn’t read before”.

 

When I got a bill for an operation, I found out why they wear masks.

Eileen Award:

  • Gr8t Lakes Teacher:  Thanks for the feedback on iTunes!

Advisory:

Book Spine Poetry

Stack books up so that the Titles on the spine form a poem.

http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/tag/book-spine-poetry/

 

Odd Advertisements

NSFW:  Prescreening required

http://oddstuffmagazine.com/funniest-advertisements-ever.html

 

11 “Modern Antiques” Today’s Kids Have Probably Never Seen 

http://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/122762

 

Middle School Science Minute  

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

 

The National Science Teachers Association has recently announced its Outstanding Science Trade Books for Students K-12.  In this podcast we look at three of the books which are very appropriate for students in grades 6 – 8.  They are:

 

Friends: True Stories of Extraordinary Animal Friendships

by Catherine Thimmesh

 

Michael Vey: The Prisoner of Cell 25

by Richard Paul Evans

 

Bug Shots: The Good, the Bad, and the Bugly

by Alexandra Siy

 

 

From the Twitterverse:  

 Diane Ravitch ‏ @DianeRavitch

 David Andrade ‏ @daveandcori

 Marlo Gaddis ‏ @mrhgaddis

 Steven W. Anderson ‏ @web20classroom

  • Teaching today like being on Chopped. You have lots in your basket and have to use it all and make it taste good. @mrhgaddis #edcampnc
  • When it come to learning about tools, teachers want ownership. They need to know the impact in their classroom. #edcampnc
 Marlo Gaddis ‏ @mrhgaddis

 Larry Ferlazzo ‏ @Larryferlazzo

  • How Can We Teach Social Studies More Effectively?
 Erik Gunn ‏ @erikgunn

  • @DianeRavitch My college prof dad scorned student evaluations. He said it would be years B4 students understood value of some classes (more)
 Ryan Dore ‏ @britishbuegler

 Terie Engelbrecht ‏ @mrsebiology

 Nancy Hniedziejko ‏ @NancyTeaches

 Shawn Avery ‏ @mr_avery

 Scott McLeod ‏ @mcleod

  • Proposed legislation re: number of days/hours in school year reflects simplistic thinking? #iaedfuture
 Liz Kolb ‏ @lkolb

 

News:

Student “Learning Styles” Theory Is Bunk (Daniel Willingham)

Since the publication of Howard Gardner‘ Frames of Mind in the early 1980s in which he pointed out the many ways that children and adults learn, popularization of “multiple intelligences” in the early 1990s has fused multiple intelligences with teaching to different “learning styles.” Practitioners have glommed onto multiple intelligences and different learning styles. Schools have committed themselves to cultivating multiple learning styles such as the KeyLearning Community in Indianapolis (IN). Willingham challenges the concept of varied learning styles and offers an alternative explanation for how and what children learn–their background, interests, aptitudes, and knowledge they bring to a topic–rather than “learning styles.”

http://larrycuban.wordpress.com/2012/04/15/student-learning-styles-theory-is-bunk-daniel-willingham/

 

The Pineapple Story Tests Us: Have Test Publishers become Unquestionable Authorities?

The New York Daily News has perhaps inadvertently shed some light on why teachers might be hesitant to have a large portion of their evaluations based on standardized test scores. In a rare moment of transparency, one of the 8th grade reading comprehension questions has been published, in a story broken by Leonie Haimson on the New York Parents blog, and it has many people scratching their heads.

http://blogs.edweek.org/teachers/living-in-dialogue/2012/04/the_pineapple_story_questions.html

http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2012/04/20/151044647/the-pineapple-and-the-hare-can-you-answer-two-bizarre-state-exam-questions?sc=tw

Professional Development

Sweating my way through a workout the other day, I stumbled across an article titledGetting Principals to Think Like Managers in the Bloomberg Businessweek magazine.  Considering that nearly every expert on the 21st Century principalship would argue that leading schools is about WAY more than “managing,” the title caught my eye.

http://transformed.teachingquality.org/blogs/tempered-radical/04-2012/will-75000-really-change-your-principals-leadership-skills

 

Earth’s quietest place

They say silence is golden – but there’s a room in the U.S that’s so quiet it becomes unbearable after a short time.

