MSM 601: Sad News, Hastings Has Posted An Obituary

Summary:

Shawn and Troy talk about State History Day, Parent Tech Night, and more. David is teaching through Virtual Reality. 

Jokes:  


Just read an article on the history of French pastry.

  • It was a total puff piece.

  • “Another day, another doll hair” – very unproductive worker the American Girl factory

Did you know that Apple is using a new file format for its photos?

  • what the heic?!

When World of Lego opened, people were lined up for blocks.


Winter is the only season that happens twice a year.


Why don’t skeletons fight each other? 

  • They don’t have the guts

    Middle School Science Minute  

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

    K12Science Podcast:  Virtual Reality

    I was recently reading the Fall, 2023 issue of “Science Scope” a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.  

    In this issue, I read the section, “Integrating Technology,” written by Michael McKenzie and Alex Fegely. They wrote an article entitled, “Differentiate Science Lessons by Using VR in Station Rotations.”

    Blended learning strategies combined with innovative technology, for example, virtual reality (VR), can be used in science classrooms to differentiate teaching and enrich learning experiences.  An app often used in classrooms is YouTube VR.  You can learn more by visiting:

    https://www.youtube.com/@360

    http://k12science.net/virtual-reality/

    Reports from the Front Lines

    • Your State’s History Day Preparations:  https://nhd.org/en/  
    • Parent Tech Night
    • Spreadsheet “Fun”
    • Student Name “Fun”

    The Social Web

    Susie Dent  @susie_dent

    Word of the day is ‘suspire’ (15th century): to let out a deep sigh.

    Word of the day is ‘snerdle’ (18th century dialect): to wrap up cosily beneath the covers and hold off the day for a little longer.

    One of my favourite dictionary facts: the verb ‘go’ has always lacked a past tense based on itself. So we opted for the past tense of ‘wend’, as in ‘to wend one’s way’. Which means that instead of ‘I goed’, we say ‘I went’.  

    Lithuania MFA | #StandWithUkraine  @LithuaniaMFA

    #OTD 1791, the Mutual Pledge between #Lithuania & #Poland was adopted, preserving Lithuania’s autonomy in the Commonwealth. The Pledge was part of the Constitution of May 3, an example of progressive political thought, testifying mutual commitment & respect for nations’ autonomy.

    Andy Saunders  @1940Andy

    Sad news from the announcements page of the local newspaper in Hastings:

    LRT English  @LRTenglish

    On Tuesday night, schools and kindergartens in Lithuania again received bomb threats

    https://t.co/5qQGjNOsAJ

    Moodle @moodle@openedtech.social

    Generative AI and H5P at #MootGlobal23 with Svein-Tore Griff With.
    This presentation was voted one of the most popular presentations at MoodleMoot Global 2023.

    Watch now: https://youtu.be/pjWVpqqErSc?si=5-27Wx

    Strategies:  

    Reimagining Study Hall to Promote Student Goal-Setting

    WIN: ‘WHAT I NEED’ TIME

    Students might spend the period taking a test they missed, consulting with a teacher about lingering questions, or working on a group project, eliminating the hassle of weekend meet-ups.

    WIN’s value lies in intentional structure, not unbounded freedom. The session comprises seven sequential, interconnected components, each of which advances the period’s purpose.

    https://www.edutopia.org/article/study-hall-can-promote-goal-setting/

    Resources:  

    AXIS:  The Culture Translator

    Forever Young

    What it is: Teens as young as fourteen spoke with New York Magazine about their time-consume multi-step skincare routines, which often include strong active ingredients like retinol and glycolic acid.

    A Hill of Beans

    What it is: A viral bean soup recipe on TikTok led to a bigger discussion about how algorithms skew users’ expectations of the content recommended to them.

    What the online world is saying: A TikTok user recently posted a recipe for a healthy bean soup. They were then inundated with requests for advice on how to modify the recipe to not include any beans. (The bean-averse are, apparently, a multitude.) But beans were the whole point—the recipe being called bean soup. Another TikTok user, @sarahthebookfairy, posted in response to the debacle, calling this an example of what she’s dubbed the “what about me?” effect. Social media users, she argues, have grown too accustomed to having hyper-individualized content served up to them through an endless feed. When they come across a post that doesn’t necessarily pertain to them, they feel compelled to respond to the content anyway, if only to call out how it doesn’t suit their preferences. The original post describing the “what about me” effect currently has well over 4 million views.

    Start the conversation: Why do you think people still respond when they see a post that doesn’t apply to them?  

    Moodle Course:  Python for Beginners

    Originally uploaded by Christian Thompson: This is the introductory course for Python for Beginners. Please start here if you have no experience coding in Python. This course is self-paced; you can proceed through the course, but should complete each unit before moving on to the next unit.  

    https://moodle.net/resource/uHFOlHUh/python-for-beginners

    ZipCaptions

    Zip Captions provides an easy to use live captions experience which lives right inside your browser. We don’t capture, store, or share any of your data, there are no hidden fees, and no agreements to sign.

    https://zipcaptions.app/#/

    Trust & Safety

    Trust & Safety Tycoon is a game exploring the difficult choices and tradeoffs involved in managing a trust and safety team.

    Created in association with the Atlantic Council’s Task Force for a Trustworthy Future Web.

    Built by Copia Gaming and Leveraged Play. Written & developed by Mike Masnick, Randy Lubin, and Leigh Beadon with generous support from the William & Flora Hewlett Foundation.

    https://trustandsafety.fun/

    Typpo

    With Typpo, you can effortlessly create engaging videos in seconds. Simply speak into your phone and let our advanced A.I. technology transform your words into fun and visually stunning animations. You don’t need any design skills to get started – anyone can use Typpo to share their ideas with the world. Share your videos directly from the app on your favorite social media channels or send them as messages to your friends and family. Try Typpo today and see how easy it is to turn your voice into captivating videos.

    https://typpo.app/

    Globe Game

    Every day, there is a new Mystery Country. Your goal is to guess which country it is using the fewest number of guesses. Each incorrect guess will appear on the globe with a colour indicating how close it is to the Mystery Country. The hotter the colour, the closer you are to the answer.

    https://globle-game.com/

    Web Spotlight: 

    How Teaching Should Change, According to a Nobel-Prize-Winning Physicist

    He argues that the traditional lecture method for teaching physics and other STEM fields has been proven ineffective, and that shifts to more active methods can greatly improve learning outcomes to make sure the next generation of researchers can make the next Nobel-worthy breakthroughs.

    …I saw actually sort of a correlation, that the really top students in coursework never turned out to be the better physicists, I decided there was some fundamental question here about learning and thinking.

    https://www.edsurge.com/news/2023-10-17-how-teaching-should-change-according-to-a-nobel-prize-winning-physicist

    12 Male Role Models From Science Fiction and Fantasy

    https://buttondown.email/charliejane/archive/12-male-role-models-from-science-fiction-and/

    Random Thoughts . . .  

    AMLE is 50 Years Old!

    Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

    MSM 600: It’s All About AI

    Summary:

    Shawn and Troy talk about AI, ACTEM, collaboration, and more. Dave is cultivating collaboration. 

    Jokes:  


    if two boats go under at the same time, that’s sinkronicity


    Does the spork go on the left or right of a paper plate?


    Delleps is spelled backwards.


    How do they figure out who’s the best fighter in Candyland?

    • They turn a mint.

    I hated my old job where all I did was push buttons all day…

    • …it was depressing.

    Middle School Science Minute  

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

    K12Science Podcast:  Cultivating Collaboration

    I was recently reading the Fall, 2023 issue of “Science Scope” a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.  

