November, 01 2009
Flickr? Quizlet? WordSift? Chalksite? Delicious? Slidestory? ArtRage? Photo sharing? Wikis? Mind Maps? Podcasting? Screencapture?
—If you find yourself responding, “it’s Greek to me” about any of the above, this is a great place to begin your adventures with online educational tools. Anna Miller, of OnlineDegree.net (a clearinghouse of information about online degree programs) provides a page of links with concise descriptions of 100 tools for teachers, divided into categories: Interactivity, Engagement, Motivation, Empowerment, and Differentiation. You’re definitely going to want to bookmark this one!
March 23, 2012 - It was once proposed, by someone who liked our work, that it was Lincoln Center Institute’s (LCI’s) mission to “build ...
March 15, 2012 - Imagine: How Creativity Works, the new book by Jonah Lehrer, the best-selling author of 2007’s Proust Was a Neuroscientist, will ...
March 02, 2012 - We’ve all heard the advice, “Think outside the box,” but now, thanks to a team of researchers, the cliché takes ...
February 24, 2012 - In three weeks, more than 10,000 North American educators will converge on the Hilton New York for WNET’s seventh annual ...
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