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NETS for Teachers
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TPCK for Technology Integration
Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPCK) attempts to capture some of the essential qualities of <a class="WikiLink" id="p-7631a6586157c294aa699e0dcfa6247009df9eb5" href="http://tpck.pbwiki.com/knowledge">knowledge</a> required by teachers for technology integration in their teaching, while addressing the complex, multifaceted and situated nature of <a class="WikiLink" id="p-1c3a09d9d8f9a2f36c4a6a96334e9cb8c8b73a34" href="http://tpck.pbwiki.com/teacher%20knowledge">teacher knowledge</a>. At the heart of the TPCK framework, is the complex interplay of three primary forms of knowledge: <a class="WikiLink" id="p-04a7e13fcccc9ce90d762d5ad9c4442057ac593b" href="http://tpck.pbwiki.com/Content%20%28C%29">Content (C)</a>, <a class="WikiLink" id="p-5130be6af8b735c398544ec6c4e19f0e33182732" href="http://tpck.pbwiki.com/Pedagogy%20%28P%29">Pedagogy (P)</a>, and <a class="WikiLink" id="p-24908791cfef8217a8a27816741bc46d8da4b717" href="http://tpck.pbwiki.com/Technology%20%28T%29">Technology (T)</a>.
always learning » The Perfect Match: Technology Integration and Understanding by Design
To me, technology facilitator isn’t just about bringing technology into the core classrooms, it’s about the process - the process of learning how to plan a new unit in a new way, using new tools…
» How Scoble Reads 622 RSS Feeds Each Morning
7 Things You Should Know About...
<p>The EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative's (ELI's) <em>7 Things You Should Know About...</em> series provides concise information on emerging learning technologies and related practices. Each brief focuses on a single technology or practice and describes:</p>
<ul>
<li>What it is</li>
<li>How it works</li>
<li>Where it is going</li>
<li>Why it matters to teaching and learning</li></ul>
Engagement Theory: A framework for technology-based teaching and learning
The fundamental idea underlying engagement theory is that students must be meaningfully engaged in learning activities through interaction with others and worthwhile tasks.
Bill Kerr: what did the printing press change and how quickly did those changes happen?
the book ushered in a whole new way of thinking - scientific thinking<br><br>How quickly did those changes happen?
Internet breathes life into dying languages | Lifestyle | Reuters
"To put it into perspective only two to four percent of the world's botanical and zoological species are in serious danger, whereas it's 50 percent of languages. The language crisis hasn't attracted the same degree of public awareness".
So Who Exactly IS Coming to Dinner? (Take the Survey) : Bump on the Blog
Educating the Net Generation | Resources | EDUCAUSE
Who's Coming to Dinner - Survey Says! : Bump on the Blog
CASTLE - School Tech Leadership
Kapp Notes: So Far to Go: A Local School Board Candidate Armed with Mis-Information
The Four Eyed Technologist » Blog Archive » CATER becomes Bloggers’ Cafe
xtimeline - Explore and Create Free Timelines
It’s not plagiarism, it’s an easy essay « Learn Online
Scissors and Cell Phones (Techlearning blog)
Informal Learning Blog :: Generation gap: birth age versus media age
Inspirational Teenager « HeyJude
brynnafred » Blog Archive » “640K ought to be enough for anybody.” — Bill Gates, 1981
YouTube - Content Aware Image Resizing
2¢ Worth » Teachers & Technology — a rant!
For several years, many of us have been trying to make a case for thinking about education in new ways, largely as a result of technological advancements and their affects on how we use information. I think that many education leaders are listening now. I think that they are ready for clear images and stories about 21st century classrooms and what teachers and students should be doing to better prepare a generation of new century citizens.
I almost lost it when I read, in Cheryl Oats’ comment, “<em>..someone told me they didn’t want to learn one more new thing, they didn’t like new things..</em>“ I would want to ask, “You call yourself a teacher?” Who more than teachers should be willing and eager to learn new things?
edublogs: The cult of the amateur and how internet changes our culture
Heck, as an absolute amateur in everything I do I've noticed that, in this day and age, being expert is not about getting more and more knowledgeable about a narrower and narrower field. It's all about being as clued up on the reasoning behind a wider and wider range of fields. Expertise has been redefined. It's just that academics like Keen have trouble swallowing it. There, folks, is the real digital divide.
NKY.Com - Teacher adapts to technology
"The creativity it brings to all of us is remarkable," said Schlachter, who teaches fourth- and fifth-graders at St. Catherine of Siena School. "I'm teaching in a totally different way as a result."
No Significant Difference And Distance Education :: Distance-Educator.com's Daily News :: Technology, Teaching, News, Research
It is not whether we can meet the same learning outcomes
<br>
with technology, but how do we use the technologies to enrich the experience, to go beyond what can be done in the face-to-face or other delivery environment.
» Thought(s) for the Day Di’s E-learning Experience
<p><font color="#0000ff">“The Reality is</font></p>
<p><font color="#ff6600"></font><font color="#0000ff">Learning has changed…… from being about reality….. to verifying reality…… to creating reality.”</font></p>
<p><font color="#ff6600"></font><font color="#0000ff">Stephen Downes, <em><a href="http://www.downes.ca/presentation/170" title="Kaliedoscope of Future Learning" onclick="javascript:urchinTracker ('/outbound/article/www.downes.ca');">A Kaleidoscope of Futures: Reflections on the Reality of Virtual Learning.</a></em></font></p>
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.