    In this issue, I read the section, “From the Editor’s Desk,” written by Patty McGinnis. She wrote an article entitled, “Cultivating Collaboration,”

    Collaboration is a key skill that is foundational to society.  The expansion of scientific knowledge, coupled with today’s complex global issues, makes collaboration among scientists and engineers crucial if we are to develop solutions to difficult problems.

    http://k12science.net/cultivating-collaboration/

    Collaborating on The Mysteries – Bill Watterson and John Kascht

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HHND7L1wUl0

    Reports from the Front Lines

    • ACTEM
      • AI Creation
      • Carl Hooker
      • Apple Pop Up Classroom
      • Game Based Learning
      • Podcasting in the Classroom
      • H5P Presentation

    Eileen Award  

    • uncheckedFacebook:  Dr. Pat Williams-Boyd 

    The Social Web

    Susie Dent  @susie_dent

    Word of the day is ‘snerdle’ (18th century dialect): to wrap up cosily beneath the covers and hold off the day for a little longer.

    Kevin Honeycutt  @kevinhoneycutt

    Download my black line master PDF of the Space capsule Learning Pod and print on cardstock for great results your kids can use as a pencil/pen holder or just take home for more adventures! https://kevinhoneycutt.org/ewExternalFile

    Cian McCarthy  @arealmofwonder

    Word for the Weekend

    Massimo@Rainmaker1973

    The importance of punctuation (Commas save lives)

    MrBerard@MrBerard@pilote.me
    Explaining CPU exceptions to A-Level #CS Students:

    “It’s a priority queue. So when I’m teaching your colleagues of Year 7, if one needs me, I go help them…. Another calls, they have to wait their turn… But if one gets a nosebleed, I have to address that first…”

    Resources:  

    AXIS:  The Culture Translator

    The Cost of a Bargain

    What it is: Chinese-owned shopping app Temu is drawing teens in with absurdly cheap prices.

    How to Help Students Avoid Getting Duped Online — and by AI Chatbots

    Students these days are terrible at sorting true facts from misinformation online and on social media, many studies show. But it’s not because students aren’t good at critical thinking, …

    One problem that students — and, really, any of us — face, Caulfield argues, is that people often approach information they encounter online with the same strategies for telling fact from fiction that worked well in an earlier time, when most published material had undergone some level of vetting and verification.

    “There wasn’t suddenly a massive decline in critical thinking,” Caulfield says. “People were just applying approaches to information on the internet that weren’t really appropriate to the internet, that people were applying some of these pre-internet approaches that weren’t really applicable.”

    One of the primary things you’re doing when you’re reading on the internet is you’re trying to decide if something’s worth your attention or not. 

    In traditional models we’ve often taught students that the way you solve any problem is by giving it deep critical attention. And of course, this is disastrous on the internet. 

    https://www.edsurge.com/news/2023-10-10-how-to-help-students-avoid-getting-duped-online-and-by-ai-chatbots

    Web Spotlight: 

    Random Thoughts . . .  

    Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

    MSM 599: Ipsedixitist, Peninkulma

    Summary:

    Troy and Shawn discuss AI quite a bit. We also have some fun with words and kids. Dave swings in with playground physics.

    Jokes:  


    If someone says, “A penny for your thoughts” and you put your two cents in, they’ve made a profit.


    The carpenter built a $1,000 door and made a grand entrance.


    Good cat names:

    Astrophe
    Aclysm
    Aract
    Erpillar


    A duel between three people is called a truel.


    “You have cute knuckles” is a rather backhanded compliment.


    The word “gullible” upside down looks like a cat.


    There was something really odd about that “Do Not Touch” sign.

    • But I can’t put my finger on it.

    Q: How do you measure the weight of crackers?

    A: In grahams.


    Remember — when you DO find that Genie and ask to be happy, you’ll soon find yourself working in a mine with height-challenged co-workers.


    Gulliver was probably the greatest hero in classic literature..

    • But a handful of people might disagree.

    Middle School Science Minute  

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

    Playground Physics

    I was recently reading the July/August 2023 issue of “Connected Science Learning” a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.  

    In this issue, I read an article entitled, “Innovative Technology Enhances Outdoor Learning Experiences with Playground Physics.”  It was written by Michaela Labriole, Judith Hutton, Laycca Umer, and Kate Maschak.

    Playground Physics is a free digital application and supplemental curriculum for grades 6-8 developed by the New York Hall of Science.  You can learn more by visiting:

    https://noticing.nysci.org/apps/playground-physics/

    http://k12science.net/playground-physics/

    Reports from the Front Lines

    • Monday
    • Testing
    • CSS fun

    The Social Web

    MagicSchool AI  @magicschoolai

    INCOMING: MagicSchool stealth launch today! Retweet and comment “I want early access ” and we’ll DM you a special link to see the latest MagicSchool drop before it’s announced. #magicschoolai #teachersaremagic #stealthlaunch

    Susie Dent  @susie_dent

    A reminder of the useful ‘ipsedixitist’ (19th century): one who firmly asserts that something is true because another person said so, with no other evidence to back it up.

    Daniel Pink  @DanielPink

    “The courage to start. The discipline to focus. The confidence to figure it out. The patience to know progress is not always visible. The persistence to keep going, even on the bad days. That’s the formula.” — @shaneaparrish

    LRT English  @LRTenglish

    The dream of allocated flats became a key part of life in Soviet-occupied Lithuania. But as the homes were dolled out on party instructions, this turned into an instrument of social control  https://t.co/S826PmiQvS  

    Cian McCarthy  @arealmofwonder

    Words for the Weekend 

    Kevin Honeycutt  @kevinhoneycutt

    My newest PDF classroom activity build is a space capsule! This one is designed to assemble with no glue or tape just scissors and ingenuity. Anyone want the file? Probably best grade 4-8.  

    Replying to

    @Frideswidel

    https://kevinhoneycutt.org/resources.html

    I’m excited to see some kid-made versions and I want to collaborate with teachers to grow a list of learning extensions kids will love!  

    I never played football, my family couldn’t afford the shoes but I ended up coaching football!

    Strategies:  

    Using AI to Write Lesson Plans

    https://www.middleweb.com/49675/moving-forward-using-ai-in-my-classroom/

    Resources:  

    TikTok Brain

    TikTok’s mind-boggling popularity has led to growing interest in how the social media platform impacts the brain, especially in the kids and teens who populate the app. In addition to concerns about its effects on mental health, some early studies suggest it could be changing their attention spans.

     TikTok has already made changes to help teens manage their time scrolling through videos. The platform does not allow push notifications after 9 pm for users ages 13 to 15. The platform also periodically creates videos to remind users to pause their scrolling, go outside, or have a snack.

    While YouTube videos are usually longer, the platform introduced a feature called YouTube Shorts with content that maxes out at 60 seconds. Google, which owns Youtube, already has features to limit use for people under 18, such as turning off autoplay for kids and teens. Reminders to take a break or go to sleep are also on by default for users aged 13 to 17.

    https://theweek.com/health-and-wellness/1025836/tiktok-brain-and-attention-spans

    Great news — social media is falling apart

    As people grow tired of toxic and addictive platforms that undermine real social connection, this new wave of social-focused upstarts could end up producing a healthier online environment.

    https://www.businessinsider.com/social-media-splintering-new-less-toxic-era-meta-bluesky-twitter-2023-10

    OpenCV

    https://opencv.org/

    MagicChart

    Create bar charts using AI from a chart. What do they mean? Who knows?

    Can be good for prompt writing (i.e. clear instructions). 

    https://www.magicslides.app/tools/magicchart

    Demystifying AI

    A FREE Workshop for Maine Educators

    This free-to-attend, four-part AI panel series during the 2023-2024 school year comprises virtual events, each offering a deeper dive into AI in the classroom. MMSA will leverage existing partnerships with leading researchers in the field to bring this topic to life for educators.