The longest that anyone has survived in the ‘anechoic chamber’ at Orfield Laboratories in South Minneapolis is just 45 minutes.

It’s 99.99 per cent sound absorbent and holds the Guinness World Record for the world’s quietest place, but stay there too long and you may start hallucinating.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2124581/The-worlds-quietest-place-chamber-Orfield-Laboratories.html

Resources:

Block Print

Create any size poster from any size picture.

http://www.blockposters.com/

 

iSLCollective

Free, printable ESL worksheets by teachers for teachers. Allows a variety of criteria: Level, Student Type, Grammar Focus, Vocabulary Focus, Skill, Material Type, Solution.

http://en.islcollective.com/

 

WorkFlowy

Easy ToDo list manager.

https://workflowy.com/

 

National Parks Tour

Provides a virtual tour of various parks: Grand Canyon, Great Smokies, YellowStone.

http://naturevalleytrailview.com/

 

 

Positive Thoughts

You might recall a charming antidote: Everything Is Going to Be OK, the lovely pocket-sized anthology of positive artwork. Now, it’s available as equally lovely 20 different note cards, featuring artists like Gemma Correll,Jessica Swift, Danna Ray, and Amy Borrell.

http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/04/19/everything-is-going-to-be-ok-cards/

 

KiKuText

Kikutext is all about parent engagement. We truly believe that an increase in parent engagement will mean an increase in student achievement. Every part of our application is designed to help you easily and quickly communicate with parents more regularly.

Parents can sign up for text messages. Teachers get a proxy phone number – no need to give out your personal cell phone number.

http://kikutext.com/

Web Spotlight:

5 Historical Misconceptions

Warning: Lady Godiva and bare bottom is included.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=sYzfKiIWN4g

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:  

 

AMLE Affiliate Conferences:  

 

Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

MSM 202: String this…Sounds abound around Slo-Motion and the SAT

Jokes You Can Use:

A little boy was starting to dig into his dinner. His father gently reminded him that they hadn’t said a prayer yet.

“It’s OK, we don’t have to. Mommy is a good cook”.

On Our Mind:  

  • The Drunkard’s Walk by Leonard Mlodinow
  • 8 weeks to go.
  • ISTE

Eileen Award:

  • PivotalEllie Ellie Dix
  • Ron Peck:  Thanks for the Twitter answer.

Advisory:

How to Listen to Music

Music has a powerful grip on our emotional brain. It can breathe new life into seemingly lifeless minds. But if there is indeed no music instinct, music — not just its creation, but also its consumption — must be an acquired skill. How, then, do we “learn” music? Even more curiously, how do we “learn” to “listen” to music, something that seems so fundamental we take it for granted?

http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/04/12/elliott-schwartz-music-ways-of-listening/

 

Body Language Decoder

http://lifehacker.com/5901468/use-this-body-language-cheat-sheet-to-decode-common-non+verbal-cues

 

Middle School Science Minute  

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

 

This is a three part feature on outstanding science tradebooks for students in Grades 6 – 8.

Part 1:

The National Science Teachers Association has recently announced its Outstanding Science Trade Books for Students K-12.  In this podcast we look at two of the books which are very appropriate for students in grades 6 – 8.  They are:

Biomimicry: Inventions Inspired by Nature

by Dora Lee

Trapped: How the World Rescued 33 Miners from 2,000 feet Below the Chilean Desert

by Marc Aronson

 

From the Twitterverse:  

AMLE  @AMLEnews

●Fun list for thoughtful conversation with middle schoolers: 50 Amazing
Numbers About Today’s Economy http://bit.ly/HhHOpT #midleved

Scott McLeod  @mcleod

●Are Education Reforms Causing a Decline in Student Achievement?
http://bit.ly/HCtICn #edreform #iaedfuture #edchat
●Stop #Cyberbullying Your Masters! http://bit.ly/IxKDc1 Schools
backpedal after overreaching, disciplining students #schoollaw

Michelle Baldwin  @michellek107

●@willrich45 would be interesting to see how much revenue “education”
corporations will make off of Common Core. :-/

