PowerPoint – TeacherTECH
Posted by Michael Senise on 9th July 2009
The following are tutorial files for animation, movies, and sound:
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Posted by Michael Senise on 9th July 2009
The following are tutorial files for animation, movies, and sound:
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Posted by Michael Senise on 19th May 2009
Edublogs is a free blogging software for education. Here are some useful links:
Getting Started with Edublogs – Contains manuals, workshop resources, tips for using with students, reasons to blog with students, and support videos
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Posted by Michael Senise on 14th May 2009
TeacherTECH Moodle Course containing links to tutorials and information on how to implement Moodle in your classroom. See link below:
Additional links for Moodle I course:
Enrolling Students in Your Moodle Course
My colleagues and I have written many tutorials on how to use Moodle. They are at the following link:
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Posted by Michael Senise on 14th May 2009
Links to Picasa:
Picasa and Picasa Web Albums Help
Great ideas presented in the following link about how to use digital cameras in education:
Strategies for Increasing Student Achievement Using Digital Cameras
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Posted by Michael Senise on 16th April 2009
Links:
How to Use Comic Life in the Classroom (courtesy of Charles Thacker, TechEd)
Workshop Description
What is Comic Life?
Comic Life is an award winning application for creating not just comics, but also annotated images,
dynamic photo albums, greeting cards, scrap books, story books, and instruction guides and brochures.
In the classroom, it is an excellent tool for creating reports of almost any kind. Comic Life allows you to
create page layouts with boxes for images and text. Styles can be applied to create just about any type
of ‘feel’ for your document. Captions can be created with tails in order to have thought balloons, speech
boxes or just additional annotations. Filters are available to turn your digital images into a variety of hand
drawn looking graphics to enhance the comic appearance of your work.
In the classroom, there are many curricular connections including: vocabulary, storytelling, storyboarding and much more! This workshop will provide examples of how Comic Life is used to engage students, as well as lesson plans including planning sheets, graphic organizers, rubrics and more. Of course, there will be plenty of hands on time for you to create your own comics and learn the software!
Comic Life is compatible with both Windows and Mac platforms.
How to Use Comic Life in the Classroom
(courtesy of Charles, Thacker, TechEd- http://www.macinstruct.com/node/69)
There’s a long history of comics in the classroom. While there’s still resistance to this medium being used in education – whether by staff or students – there is also a growing movement to use every valuable tool available.
Comics have some great uses in the classroom and in a variety of curricula. From pre-readers to high school students, from English to ESL to Science and Math, comics can help students analyze, synthesize and absorb content that may be more difficult when presented in only one way.
Why Comics in the Classroom?
For the pre-reader, a comic can be purely graphical in nature and help provide practice with sequencing as well as concrete to abstract transitions using illustrations instead of written words. The written component of a comic can be introduced when the early readers are ready to connect words with images. Comics can help early readers or readers with language acquisition problems by providing visual clues to the context of the narrative.
For more advanced readers, comics can contain all the complexity of ‘normal’ written material which the student must decode and comprehend, such as puns, alliteration, metaphors, symbolism, point of view, context, inference, and narrative structures. A comic can also be a stepping-stone to more complex and traditional written work. A single pane in a comic can represent paragraphs worth of written material in a manner that is enjoyable and effective for the early or challenged reader.
Comics also have the ability to meet the needs of students in a variety of learning styles. Tom Hart illustrates how comics addressmany of Howard Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences in this short article. I strongly recommend that you read through the articles in the reference section below as many others have covered the concept of comics in education in far more detail than I do here.
Using Comic Life to Facilitate Student Participation
With the time educators have for research and professional reading becoming increasingly scarce, I know that a quick ‘What can I do with this tomorrow in class?’ concept must be presented. For this, I will select an example (the book report) that is simple and quick to implement, although there are far more effective uses of comics in the classroom.
We have staff using Comic Life to facilitate student participation in assignments that traditionally would have been written assignments with little to no imagery included. The book report is a classic example of how Comic Life can breath new life into an old assignment.
Often dreaded by students (including myself), the book report is a staple of the classroom for several reasons. First, it provides a way to evaluate whether or not a student has read the assigned material. It also allows a student to show how they synthesize and analyze information contained in written material. Depending on the course requiring the report, this may include character and plot analysis, thematic content, purpose, story development, historical reference, and personal evaluation or judgment.