    All events to take place via Zoom, from 3:30 – 5:30 PM (EST).

    https://sites.google.com/mmsa.org/demystifyingai/home

    Web Spotlight: 

    Same Old Ways

    https://eduk8.me/2023/10/same-old-ways/

    Hey Computer, Make Me a Font

    https://serce.me/posts/02-10-2023-hey-computer-make-me-a-font

    Some traditional font making sites: 

    https://fontstruct.com/

    http://www.pentacom.jp/soft/ex/font/edit_canvas.html 

    Random Thoughts . . .  

    Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

    MSM 598: Grilled Cheese Sandwiches!

    Summary:

    Troy and Shawn talk about AI, Grilled Cheese Sandwiches, teaching strategies, and more. 

    Jokes:  


    Restless? Read “The History of Teleportation.”

    It will take you places.


    50% of Scotland is land.

    The other 50% is Scot.


    Alaskan Flat Tire:


    Shouldn’t there be a flat moon society since we only see one side of it?


    The ultimate age-old question has to be “How old are you?”


    Doing poorly in school can be quite D-grading.


    The only thing flat earthers fear is sphere itself.


    “Gibberish” is a little-known palindrome.

    Spelled backwards, it is still gibberish.


    At one point, even “Gone With the Wind” was just a draft


    When I hopped on the treadmill at the gym I got funny looks.

    So I decided to run instead.


    I’ve discovered something that will let you walk through walls. 

    • I call it “a door”

    If you write a second book about electric bicycles…

    • is it an E-qual?

    Reports from the Front Lines

    • Provisioning Fun
      • Wrong email
      • Wrong building
    • State Testing
    • Dissertation Defense
    • Generative AI 
    • Fundraisers

    The Social Web

    Martin Dougiamas  @moodler

    #ImALifelongLearner #JApprendsToutAuLongDeLaVie parce que… #AprendoALoLargoDeLaVida porque… انا اتعلم مدى الحياة# #我是一名终身学习者 因为 #ЯучусьВсюЖизнь, потому что #SayaTerusBelajar karena https://app.cheerity.com/yIXP5zvYx/main

    John R. Sowash  @jrsowash

    Some sad news just announced by Google….#Jamboard has been discontinued.  Official announcement: https://tinyurl.com/2d392xfg

    Killed by Google 

    https://killedbygoogle.com/

    While I am sad that Google is ending support for #Jamboard in 2024, there are a lot of great tools that are as good or better than Jamboard. Here are my three favorites. Are there any other alternatives that are worth considering? #GoogleEDU #teacherTwitter #figmaEDU

    @CanvaEDU     https://twitter.com/jrsowash/status/1707434908128256341/photo/1  

    Susie Dent  @susie_dent

    If it’s been one of those weeks and you don’t quite have the words, may I offer you ‘bumfuzzled’ and ‘dumfoozled’ from the 19th century? Both mean perplexed, befuddled, and in need of a lie-down.

    Alice Keeler  @alicekeeler

    For funsies, how would you solve this equation?

    Katie Powell  @Beyond_the_Desk

    Look what arrived today! I had the privilege of writing a forward for @MsAmberChandler’s new book, Everything New Teachers Need to Know but are Afraid to Ask. We know we need to do a better job supporting new teachers, so I’m proud to be able to recommend this great resource!

    https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/mono/10.4324/9781003365921/everything-new-teachers-need-know-afraid-ask-amber-chandler

    Revolving_Door_Admin  @RAD_is_awesome

    The superintendent and executive cabinet are aware of the issue of students cutting classes and have concluded that the problem is the lack of academic rigor in the teachers’ lessons.

    Strategies:  

    60 Second Strategies

    Our popular series of short videos that break down effective classroom practices for every grade level in literally one minute—all in one place. How’s that for a quick win?

    https://www.edutopia.org/60-second-strategies-for-educators

    SAR

    I’ve been talking this week with my students about memory and learning. 

    Understanding how we learn via memory processing and understanding what this means for how we study is, in my opinion, of utmost importance to all learners and teachers. It seems criminal that so many students and teachers (especially in the US) complete their careers and/or schooling without coming into contact with this vital information. 

    So, I propose this:

    Sense → Attend → Rehearse

    It’s simple, easy to remember, and I believe it covers major aspects of memory and learning in the classroom.

    https://theeffortfuleducator.com/2023/09/25/the-sar-method/

    Resources:  

    Movie & Book Recommender

    https://movie-and-book-recommender.vercel.app/

    Copyright

    Posters and curriculum

    https://copyrightandcreativity.org/infographics/

    Digital Public Library of America

    https://dp.la/

    Web Spotlight: 

    Historical maps probably helped cause World War I

    I probably spent more time looking through the volumes of Colin McEvedy’s Penguin Atlas of History series than any other book when I was a kid (scans of the medieval volume are here). 

    The simplicity of a historical map — the clear labels, the sharp edges, and above all the reduction of thousands or millions of people into abstract symbols — is a big part of why they’re so beguiling. But it’s also why they lead us astray.

    …it’s in the process of making historical maps that you truly realize how much they leave out. What precise date does a map of, say, “the world circa 1200” actually show? How real are those borders between different polities and tribes? Or, in the case of maps of battles like Cannae, how can we know exactly how a detachment of troops moved during the fog of war, hundreds or thousands of years ago?

    https://resobscura.substack.com/p/historical-maps-probably-helped-cause

    Bringing Smithsonian Collections You Can See, Hear and Touch to Learners Near You

    https://www.smithsonianmag.com/blogs/smithsonian-education/2023/02/07/bringing-smithsonian-collections-you-can-see-hear-and-touch-to-learners-near-you/

    Life at 13

    “It’s not as easy as it used to be,” London said, about being a teenager. “’Cause you can’t escape social media unless you delete the apps.”

    https://www.nytimes.com/2023/09/21/briefing/social-media-teenagers.html

    AXIS:  The Culture Translator  

    Don’t Call Me

    What it is: The Washington Post dishes out some very basic advice on modern phone etiquette.

    Why it’s still interesting: Something that might surprise parents is the seemingly universal way younger people despise voicemail messages. The article suggests that voicemails should be left only at truly pivotal moments—like your mother wishing you a happy birthday, or a friend sharing a snippet of a live concert you couldn’t get tickets for. Voicemails are simply inconvenient to retrieve, and often go ignored. Another piece of advice: when calling a Gen Zer, shoot a warning text. While teens don’t all hate talking on the phone, many feel the need to mentally prepare for the conversation instead of simply picking up an unexpected call. Unless it’s a conversation that requires a back-and-forth dynamic (like a brainstorming session or an argument), most younger people really, really, really would prefer you simply text or email them to share information.

    Start the conversation: Besides warning texts and avoiding voicemails, what are some other differences in how younger people prefer to use phones?  

    Hey Gen

    Video, audio translation. Matches the voice to the lip movement. 

    Example: 

    Random Thoughts . . .  

    Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

    MSM 597: Goblin Tools, not just for the Cafeteria!

    Summary:

    Shawn and Troy talk about AI, tools, students, and more. Dave has Science, Science, Everywhere.

    Jokes:  


    You’re in a wordplay contest and the topic is “water”.

    • What is your wet pun of choice?

    How did the plant go into business?

    • He got seed money.

    If you call someone a “stick in the mud” it’s because they are no fun.

    • But if a dog finds a stick in the mud it’s the greatest day of his life.

    A prisoner escaped by putting a paper towel over his face and walking out of jail.

    • There’s a Bounty on his head.

    Someone told me it was already autumn. I’m not falling for it.