Will Richardson  @willrich45

●@michellek107 I think we’re already beyond a CCSS “cottage” industry.
Like shooting fish in a barrel for corporations.
●Question: If policy makers think they are making public schools great with
reforms, then why offer vouchers to opt out of reform? #edpolicy

On the ClassroomWall  @FlyontheCWall

●study strategies … i often defer to this site http://www.studygs.net to help
me help the kids #5thchat
●food for thought: How to Learn Without Memorizing http://ht.ly/acjz9

Dan Witte  @danwitte

●Starting our famous person press conference scripts. Link to the handout.
Anything I should add?
http://wp.lps.org/dwitte/files/2012/04/Press-Conference-Script.pdf
#midleved #engchat

Bill Ferriter  @plugusin

●Have I ever showed you the feeds that I give my kids during SSR?
http://www.netvibes.com/wferriter#SSR_Collection #midleved #edtech

Monte Tatom  @drmmtatom

●#QR Codes Explained & Ideas for Classroom Use #fhuedu508 #fhucid
#eLearning http://tinyurl.com/d3qr8tg

Larry Ferlazzo  @Larryferlazzo

●All My Best Resources On Parent Engagement In One Place!
http://bit.ly/HJZiNk
Watch for middle level tweets on Twitter with the hashtag #midleved.

 

 

Resources:

An Open Letter to Educators

If the message in this video resonates with you feel free to send it to any teachers, principals, professors, university presidents, boards of regents, boards of education, etc. you think should see it.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=-P2PGGeTOA4

 

TED offers free video lessons for high school and college students

By Lyndsey Layton, Published: March 12

Imagine you’re a high school biology teacher searching for the most vivid way to explain electrical activity in the brain. How about inserting metal wires into a cockroach’s severed leg and making that leg dance to music?

Starting Monday, that eye-popping lesson, performed in a six-minute video by neuroscientist and engineer Greg Gage, is available free online.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/ted-offers-free-video-lessons-for-high-school-and-college-students/2012/03/09/gIQAuw5O6R_story.html

 

http://www.youtube.com/tededucation

Web Spotlight:

Sound Maps

Use the interactive maps to find recordings of regional accents and dialects, wildlife and environmental sounds, and selected world and traditional music.

Includes dialects, and the Millenium Memory Bank. Also includes Holocaust survivors.

http://sounds.bl.uk/sound-maps

 

Ultra Slow Motion

http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/04/13/ultra-slow-motion/ 

 

What Happens When A 35-Year-Old Man Retakes The SAT?

*Warning – Not Safe for Work language is used.

Shockingly, little about the SAT has changed since I set foot in that classroom. Most students still have to take the test using bubble sheets and a No. 2 pencil, which is insane to me. They’ve managed to digitize VOTING

http://deadspin.com/5893189/what-happens-when-a-35+year+old-man-retakes-the-sat

Strategies:  

 Seussisms

http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/04/11/seuss-isms/

 

How Long Is a Piece of String? BBC and Comedian Alan Davies Explore Quantum Mechanics

by Maria Popova

In How Long is a Piece of String?, they enlist standup-comic-turned-physics-enthusiast Alan Davies in answering the seemingly simple question of the film’s title, only to find in it a lens — a very blurry lens — on the very fabric of reality.

http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/04/09/how-long-is-a-piece-of-string-bbc/

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:

 

AMLE Affiliate Conferences:

 

Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

MSM 196: iPads, Too much good stuff, and Paper (li & plane)

Jokes You Can Use:

Some people think that movies would be better if less film were shot and more actors.

On Our Mind:


Eileen Award:


Advisory:

Languages

http://ourmothertongues.org/Home.aspx

Paper AirPlanes

http://twentytwowords.com/2012/02/29/new-world-record-distance-for-a-paper-airplane-flight/

Middle School Science Minute

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

This middle school science minute is about life jackets, engineering, volume and density. In the February 2012 issue of Science Scope (NSTA publication) Richard Moyer and Susan Everett wrote an article entitled: “Increase your v to lower your D.”  They developed a 5E lesson that can easily be used by teachers.  The lesson integrates all of the STEM disciplines, while focusing on the core ideas of criteria and constraints in engineering and the practice of engineering design.  It also is focused on the concepts of density and volume.

BTW, Dick Moyer, in this article, teaches over at UM-Dearborn.  Pretty well known in the area.

