Kathy Schrock's Home Page - Navigating Primary Source Materials on the Internet
Blog posts
eSchool News online - School laptop program begets writing gains
Laptops make it easier for students to edit their copy and make changes without getting writer's cramp, he said. As a result, students are writing and revising their work more frequently, which leads to better results. And it's important, Silvernail said, that those skills translated when the test was taken with pen and paper, too.
"It's just a lot easier to edit, to self-critique. Our teachers engage students in a lot of peer editing. Not only are they helping themselves, but they're helping each other as they get to their final projects," Rebar said.
Around the Corner v2 - MGuhlin.net - Read/Write Web
Students tell universities: Get out of MySpace! | Students | EducationGuardian.co.uk
Online spaces are blurring, as universities that podcast and text their students have shown. The Jisc project manager, Lawrie Phipps, explains how the battle lines are being drawn: "Students really do want to keep their lives separate. They don't want to be always available to their lecturers or bombarded with academic information."
The Ed Techie: The VLE/LMS is dead
Half an Hour: Kirschner, Sweller, Clark (2006) - Readings
Half an Hour: Kirschner, Sweller, Clark (2006) - Summary
How Long Does it Take? Estimation Methods for Developing E-Learning
The National Academies Press Home Page
Resources for Teaching Middle School Science
Free Learning and Control Learning: On the So-Called Failure of Constructivist, Discovery, Problem-Based, Experiential, and Inquiry-Based Teaching » SlideShare
Scaffolding and Achievement in Problem-Based and Inquiry Learning
A response to the Kirschner, Sweller, & Clark article, specifically focused on demonstrating that problem based learning and inquiry learning are highly scaffolded, not "minimally guided." Research is cited showing the effectiveness of PBL.
Using audio narration in elearning » Making Change
flickrCC
Search for Creative Commons images on Flickr and edit in Picnik right from the search
Find free images online - my list! « HeyJude
blog of proximal development » Blog Archive » Conversation with Pre-Service Teachers - Teacher as Learner
And so, the challenge is that when I try to divest myself of my teacherly voice I need to remember that this process is not about losing the voice of the expert but about losing the voice of the traditional authoritarian teacher who enters the classroom as an official persona armed with a pre-defined set of goals and very specific lesson plans for his students to follow. It is about giving the students the freedom to engage with ideas that they find relevant and interesting, not about dictating every step of their learning process.
I believe that it is important to lose the authoritarian voice, the controlling voice, but not the voice of an expert who chose to teach because of his passion for the subject. The students need to see that the instructor is someone who lives and breathes whatever it is that they’re studying, that they have in their midst someone who has a wealth of expertise.
Society for Cinema & Media Studies - Fair Use Statement
A List Apart: Articles: How to Size Text in CSS
3 Sure-Fire Ways to Make Your E-Learning Graphics Sizzle - The Rapid eLearning Blog
Using Images in E-learning - Chapter 1 - Teaching Strategies - Summary - Print Version
Famous Quotes: Educational Quotes for the 21st Century
AAME : Raw History Lesson Plan: Using Primary Sources; The Domestic Slave Trade, Runaway Journeys
Teacher Lesson Plan - Twain's Hannibal
The Galileo Project | Science | Susnpot Drawings
Exploring Primary Sources
EIU/SIUE Teaching With Primary Sources Newsletter
eLearn: So You Want to Be an E-learning Consultant...
Beyond the Glass Ceiling: Telecommuting Lowers Job Stress, Especially For Women
In the Middle of the Curve: Spit-Takes and Good News
eLearn: Case Studies - The Reluctant Online Professor
As it turned out, this was one of the best courses, online or onsite, I have ever taught. Not only did I witness enormous engagement among almost all of the students, but the level of learning was much higher than in previous years.
The feedback from the students on the course was very positive, better than I had received for the onsite course in previous years. One of my favorite written student comments was, "… I don't know how this course could be taught as effectively in the classroom."