    Middle School Science Minute  

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

    K12Science Podcast:  Science, Science, Everywhere

    I was recently reading the April 2023 issue of “Connected Science Learning” a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.  

    In this issue, I read the editorial section written by Beth Murphy.  She wrote an article entitled, “Science, Science, Everywhere.”

    If we look to the history of science and engineering, it all begins with phenomena-observations of the natural and human-made worlds that cause one to ask questions and identify problems worth answering and solving.  In her editorial she looks at how the formal science education system as we know it came to be.

    http://k12science.net/science-science-everywhere/

    Reports from the Front Lines

    • Moodle vs Google Classroom
      • USDZ images
    • H5P Presentation
    • AI in MAIne – Legal Aspects
    • Friendly Grandpa

    The Social Web

    Susie Dent  @susie_dent

    Word of the day is ‘struthonianism’: the act of burying one’s head in the sand; an attitude of ‘Problem? What problem?’. From the Latin ‘struthio’, ‘ostrich’.   

    Word of the day is another outing for ‘mumpsimus’ (16th century): one who sticks rigidly to their position, despite clear evidence that they shouldn’t.  

    Revolving_Door_Admin  @RAD_is_awesome

    The reason for your negative walkthrough assessment is because you failed to mention your Clarity Statement for the 60 seconds that I was in your classroom.

    Ryan Hazen  @MisterHazen

    Ok this is fascinating https://moodle.org/plugins/local_aiquestions #MootGlobal23

    Now THAT is a proper Chat GPT prompt that can really help teachers using #moodle #MootGlobal23

    PhET is one of the best freely available tools out there for simulations, perfect for a project like

    @Edutab_Africa – check them out and play around if you haven’t already! https://phet.colorado.edu

    Moot Global | #MootGlobal23  @mootglobal

    Lightning Session 3: Maxwell Fundi (Edutab) offered a comprehensive look at offering offline eLearning for primary schools in low resource settings using Moodle. He emphasised how Edutab brings STEM education to life through simulations on portable, single-board computers.

    Strategies:  

    Let’s scrap the neuromyths: No, you aren’t a ‘visual’ or ‘auditory’ person

    Who hasn’t heard the statement that we only use 10 per cent of our brain? That listening to Mozart’s music makes you smarter or that most learning happens in the first three years of life? Or that a person who is “right-brained” is more creative? Another widespread idea is that we are either visual, auditory or kinesthetic (more sensitive to touch) and that we learn better according to these “styles.”

    At the Cognitive Health Research Laboratory at Laurentian University, our research team is particularly interested in the neuromyths of learning styles called VAK, for visual, auditory, kinesthetic.

    https://theconversation.com/lets-scrap-the-neuromyths-no-you-arent-a-visual-or-auditory-person-141957

    Resources:  

    Connections

    Allows you (or your students) to create groups of connected items. You group four items with four groups.

    https://connections.swellgarfo.com/

    *Scroll down to the bottom of the post for the Spoiler Answer

    Goblin Tools

    https://goblin.tools/

    Gutenberg Audio Books

    Thousands of free and open audiobooks powered by Project Gutenberg, Microsoft, and MIT.

    Project Gutenberg, Microsoft, and MIT have worked together to create thousands of free and open audiobooks using new neural text-to-speech technology and Project Gutenberg’s large open-access collection of e-books. This project aims to make literature more accessible to (audio)book-lovers everywhere and democratize access to high quality audiobooks. Whether you are learning to read, looking for inclusive reading technology, or about to head out on a long drive, we hope you enjoy this audiobook collection.

    https://marhamilresearch4.blob.core.windows.net/gutenberg-public/Website/index.html

    PNGWing

    https://www.pngwing.com/

    AXIS:  The Culture Translator

    An Empirical Question 

    What it is: People everywhere are asking each other how often they think about the Roman Empire, and then posting about the answer. #romanempire currently has 1.2 billion views on TikTok.

    Web Spotlight: 

    Free Classes:

    26 of the best MIT courses you can take online for free

    Find free courses on everything from game design to machine learning.

    https://mashable.com/uk/deals/free-mit-courses-september

    22 of the best Stanford University courses you can take online for free

    edX is offering learners from around the world access to Stanford University’s extended education, professional development, and lifelong learning opportunities. And you can take advantage of these opportunities without spending anything.

    https://mashable.com/uk/deals/free-stanford-courses-september

    Current Events:  The World from A to Z with Carl Azuz

    Daily 9 minute news program for students.  Carl’s back with all the puns!

    https://worldatoz.org/

    Patented Podcast

    “This podcast investigates the curious history of invention and innovation. Did Thomas Edison take credit for things he didn’t actually invent? What everyday items have surprising origins? And would man have ever got to the moon without… the bra?”  

    Random Thoughts . . .  

    *Spoiler for Connections: 

    Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

    MSM 596: Orange Agronomist

    Summary:

    Shawn and Troy talk about starting of the school year. Dave plants the concept of an Agronomist. 

    Jokes:  

    ​​I bought my friend an elephant for his room.

    He said, “Thanks!”

    I replied, “Don’t mention it.”


    Puns about actress Alison Brie can be rather cheesy.


    John’s getting several rabbit tattoos on his bald head so he can have hares there again.


    If your Canadian bacon keeps curling in the frying pan take away the broom.


    A plateau is the highest form of flattery.


    I often chortle a bit when I see a no-reply e-mail has a reply button at the bottom.


    It’s still a bit odd when computers ask us to confirm we’re not a robot.


    We’ve probably all kicked a pregnant woman.


    Instead of a curse jar I have a pessimist jar.

    At the moment it’s half empty.


    Going with chimney jokes today. I have a stack of them.

    (No charge — they’re on the house).


    Pirated movies get 3.14 stars.


    I’m starting a sarcasm society.

    Would be honored if you joined.


    Just realized I’ve never had an epiphany.


    Self esteem is generated by heating water within your mind.


    You don’t have to tell me twice because I don’t listen either time.

    Middle School Science Minute  

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

    K12Science Podcast:  Agronomist

    I was recently reading the July/August 2023 issue of “The Science Teacher” a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.  

    In this issue, I read the “Career of the Month” column, written by Luba Vangelova.  She wrote an article entitled, “Agronomist.”

    Agronomists, or agriculturists, use their knowledge of soil and plants to help farmers row crops more effectively.  They can work for government agencies, nonprofits, academic institutions, or private enterprises.  The article features Lee Briese a Certified Crop Advisor who lives in Jamestown, North Dakota.

    http://k12science.net/agronomist/

    Reports from the Front Lines

    • Start of the Year
      • Fans
      • New Rooms

    The Social Web

    LRT English  @LRTenglish

    In the first instalment of LRT tapes, we bring you an odd TV report from 1994 about, well, we are not really quite sure about what. But it’s something about bananas.  https://twitter.com/i/status/1702622445033685179  

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_hF05ik5TFQ

    Susie Dent  @susie_dent

    Word of the day is ‘shotclog’ (17th century): an unwelcome companion who’s only tolerated because they are buying the next round. (I like to think it can be used affectionately too.)

    Etymology of the day is ‘conspire’: from the Latin for ‘breathe together’ – the idea is of hugger-muggering at close quarters in order to plot mischief.  

    Word of the day is ‘sudoriferous’: sweat-inducing.  

    A reminder, if you need it, that the word ‘swullocking’ means swelteringly and meltingly hot.