From the Twitterverse:

* patrizia ‏ @4titania

* Jane Balvanz ‏ @JaneBalvanz

* Will Richardson ‏ @willrich45

* Kevin Creutz ‏ @kevcreutz

* Will Richardson ‏ @willrich45

* Larry Ferlazzo ‏ @Larryferlazzo

* Vicki Davis ‏ @coolcatteacher

  • All About Creative Commons And Copyright – LiveBinder – Steven Anderson’s livebinder on creative commons and… vsb.li/cQKeCl
* Ryan Gallwitz ‏ @rgallwitz

* Tom Whitby ‏ @tomwhitby

  • Virginia Teachers Plan “Wake” For Public Education In Light Of Bill That Slashes Retirement Benefits zite.to/wGpi8R #Edchat
* Diane Ravitch ‏ @DianeRavitch

Don’t forget #midleved on Friday, 8:00 EST on Twitter!

News:

ISTE Virtual Presence

ISTE opens a site on EduIsland9 to replace the four islands it once maintained in Second Life.

The Middle School Plunge

In 2010, the Charlotte-Mecklenburg (North Carolina) school district shuttered four of its eight middle schools, opting to serve students in elementary schools spanning kindergarten through grade 8. In so doing, it followed in the footsteps of urban school districts such as Baltimore, Milwaukee, Philadelphia, and New York City, all of which have in the past decade expanded their reliance on the once ubiquitous K–8 model.
…policymakers nationwide continue to wrestle with a basic question: At what grade level should students move to a new school?
http://educationnext.org/the-middle-school-plunge/

Resources:

iPad Resources for Administrators

From: Eric Sheninger
http://pinterest.com/esheninger/ipad-apps-for-administrators/

HelloSlide

Simply type the speech for each slide, instead of recording it, and HelloSlide automagically generates the audio.
It gives more exposure to your presentations, making them searchable, editable, and available in 20 different languages.
http://www.helloslide.com/

Canvas LMS

Learning enriches living. Discover how major universities and K-12 school districts are boosting teacher effectiveness, student success and parental engagement with the Canvas learning management system.

Learn more about canvas

http://www.instructure.com/

1,000 Educational Apps

Sure, there are plenty of apps you can use in education. There are even apps created specifically for use in education. Apple has a whole category dedicated to education in the App store. But how do you really know which ones are worth downloading, or possibly even paying for?
TCEA (Texas Computer Education Association) to the rescue! TCEA regularly tests available apps andrecommends apps that teachers should be using.
TCEA maintains a list of recommended apps in a shared document via Google Docs. The list is organized by subject area and free apps are color coded in white.
http://adecardy.visibli.com/share/C46fkd

*Tip: You can access the Google Doc below. Select Make a Copy. You can then filter the document to items that you want.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AvFbfb1mWoNwdGlweWtkZkFRS1gzUDMtTUtoTEw0MkE#gid=0

Web Spotlight:

“Bully” gets rated R

The MPAA rated the movie R on the basis of language used in the film — language that young teens hurled at a 13-year-old.
http://www.thewrap.com/movies/article/weinstein-company-considers-leaving-mpaa-over-bully-rating-35681

Cognitive Neuroscience Tools

FreeEDUCATIONAL TOOLS FOR COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
Free access to materials for students, educators, and researchers in cognitive psychology and cognitive neuroscience.
Includes Memory Tests that students can take.
Sections include:

  • Change Blindness
  • Visual Search
  • Implicit Memory Test
  • Monsters & Globes Problem


This includes videos, demos and more.
This site could be used for Current Events, Social Studies, Science and more.
http://gocognitive.net/

Stop Selling Dreams

What is school for?

The economy has changed, probably forever.

School hasn’t.

School was invented to create a constant stream of compliant factory workers to the growing businesses of the 1900s. It continues to do an excellent job at achieving this goal, but it’s not a goal we need to achieve any longer.

In this 30,000 word manifesto, I imagine a different set of goals and start (I hope) a discussion about how we can reach them. One thing is certain: if we keep doing what we’ve been doing, we’re going to keep getting what we’ve been getting.