The book reports we often see in classes are, well, boring. Comic Life can help students create reports that are interesting to themselves and the class – reports that are fun to create and share. The paneled interface of a comic lends itself to breaking larger concepts into smaller, easily digested ideas that can be strung together in a coherent and entertaining way. Creating the imagery used in the comic can draw a student into the story or character in a way that a written report simply can’t.
Use Comic Life to help break down complex ideas and to create entertaining content for material that can sometimes be dull. Here are some assignment ideas that lend themselves to the use of Comic Life:
* Timelines (history, events, sequences)
* Historical figures (history of, life of)
* Instructions (step by step, details, illustrations, easy to follow)
* Dialogue punctuation
* Character analysis
* Plot analysis
* Storytelling
* Pre-Writing Tool
* Post-Reading Tool
* Teaching Onomatopoeias
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Posted by Michael Senise on 15th April 2009
Links to Podcasts and Online Videos
Innovative Video in Education Awards Videos (IVIE) (Choose Gallery drop down menu to see videos)
Help and Resources
Storyboarding Templates and Resources:
Below is a link to the Moodle course that contains helpful links and information on this topic.
Digital Video Production – Windows Movie Maker
Digital Video Production – Macintosh
Additional student files to organize content and storyboard movie. These were created by one of my colleagues and I am using them with permission:
Links to podcast hosting for education:
Calaxy at the K12 High Speed Network
Other Podcasting links:
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Posted by Michael Senise on 25th March 2009
Links to Online Resources for Google Docs
Workshop Overview
Google Docs is different and a great addition to any classroom!
Google Docs is an easy-to-use online word processor, spreadsheet and presentation editor that
enables you and your students to create, store and share instantly and securely, and collaborate online in
real time. You can create new documents from scratch or upload existing documents, spreadsheets and
presentations. There’s no software to download, and all your work is stored safely online and can be
accessed from any computer.
Revision is a critical piece of the writing process—and of your classroom curriculum. Now, Google Docs
has partnered with Weekly Reader’s Writing for Teens magazine to help you teach it in a meaningful and
practical way.
The sharing features of Google Docs enable you and your students to decide exactly who can access and
edit documents. You’ll find that Google Docs helps promote group work and peer editing skills, and that it helps to fulfill
the stated goal of The National Council of Teachers of English, which espouses writing as a process and encourages multiple
revisions and peer editing.
In this workshop, you will learn the basics of Goodle Docs, as well as tips and tricks for using it in the classroom with
your students.
How Students and Teachers can use Google Docs
Teachers are using Google Docs both to publish announcements about upcoming assignments and to monitor student progress
via an interactive process which allows you to give guidance when it might be of maximum benefit – while your student is still
working on an assignment. Through the revisions history, you can see clearly who contributed to what assignment and when; if a
student says he or she worked on a given project over the last two weeks, it will be documented (no more “dog ate my homework” excuses).
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Posted by Michael Senise on 11th March 2009
Links:
Download Audacity – http://audacity.sourceforge.net/download/
Download LAME MP3 Encoder - http://audacity.sourceforge.net/help/faq?s=install&item=lame-mp3
Audacity Help – http://audacity.sourceforge.net/help/
Music – http://freeplaymusic.com
CCMixter – Creative Commons Music Site – http://ccmixter.org/shannon-hurley
Workshop Description
Audacity is a free, open source, audio recording and editing tool, which can engage students in
the process of learning. We find that when students are required to produce a product that will be
published to their peers, they more readily perfect and edit that product thus learning the content more
deeply. By having the student produce a product using Audacity, such as a podcast, book talk, journal,
voice over, poem, or news broadcast, you will be able to more actively engage them in learning and help
them to solidify content-related memories. As a teacher, you can also engage your students more fully by
using audio in the classroom whether it is to produce a class Podcast of your lectures, record audio based
quiz questions and answers for English Language Learners, create audio-based instructions for students,
or record audio for upcoming school announcements, just to name a few. Come and learn how to increase
student engagement and provide an alternative means for you and your students to communicate using this tool.
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Posted by Michael Senise on 10th March 2009
The following is the link to the TeacherTECH Moodle III Course:
http://education.sdsc.edu/teachertech/community/ttmoodle/course/view.php?id=141
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Posted by Michael Senise on 9th March 2009
CMAP Tools is great open source software to make graphically organize concepts and thinking. It can be located on the web at http://cmap.ihmc.us/conceptmap.html.
It can be downloaded at http://cmap.ihmc.us/download/
The help resources, which can be located from the CMAP Tools help menu are excellent and walk a user through step by step using both pictures and words.
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