    MMS MainStage Company, Director Louise Hickey  @Theatricalteach

    Jabberwocky in Sixth Grade Theatre! #MelissaSchools  @MMSCardinals

    Shannon McClintock Miller  @shannonmmiller

    Here’s the Dot Day Choice Board, friends.  Let’s help our kids make their mark on the world by celebrating through singing, creating, playing, reading and more.  You will find it here…and a link to make a copy for your own too.  https://buff.ly/3Ex8Teb #DotDayhttps://twitter.com/shannonmmiller/status/1700244959562215895/photo/1  

    David Pogue  @Pogue

    Oh wow. After Apple blocked cookies in its Safari browser, Google has now built, RIGHT INTO CHROME, a tracker that “track[s] the web pages you visit and generate[s]a list of advertising topics that it will share with web pages whenever they ask.”

    umichvoter   @umichvoter·

    the red in northern michigan and blue in ann arbor cancel each other off (2020 election)

    Bodo Hoenen  @BodoHoenen

    My son keeps getting homework he does not know how to do! So the Digital Twin AI tutor he built over the summer is now his go-to Teacher! It’s teaching him in ways I never could. Proud dad moment and a big high-five to the future of learning!  #EdTech #AI #HomeworkHero

    Strategies:  

    How to Cure Writer’s Block

    https://www.languageisavirus.com/

    Resources:  

    Antique Book Patterns

    A collection of antique book patterns from front or end papers. Spanning from 1890-1930. Ordered by theme.

    https://www.flickr.com/photos/bergen_public_library/albums/72157633827993925/

    Photogrammar

    The 170,000 photographs taken between 1935 and 1944 under the direction of the Farm Security Administration (FSA) and the Office of War Information (OWI) constitutes one of the richest photographic archives in the United States, arguably the world. One of the most famous documentary photography collections of the twentieth century, the “Historic Section” created visual evidence of government initiatives alongside scenes of everyday life during the Great Depression and World War II across the United States. Photogrammar provides tools to explore this abundant archive: maps to see photos taken in thousands of locations across the United States, a “treemap” to explore them categorically and thematically, a timeline to concentrate on a given moment in time or a specific photographer, and individual photographer pages with oral histories.

    https://photogrammar.org/maps

    The Anti-Ownership Ebook Economy

    Something happened when we shifted to digital formats that created a loss of rights for readers. Pulling back the curtain on the evolution of ebooks offers some clarity to how the shift to digital left ownership behind in the analog world.

    Publishers and platforms insist that you only buy a license to access the books, not the rights to do anything else with them.

    https://www.nyuengelberg.org/outputs/the-anti-ownership-ebook-economy/

    Learn with Carlos

    The Carlos App is an AI and machine learning-powered application that provides a real language immersion experience. It works on both mobile and desktop platforms and includes an audio feature for enhanced learning. The app is powered by OpenAI’s ChatGPT technology.

    https://carlos-app.com/

    Puzzlemaker

    https://puzzlemaker.discoveryeducation.com/

    Google Tools for Art

    https://www.techlearning.com/news/google-tools-and-activities-for-art-education

    Kimstudies

    English Language Resources

    “Syftet med Kimstudies är att inspirera lärare till god undervisning och elever till att vilja lära sig mer engelska genom att goda exempel på undervisningsmaterial görs lättillgängligt.”

    https://www.kimstudies.com/

    Web Spotlight: 

    Fighting Inequality Through Softball: Maya Women Make a League of Their Own

    Oh, this is delightful: a short documentary about a group of Mayan women in the tiny town of Hondzonot in the Yucatan peninsula who formed a softball team called Las Diablillas (Little Devils).

    https://kottke.org/23/08/maya-women-make-a-league-of-their-own

    How Do Kids View Themselves? This Survey Shares the Answers

    More than 80 percent of kids surveyed feel they can make a difference in their communities.

    https://www.edsurge.com/news/2023-09-07-how-do-kids-view-themselves-this-survey-shares-the-answers

    AXIS:  The Culture Translator

    What TikTok Did 

    What it is: The legacy of TikTok may be the total implosion of social media—or at least a marked, permanent difference in the way people use it, argues Kate Lindsay in The Guardian.  It’s contributing to another phenomenon, called “ghost watching,” where thousands of users passively consume social media content and nobody who isn’t an influencer already wants to post anything on Meta-owned apps.  

    Not So Fast

    What it is: Newly published data from the Pew Research Center suggests that the majority of Americans see job satisfaction and close friends—not marriage and family—as the essential elements of a fulfilling life.  

    Sweden Brings More Books and Handwriting Back to the Classroom

    “As children across Sweden have recently flocked back to school after the summer vacation, many of their teachers are putting a new emphasis on printed books, quiet reading hours, and practicing handwriting as the country’s yearslong focus on the digital.”

    Random Thoughts . . .  

    Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

    MSM 595: Kanso or NoKanso?

    Summary:

    Shawn and Troy discuss back to school, AI in schools, Moodle and more. Dave names the Dinos. 

    Jokes:  

    Student: If the main parachute malfunctions, how long do we have to deploy the reserve?

    • Instructor: The rest of your life.

    What do rich people say when tickling their little kids?

    • Gucci, Gucci, Gucci.

    Where can you get a powerstrip to plug all of your devices in to?

    • The Outlet Mall

    I was reading while getting my hair permed. 

    • I was curled up with a good book.

    They should end soccer games with an art competition.

    • That way it would be win, lose or draw.

    I once knew a bunch of guys who thought they were really exceptional at statistics.

    • They turned out to be average.

    I was a little late with my dog’s dinner last night.

    • Yeah…he gave me a negative “yelp” review.

    In space, no one can guess your weight.


    I once drew a fish. 

    • It wasn’t to scale.

    A great thing about twins is that they enter the world pre-paired.


    I sold my vacuum today.

    • All it was doing was collecting dust.

    Problems?

    • Dissolve some table salt in a glass of water for a simple solution.

    I keep hitting “Accept All Cookies” but, so far, NOTHING.

    Middle School Science Minute  

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

    K12Science Podcast:  Dinosaur Names

    I was recently reading the July/August 2023 issue of “Science and Children” a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.  

    In this issue, I read the “Science 101” column, written by Matt Bobrowsky.  He wrote an article entitled, “Origin of Dinosaur Names.”

    Most of our English words have their roots in other languages.  In this podcast we look at the origin of:

    • Dinosaur
    • Stegosaurus
    • Tyrannosaurus rex

     http://k12science.net/dinosaur-names/

    Reports from the Front Lines

    • Gearing up 
    • HDMI Fun
    • AI in schools
      • Think long term
      • Advantages

    The Social Web

    AMLE  @AMLE

    Imagine if a film maker spent a year in a school talking to tweens. Changing by the Minute offers an authentic glimpse into young adolescence, and is now available to the AMLE community complete with a toolkit of PD & student activity resources.  https://okt.to/oCPXwe

    Teacher2Teacher@teacher2teacher

    Up for a quick game?  “Groups of 5. Take turns rolling the die and answering the questions. The first person in each group to roll all numbers and answer all questions wins.” – T

    @GingerAaron 

    Edutopia  @edutopia

    Fixing Education  @FixingEducation

    Asking teachers to do ‘ONE MORE THING’ and not removing anything else from their plate doesn’t help anyone. •It doesn’t help Teachers! •It doesn’t help Test Scores!  •And it certainly doesn’t help STUDENTS!

    Susie Dent  @susie_dent

    Etymology of the day is ‘mugshot’: the use of ‘mug’ for a face looks back to 18th-century drinking mugs that often represented a grotesque human face. Their unintelligent expression probably introduced ‘mug’ as an insult for a stupid or gullible individual.

    Cian McCarthy  @arealmofwonder

    Words for the Weekend

    Strategies:  

    Speakable

    Speakable is your go-to for creating auto-graded speaking activities in over 100 languages, eliminating the hassle of grading hours of recordings, so you can focus on what you do best – teaching

    BASIC

    • Always Free

    When you’re getting started and just want the basics.