Our kids are too important to sacrifice to the status quo.

http://www.squidoo.com/stop-stealing-dreams

Socrates Fails his Teacher Evaluation

The results were posted in the Agora for all to see  the quality and performance of their teacher.  Socrates failed.    He simply spent too much time asking them to think.   A walk- through evaluation by his supervisor (undisclosed), determined that “ sometimes Socrates’s  students meander through endless dialogues examining challenging questions that do not have one right answer.”    Hopefully, he will be replaced or perhaps go through an intensive summer professional development program in Sparta.
http://edge.ascd.org/_SOCRATES-FAILS-TEACHER-EVALUATION/blog/5822005/127586.html

Students Engaged

So, how do they know if a student is engaged? What do “engaged” students look like? In my many observations, here’s some evidence to look for:
http://www.edutopia.org/blog/student-engagement-definition-ben-johnson

12 Must See Teacher Movies

http://www.teachhub.com/top-12-must-see-teacher-movies 

AMLE 2011:

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Association of Middle Level Education

  • Annual Conference

AMLE Affiliate Conferences:

Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.

MSM 194: Para What? Para Dice? Para Pants?

Jokes You Can Use:

Customer: This food isn’t fit for a pig.
Waiter: I’m sorry. I’ll bring you some that is.

PARAPROSDOKIANS: (Winston Churchill loved them.)
Here is the definition:
“Figure of speech in which the latter part of a sentence or phrase is surprising or unexpected; frequently used in a humorous situation.”
“Where there’s a will, I want to be in it,” is a type of Paraprosdokian.

– A bus station is where a bus stops. A train station is where a train stops. On my desk, I have a work station.
– Whenever I fill out an application, in the part that says, ‘In case of emergency, notify:’ I put ‘DOCTOR.’
– You do not need a parachute to skydive. You only need a parachute to skydive twice.

On Our Mind:

“The ‘Good’ Kids Are Compliant, The ‘Bad’ Kids Are Defiant, And Nobody Is Engaged”
(Daniel Pink via http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/superintendent/bookclub.aspx )

Eileen Award:

  • Anabelle Maillard Morgan
  • Jamie Cruikshank
  • Congrats to Todd Williamson on his new position as Head Techie in his school district!


Advisory:

Touching “Arigato” (Thank You) Video From Japan

(via Larry Ferlazzo)
http://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2012/02/12/touching-arigato-thank-you-video-from-japan/
YouTube Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=SS-sWdAQsYg

MistakeVille

Try the Job Interviews gone wrong.
http://www.mistakeville.com/

Middle School Science Minute

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

Transforming Field Trips
This middle school science minute is about transforming field trips. In the January, 2012 issue of Science Scope (NSTA publication) Rebecca Morris wrote an article entitled, “Transforming a Field Trip Into an Expedition: Supporting Active Research and Science Content Through a Museum Visit.”  Rebecca shares the methods that she used with her 6th grade students.  She developed the museum field trip into a short-term, active research project assignment.

From the Twitterverse:

 nancyflanagan @nancyflanagan

 Terie Engelbrecht @mrsebiology

 Rich Kiker @rkiker

 The Dennys @DoTheMathBooks

  • Your Education is worth what You are worth. -Anon #quote
 Jeff Johnson @iLEADCommunity

 Scott McLeod @mcleod

  • New bookmark: Virtual Jamestown
  • New bookmark: The Past, Present and Future of Badges for Learning
Don’t forget to join #midleved chat on Twitter at 8:00 pm EST!

News:

Common Core Standards and Impact on Achievement

“A final word on what to expect in the next few years as the development of assessments tied to the Common Core unfolds. The debate is sure to grow in intensity. It is about big ideas—curriculum and federalism. Heated controversies about the best approaches to teaching reading and math have sprung up repeatedly over the past century.18 The proper role of the federal government, states, local districts, and schools in deciding key educational questions, especially in deciding what should be taught, remains a longstanding point of dispute. In addition, as NCLB illustrates, standards with real consequences are most popular when they are first proposed. Their popularity steadily declines from there, reaching a nadir when tests are given and consequences kick in. Just as the glow of consensus surrounding NCLB faded after a few years, cracks are now appearing in the wall of support for the Common Core.
Don’t let the ferocity of the oncoming debate fool you. The empirical evidence suggests that the Common Core will have little effect on American students’ achievement. The nation will have to look elsewhere for ways to improve its schools.”
http://www.brookings.edu/~/media/Files/rc/reports/2012/0216_brown_education_loveless/0216_brown_education_loveless.pdf