    STARTER

    • $12/mo

    When you need to view your gradebook

    GROWTH

    • $56/mo

    When you need short respond cards and analytics.

    PROFESSIONAL

    • $99/mo

    When you need everything Speakable has to offer.

    https://speakable.io/

    Resources:  

    American Government 3e

    American Government 3e aligns with the topics and objectives of many government courses. Faculty involved in the project have endeavored to make government workings, issues, debates, and impacts meaningful and memorable to students while maintaining the conceptual coverage and rigor inherent in the subject. With this objective in mind, the content of this textbook has been developed and arranged to provide a logical progression from the fundamental principles of institutional design at the founding, to avenues of political participation, to thorough coverage of the political structures that constitute American government. The book builds upon what students have already learned and emphasizes connections between topics as well as between theory and applications. The goal of each section is to enable students not just to recognize concepts, but to work with them in ways that will be useful in later courses, future careers, and as engaged citizens.

    https://openstax.org/details/books/american-government-3e

    OER Resources

    https://oercommons.org/groups/openstax-american-government/1093/?__hub_id=27

    American Government 3e Audiobook

    We produced a free audiobook of American Government 3e, an OpenStax textbook. This textbook provides an introduction to US government and civics, and is used widely in college-level Political Science courses. We believe that this project will be helpful to everyone, and especially to those who are auditory learners, students with disabilities, and students who speak English as a second language.

    The audio recordings are all offered under a Creative Commons license (CC-BY-SA 4.0). You are free to use, revise, remix, and share these recordings as long as you give proper attribution and share any derivative projects under the same license.

    Audio recordings of all 17 chapters to help you study and succeed!

    https://www.openaudio.us/

    Middle School Connection:  

    Michigan YIG:  https://www.myig.org/Middle-School

    A Simple Process and Template for Student Podcasting

    “Maybe you’ve heard the saying that whoever is talking is the person learning. Or, the teacher should do less talking in the classroom than the students. Both of those sayings have truth to them. With that in mind, let’s see if there are benefits to student-generated podcasts.”

    https://blog.tcea.org/simple-process-template-student-podcasting/?fbclid=IwAR2TbLVB0ZfCuwncRm4qUOviypcvszpyqdeHv2pFinOX15bcUEp5nASziv0

    Organic Maps

    Organic Maps is a free Android & iOS offline maps app for travelers, tourists, hikers, and cyclists based on top of crowd-sourced OpenStreetMap data. It is a privacy-focused, open-source fork of Maps.me app (previously known as MapsWithMe), maintained by the same people who created MapsWithMe in 2011.

    Organic Maps is one of a few applications nowadays that supports 100% of features without an active Internet connection. Install Organic Maps, download maps, throw away your SIM card (by the way, your operator constantly tracks you), and go for a weeklong trip on a single battery charge without any byte sent to the network.

    ​​Organic Maps is the ultimate companion app for travelers, tourists, hikers, and cyclists:

    • Detailed offline maps with places that don’t exist on other maps, thanks to OpenStreetMap
    • Cycling routes, hiking trails, and walking paths
    • Contour lines, elevation profiles, peaks, and slopes
    • Turn-by-turn walking, cycling, and car navigation with voice guidance
    • Fast offline search on the map
    • Bookmarks and tracks in KML, KMZ, GPX formats
    • Dark Mode to protect your eyes
    • Countries and regions don’t take a lot of space
    • Free and open-source

    https://organicmaps.app/

    AXIS The Culture Translator

    Something in the Air

    What it is: TikTok posts and YouTube shorts called “subliminals” are taking over teens’ feeds, promising to fix the effects of “school air.”

    Web Spotlight: 

    A New Chapter for Richard Byrne

     I’m starting law school this fall at Vermont Law and Graduate School. I’m enrolled in a JD program designed for working professionals. 

    https://freetech4teach.teachermade.com/a-new-chapter-for-me/

    Random Thoughts . . .  

    Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

    MSM 594: Brim’Tud Will Be Easier Than Puggle!

    Summary:

    Shawn and Troy talk about preparing for the new year, living at the school, and more. Dave brings in biomimicry with all its advantages.

    Jokes:  


    My wife likes to tell me my shoes are untied while we’re doing our morning jog.

    • It’s kind of a running joke.

    John bought a sundial for the yard.

    • He also installed floodlights so he could use it at night as well.

    Hmm. 2070 is closer to us now than 1970.


    Two blood cells fell in love.

    But it turned out to all be in vein.


    Jokes about time travel are a thing of the future.


    I am currently boycotting any company that sells things I can’t afford.


    Saw it will be humid another 4 days.

    • Read it on a sticky note.

    The undertaker’s favorite element is barium.


    The coroner is a last responder.


    Today I’m shooting for whelmed.


    Middle School Science Minute  

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

    K12Science Podcast:  Biomimicry

    I was recently reading the July/August 2023 issue of “Science and Children” a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.  

    In this issue, I read the “Editor’s Note” column, written by Elizabeth Barrett-Zahn.  She wrote an article entitled, “Inspired by Nature: Biomimicry.”

    Biomimicry is a powerful approach to designing and engineering sustainable solutions by taking inspiration from nature.

    http://k12science.net/biomimicry/

    Reports from the Front Lines

    • Moving
    • Prepping for new teachers

    The Social Web

    Erik M. Francis@Maverikedu12

    NEW FOR 2023-2024! Depth of Knowledge IS NOT a taxonomy! It could serve as a multitiered systems of support #MTSS for delivering instruction, responding to intervention & extending #learning. Each #DOK level functions as an #RTI@solutiontree  http://solutiontree.com/truedok #rtiaw

    Dad Jokes! @dadgivesjokes

    Did you hear that NASA is about to launch a new mission to say sorry to aliens for Earth polluting space? It’s called Apollo G

    Matt Miller   @jmattmiller

    UNBOXING VIDEOSto show what they know Add some FUN to your video activities! Example unboxing videos to watch Downloadable student planning guide 20 video activity ideas Microsoft Flip tips http://ditchthattextbook.com/unboxing  #ditchbook

    Cian McCarthy  @arealmofwonder

    Words for the Weekend 

    Susie Dent  @susie_dent

    Word of the day is ‘gadwaddick’ (19th century): to go on a merry jaunt.

    Todd Finley  @finleyt

    8 Classroom Ice Breakers  | Brain Blast #teachers #classroom #backtoschool #principalchat #ukedchat #students #firstdayofschool

    Jim Thompson  @Schoolguy

    In lieu of an “icebreaker” to launch the new school year..think about having each grade or team in your building have time to share, put their accomplishments together, share them with colleagues, students, parents and the community. Would celebrate teacher voice !  

    Dr. Catlin Tucker  @Catlin_Tucker

     Looking for fun ways to help students get to know each other? Check out this fun slide deck activity! https://catlintucker.com/2019/08/fun-with-frayer

    Kristen Engle  @MsEngleTeach

    Replying to @JulieSHasson

    At least from my experience, this has been a fun icebreaker activity to do with students and teachers, faculty, and staff!  https://t.co/eYTRHJcVTQ  

    Mrs. Lammey_Art @JenLammey

    My A1 class is awesome. There are a lot of seniors in there and they were game for the silly icebreakers. I already had a new student excited to show me her personal art. Here are some adorable pigs from the pig personality test!  https://www.csap.org/fall_meeting_files/Fall2012/Personality-Test.pdf 

    Strategies:  

    Teaching the Long-Term Value of Annotation

    Annotation can be a difficult and stressful process for high school students and educators alike. It’s an essential skill across subject areas, something we expect students to just do, but rarely do we actually teach them how. Students don’t understand how to annotate and, more often than not, why it would be a useful tool in the first place. 

    https://www.edutopia.org/article/teaching-annotation-high-school/

    Resources:  

    EduAide

    We offer teachers a set of Ai tools to express their creativity, cultivate their expertise, and align educational planning with what works for their students. We provide infrastructure for a new way of sourcing educational resources.

    https://www.eduaide.ai/

    Add annotations to your presentations in Google Slides

    We’re introducing a feature that lets you highlight or emphasize key content while you present in Google Slides. With the new pen tool, you can circle, underline, draw connections or make quick notes directly on your presentation. 

    Whether in a board meeting or a brainstorming session, annotations can help make your presentations more engaging, interactive and impactful. 

    https://workspaceupdates.googleblog.com/2023/08/add-annotations-to-your-presentations.html

    Tome

    From your mind to theirs, in fewer steps.

    Tome is a new medium for shaping & sharing ideas.

    *There is a Free level for Tome for individuals. 

    https://tome.app/

    MIT Press’s Direct to Open (D2O) achieves second year goal, opens access to eighty-two new books in 2023

    https://mitpress.mit.edu/mit-presss-direct-to-open-d2o-achieves-second-year-goal-opens-access-to-eighty-two-new-books-in-2023/

    Lego Instructions

    Created on May 29, 2023, the Internet Archive’s LEGO Building Instructions collection contains “a dump of all available building instruction booklet PDFs from the LEGO website” as of March 2023, according to the description on the site.

    https://archive.org/details/lego-set-instructions?tab=collection

    The Action Mindset Workbook for Teens

    When you think about the future, are you consumed by fear and self-doubt? Do you feel stuck in your life? Does your inability to move forward cause increased anxiety, sadness, or insecurity? It’s easy to avoid or withdraw from the situations that make you anxious or worried—it can feel safer at the time—but the fact is, until you find a way to confront discomfort head on and take action anyway, you’ll remain stuck in a cycle of disappointment and frustration. So, how can you break free, get unstuck, and fully embrace life?  

    https://www.amazon.com/dp/1648480462?psc=1&ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_product_details

    AMLE Early Career Educators Membership

    “At AMLE, we know it is essential to our mission to support early career educators. We also know what a challenge those initial years in the classroom can be. That’s why we’re launching a membership specifically for early career educators designed to help them to thrive.

    Launching in August, 2023 the new membership category is open to any first year teacher, or in their first year of teaching students aged 10-15. It is offered without charge and provides:

    • All of the benefits of professional membership, including the Successful Middle School Online Course Series
    • A print subscription to Middle School Journal
    • Access to the forthcoming AMLE Early Career Teacher Support Network, including monthly cohort check-ins moderated by a veteran teacher
    • The opportunity to be paired with a trained AMLE mentor
    • Additional discounts in the AMLE Store and on registration for events and conference

    https://www.amle.org/early-career-educators/

    AXIS The Culture Translator

    Chef’s Kiss

    What it is: Physical gestures that originated on TikTok have become an integral part of how Gen Z communicates in real life.

    A Shorts Story

    What it is: YouTube’s TikTok competitor, Shorts, is gaining traction—and, The Wall Street Journal argues, limiting attention spans.  Anecdotally, some parents have noted that short-form content is harder for their teens to disengage from, and researchers worry that users with developing brains will be impacted long-term by shorter attention spans. As of this writing, parents can’t disable Shorts content within the YouTube app or set a time limit just for Shorts, though some third-party plug-ins do have the ability to block them.  

    Web Spotlight: 

    Wonders of Street View

    Random wonderfulness of the world. 

    https://neal.fun/wonders-of-street-view/

    That Nick Powers Guy

    https://www.thatnickpowersguy.com/

    What Major Web Sites Looked LIke

    https://mashable.com/article/90s-web-design

    Vape Pens that Look Like Highligters

    https://highlightvape.com/

    Random Thoughts . . .  

    Cursive is Optional?

    https://www.legislature.mi.gov/(S(o1mtosjkkjtnj2kskxluqdok))/mileg.aspx?page=smartlink&objectname=2023-HB-4064

    Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

    MSM 593: The Exact Right Size to Not Be Useful

    Summary:

    Shawn and Troy are back after a break. Dave has a total MEGA movie that eclipses all others (and you can get involved). 

    Jokes:  

    I’m looking at the periodic table and there is no element of surprise.


    What kind of music is best for a fishing trip?

    • Something catchy.

    What do you do with dirty nuts and bolts?

    • Get a washer.

    Can you name the six senses? The first five are easy:

    Sight.
    Smell.
    Taste.
    Hearing.
    Touch.

    But most people forget about Humor.


    Guy driving a truck with an attached trailer hauling pigs zoomed by me earlier.

    • Now that’s pulled pork.

    Never ask a contortionist to tell you a joke

    • They have a twisted sense of humor.

    My back goes out more than I do.


    Middle School Science Minute  

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

    Megamovie 2024

    I was recently reading the July/August 2023 issue of “Science Scope” a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.  In this issue, I read the “Citizen Science” column, written by Jill Nugent.  She wrote an article entitled, “Megamovie 2024: A Project to Eclipse All Others.”

    The primary goal of the Eclipse Megamovie Project 2017 was to produce a high definition, time-expanded, video of the total solar eclipse that crossed North America from the northwest to the southeast on August 21, 2017.  With new knowledge in-hand they are ready to initiate Eclipse Megamovie 2024.  The goals are to characterize transient plasma features in the solar corona while improving the quality of the Eclipse Megamovie aesthetically.  For more information, please visit:

    https://eclipsemegamovie.org/megamovie

    Reports from the Front Lines

    • Summer Projects
    • Prep for the upcoming year
    • Social Studies Enrichment
    • Classes for Recertification
    • Moving update

    The Social Web

    Susie Dent @susie_dent

    Word of the day is ‘ingordigious’ (17th century): motivated primarily by greed.  

    I’ve always loved the way language is punctuated by places: jeans are ‘from Genoa’, denim is from Nîmes in France, suede from Sweden, mayonnaise from Minorca’s Port Mahon, damask from Damascus, sardines and sardonic from Sardinia, and spruce (both the tree and a neat appearance) from Prussia.  

    Alice Keeler  @alicekeeler

    Did you know that Khan Academy offers a free course on animation from Pixar? Join the fun with Pixar in a Box at https://khanacademy.org/computing/pixar

    Monte Syrie  @MonteSyrie

    When my (former) principal literally pulled my projector screen up to make sure I had a learning target during a walkthrough (despite the live, kick-ass learning experience going on in front of him), I quit learning targets. Oh, I post them, but they’re not for us. #playthegame

    Richard Byrne  @rmbyrne

    How to Generate Concept Maps With Artificial Intelligence

    Richard Byrne  @rmbyrne

    Three Good Tools for Recording Brainstorming Sessions https://freetech4teachers.com/2023/07/three- 

    Shottr  @shottr_cc

    Shottr v1.7 is officially out! Meet freehand drawing, spotlight tool, text highlighter, and image resizer

    Cian McCarthy @arealmofwonder

    Words for the Weekend  Pick your winner  A B C D (Follow for more)

    Pixton @Pixton

    Create a personalized classroom banner with your new students’ avatars in the first week of school!! They’ll absolutely love seeing their pictures up on the wall  Once you’re in the class on the Pixton site, go to Printables > Themed Avatars > Print All 

    Matt Miller   @jmattmiller

    Looking for some creative digital projects for the end of the semester? Check out some of these ideas: Annotated Wakelet collection Digital storytelling A podcast series … and more! http://ditchthattextbook.com/10-ideas-for-digital-end-of-semester-final-projects/

    #DitchBook

    Strategies:  

    Gamification

    https://ditchthattextbook.com/gamification/

    Resources:  

    AXIS The Culture Translator

    Who Are They Talking To?