The Opportunity Cost in Education

What does “paperwork” cost to a school district?
http://coolcatteacher.blogspot.com/2012/02/count-opportunity-cost-of-teacher-tasks.html

Resources:

Quadratic Equations – The Main Ideas

To help pupils see the bigger picture in topics I have decided to experiment with some conceptual card sorts. I worry sometimes that pupils just learn methods and can’t see the links between them. Teachers I know encourage their pupils to ‘build a map’ in their minds of topics and ideas so that when they are faced with a maths problem they can ‘navigate’ to the correct section of their mind map and start using the skills they know. I love this idea but do think it is a perhaps a bit too challenging to ask pupils to do this with no support. My aim in producing the conceptual card sorts it to help pupils in their categorisation and organisation of maths concepts in their minds.
http://www.greatmathsteachingideas.com/2012/02/16/quadratic-equations-the-main-ideas-a-card-sort-to-support-conceptual-understanding/

Mission US

Mission US is a multimedia project that immerses players in U.S. history content through free interactive games.
Mission 1: “For Crown or Colony?” puts players in the shoes of Nat Wheeler, a printer’s apprentice in 1770 Boston. They encounter both Patriots and Loyalists, and when rising tensions result in the Boston Massacre, they must choose where their loyalties lie.
In Mission 2: “Flight to Freedom,” players take on the role of Lucy, a 14-year-old slave in Kentucky.  As they navigate her escape and journey  to Ohio, they discover that life in the “free” North is dangerous and difficult. In 1850, the Fugitive Slave Act brings disaster. Will Lucy ever truly be free?
Other missions are planned for release in 2013 and 2014.
Join the conversation and get updates about Mission US on Facebook and Twitter.  For more information, visit the Help page.  To share your feedback, email us via the contact form on this site. Thanks for playing!
http://www.mission-us.org/

Web Spotlight:

Microsoft Partners in Learning Apply today US Forum

The US Forum is a celebration of innovative teaching practices and innovative schools. It is a unique experience open to all K–12 U.S. educators and school leaders to share what they’re doing in the classroom, exchange ideas and collaborate to inspire their professional practice.
How to Apply:
If you are an innovative educator, we would love for you to share your ideas! Simply click “apply to the forum” below and complete the application. The application will allow us to understand a little more about your school, classroom, and how you are impacting students.
https://www.facebook.com/partnersinlearning?sk=app_368381589844161

Strategies:


What’s Your Story

Welcome to the third annual What’s Your Story? video contest from Trend Micro. With so many amazing submissions in years past, we can’t wait to see what inspiring, informative and original videos you create this year!
What’s it all about? Sharing photos, downloading music, texting, doing schoolwork, keeping in touch with friends — with more people spending more time online, it’s more important than ever to know how to do it safely and responsibly.
That’s why you’re invited to join our contest. Submit and share a short video to help others stay safe, smart and responsible online and you could win $10,000, or other cash prizes.

What’s the deal?

Prizes: One $10,000 USD grand prize; six cash category prizes (three awarded to schools per entry category and three awarded to individuals per entry category). Prizes are in US Dollars or equivalent in Canadian Dollars at contest closing date.
Deadline: Upload by 11:59:59 PM US Pacific Time on April 3, 2012
Content: Your video must address one of these topics:

  • Take action against bullying
  • Keep a good rep online
  • Be cell smart

Eligibility: All residents of Canada (excluding Quebec) and the US, 13 years of age and older.

http://whatsyourstory.trendmicro.com/internet-safety/Home.do

National Archives Digital Experience

Create Posters, Videos and/or Pathways revolving around the material in the National Archives. Easy to use.
http://www.freetech4teachers.com/2012/02/create-videos-and-posters-on-us.html
http://www.digitalvaults.org/#/create/

Events & Happenings:

Calendar of Events:

Ohio Middle Level Association:

AMLE Affiliate Conferences:


Classroom 2.0’s Live Calendar.