    What it is: Light language is a style of speaking that claims to channel vibrations and communicate with beings not from earth. Posts that feature #lightlanguage are trending, with 237 million views on TikTok.

    IJBOL

    What it is: A new acronym is taking the place of “LOL” and “ROFL.” The replacement? “IJBOL,” short for “I just burst out laughing.”

    Slang of the Week

    Beige Flag: If green flags are positive things someone brings to a relationship and red flags are the negative things, then it would make some sense that “beige flag” would be the boring things someone brings to the relationship. Apparently, that’s what the term was originally supposed to mean, but browse #beigeflag on TikTok, and you’ll see that “beige flag” has morphed to mean the odd (often cute) habits or idiosyncrasies an individual has. Some examples of “beige flags” include thinking black clothes are all “goth” and not being able to eat without spilling food on yourself. The term seems to be most frequently used by baffled girlfriends trying to understand the weird things their boyfriends do.

    Acronymy

    Can we define every word as an acronym?

    https://acronymy.net/

    Skype A Scientist

    https://www.skypeascientist.com/

    Web Spotlight: 

    Random Thoughts . . .  

    Tech in Education

    Should all teachers teach technology?

    https://troypatterson.me/2023/08/11/tech-in-education/

    Click the Play button below to listen to the show!

    MSM 592:  Scrolling Like A Boomer

    Summary:

    Shawn and Troy talk about summer, microphones, ChatGPT, and more. Dave shines the light on the Great Eclipse of 2024.

    Jokes:  

    Do you think it’s strange that my daughter talks about Cheers characters

    • or is that the Norm?

    “Have you noticed any patterns with your balding?” asked my doctor.

    • “Yes,” I replied, “whenever it happens I look in the mirror and have a little cry.”

    What did the southern math-focused acorn say when he grew up?

    • “Gee, Ah’m a tree!”

    The dictionary publishing facility burned down overnight.

    • Locals are at a loss for words.

    John’s coffee table book about renovated basements has made the best cellar list.


    Little Johnny had a chance in band to switch from bass drum to trumpet.

    • But he blew it.

    John fell asleep at the hobby table with his face on his jigsaw tiles.

    He woke up with a puzzled look on his face.


    A new club that assembles wooden furniture has been formed.

    • I hope they let me join.

    I tried to apologize to Sharon for saying her skin felt a bit leathery today but she is not suede.


    Looking to hire someone to be in charge of my TV controls.

    • Must work remotely.

    In his whole life, Caesar never once said “Thank you.”

    • He also didn’t speak English.

    Middle School Science Minute  

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

    K12Science Podcast:  Solar Eclipse 2024

    I was recently reading the July/August 2023 issue of “Science Scope” a publication of the National Science Teaching Association.  

    In this issue, I read the “Commentary” column, written by Kurtz Miller.  He wrote an article entitled, “Preparing for the Great American Eclipse of 2024.”

    The Great American Eclipse of 2024 will pass across the United States on Monday, April 8, 2024, from Eagle Pass, Texas to Presque Isle, Maine.  It is important to consider how to prepare for this upcoming event.

    http://k12science.net/solar-eclipse-2024/

    Reports from the Front Lines

    • Books To Read:
      • Lead From Where You Are
      • 10 Mindframes for Leaders
    • Microphones

    The Social Web

    𝐂𝐡𝐫𝐢𝐬𝐭𝐨𝐩𝐡𝐞𝐫 𝐇𝐚𝐫𝐫𝐢𝐬   @Principal_H

    Good teaching is ¼ preparation and ¾ theatre. #education #teacher #leadership #school #autism #sped #teachertwitter #twitteredu #fridaymorning

    Eric Curts  @ericcurts

     Google begins to roll out NotebookLM – https://blog.google/technology/ai/notebooklm-google-ai/

     Train the AI on your own Google Docs  Get summaries, ask questions, generate ideas  Great potential for students working with class notes & content #edtech #GoogleEDU 

    Larry Ferlazzo  @Larryferlazzo

    This site provides short descriptions of every kind of known writing system developed by humans https://worldswritingsystems.org

    Alice Keeler  @alicekeeler

    Quick and Dirty: start a lesson plan with STUDENTS thinking. 5 E’s lesson plan: Engage, Explore, EXPLAIN, Extend, Evaluate

    Lizisthemeanestmom  @Lizb7Rawlins

    Educators, what are some quick and easy ways you keep your families engaged in what is happening in the classroom? I set myself up with the goal to make positive phone contact with each parent each week, but I couldn’t keep up.

    AMLE@AMLE

    Ready to hit the ground running his school year? Check out some of AMLE’s most popular #B2S workshops, like:  Onboarding new #middleschool parents  The changing young adolescent  Teaming & Advisory program development & more!

    Toby Price  @jedipadmaster

    Principals … here’s an awesome ice breaker your teachers are guaranteed to love…it’s called “Go work in your classroom.” #edutwitter

    Susie Dent  @susie_dent

    My regular reminder that to be ‘thunderplumped’ is to be soaked to the skin in seconds by a heavy downpour.  Resistentialism is the belief that inanimate objects are out to get you (in case anyone is having a morning like mine).

    Strategies:  

    Google Bard

    You can now access Bard in new languages and countries, customize responses, add images to your prompts and more.

    Interact with Bard in new places and languages

    Starting today, you can collaborate with Bard in over 40 languages, including Arabic, Chinese, German, Hindi and Spanish. 

    Get more customized responses

    Listen to responses

    Easily adjust Bard’s responses – You can now change the tone and style of Bard’s responses to five different options: simple, long, short, professional or casual.

    Boost your productivity

    Pin and rename conversations

    Share responses with friends

    Use images in your prompts – Whether you want more information about an image or just need help coming up with a caption, you can now upload images with prompts and Bard will analyze the photo to help. This feature is now live in English, and we’ll expand to new languages soon.

    https://blog.google/products/bard/google-bard-new-features-update-july-2023/

    Resources:  

    Scam Spotter

    According to the FTC, consumers reported losing more than $8.8 billion to fraud in 2022, a 44% increase over the prior year.

    https://scamspotter.org/

    Magnetic Poetry

    You could also have kids create these themselves. 

    http://magneticpoetryplayonline.com/ 

    World In Data

    https://ourworldindata.org/

    https://ourworldindata.org/teaching

    AXIS The Culture Translator

    Looking Like a Snack 

    What it is: Loaded snack plates dubbed “girl dinner” are being posted on TikTok and Instagram.  Start the conversation: What would be on your ideal snack plate?  

    Thumbscrollers 

    What it is: A survey from the makers of mobile game Candy Crush indicates that younger people are embarrassed to use their index fingers to scroll on their phones.  Start the conversation: Have you ever noticed who scrolls with their thumb and who scrolls with their index finger? Why do you think it’s different across generations?    

    OER:  Go Open Michigan

    Welcome to #GoOpen Michigan. Explore our library of open education resources and join a network of Michigan educators who are dedicated to using high quality, openly-licensed educational resources. 

    https://goopenmichigan.org/

    HERE IS A LIST OF GAMES CHATGPT SAYS IT CAN PLAY WITH ELLS TO HELP THEM LEARN ENGLISH

    https://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/2023/07/11/here-is-a-list-of-games-chatgpt-says-it-can-play-with-ells-to-help-them-learn-english/

    Web Spotlight: 

    Michigan Electronic Library

    Curated library resources. You’ll need an EBSCO account, Michigan local library card, or a Michigan Driver’s License.  Sorry Maine* . . . 

    https://www.mel.org/welcome   

    * Check your statewide library (and local library), there are now lots of resources. 

    Random Thoughts . . .  

    Click the Play button below to listen to the show!