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Monday, March 21, 2022
45 Next Generation Learning Tools That Kids Will Love
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
10 Technology Skills Every Educator Should Have
This past January I wrote "10 Tech Skills Every Student Should Have" and I have decided to modify it for the "10 Tech Skills Every Educator Should Have". Here's my list.
Overall, educators need to understand some basics about technology and that it is not a be-all-end-all solution to everything in a classroom. Technology can help teachers differentiate and provide new experiences for their students. Technology can also help students better understand a concept and provide extra help for them. Educators need to start with good pedagogy and lesson objectives and activities and then look for technology that can enhance those lessons, improve teaching and learning, and help students learn.
The How's, Why's and Value of Educational Technology
1. Internet Search and Research - educators need to know how to do a proper internet search, using search terms and modifiers. This skill is needed for school, work and life in general. They also need to be able to teach proper internet search skills to their students, no matter what class they are teaching. They need to know where to find scholarly and peer-reviewed materials to use.
Tips on Better Searches (from Google)
Infographic on Better Searches
Common Craft Video on Web Search Strategies
UPDATED thanks to a great comment below.
2.
Evernote for Education - take notes, clip from the web, upload files, and much more
Google for Education - Docs, calendar, tasks, email, and much more
3. Self learning of tech and where to go for help - knowing how to search a help menu on software or hardware, where to go to find user forums for help, and where to find the manual for technology is a huge skill that many do not know about. I am amazed at how many educators don't know where to go for help, outside of asking another teacher. This goes along with internet search also - being able to find what you need to help you figure out how to do something.
Free Tech Tips and Help
TechEase - technology tips
Online Tech Tips - hardware, software, and more
Tech Support help
4. Finding Free Resources and Sources of Funding for Technology - budgets are constantly shrinking and teachers need to make due with less. Knowing how to find funding for technology or find free technology is very important. It's also important to look at different ways of providing technology in schools, whether it is through computer labs, 1-1 laptops, or Bring Your Own Device (students bring own tech). This skill can help teachers, schools, and districts save money in certain areas (apps and services) to have more money for other areas (hardware).
Why do schools still pay so much for software? Free alternatives to paid software and services.
DonorsChoose - get materials for your classroom project funded
Tips for saving money and finding free resources for school
5. Social Media - how to properly use social media for school and work, how to protect yourself on it, the issues of cyberbullying, connecting with others in your profession (PLN). Many educators are use social media for their personal life, but not enough are using it in their professional life. I learn so much from Twitter and Google+ because of the people and web sites I follow there. This goes along with number 3 - self learning. I get more "professional development" out of a week of participating in social media than I have in 10 years of traditional professional development. Educators need to get online as part of their profession.
Twitter, Google+, Facebook comparison
Twitter, Facebook, RSS, Email, Google+ - tips on use
Facebook and Google+ security and privacy
Common Craft Video on Social Media
Create a Personal Learning Network
UPDATED thanks to a great comment below.
6.
Netiquette - Wikipedia
7. Security and Safety - antivirus, spam, phishing, too much personal information sharing, stalkers, and more are all issues they need to know about. Educators need to be aware of this for their own protection, and to teach their students these important topics.
Internet Safety Resources
Google Family Safety Center
Google Good to Know online safety and internet data
Common Craft Video on Secure Passwords
8. Hardware basics and troubleshooting - knowing what different parts of technology are called, how to make minor fixes, and how to do basic troubleshooting for WiFi, networks, OS won't load, etc.
Free Tech Tips and Help
TechEase - technology tips
Online Tech Tips - hardware, software, and more
Tech Support help
9. Backup data - with all of the data that educators create for school and work, it is important to back it up and have access to it at any time. I deal with educators all the time who have lost their flash drive or had a flash drive die and never backed up their files somewhere else. The era of the flash drive is gone. Cloud computing it where it's at.
Backup your Data - tools and resources
Google Takeout - export your Google data
10. Finding apps and software - how to find, evaluate, and use apps for school and business. Also, how to find quality, free alternatives to paid software, apps and services. Part of this for educators includes not only finding apps and software, but making sure that they aren't using these just to use technology. The lesson objectives come first and then you can look for technology that can enhance the lesson or help students.
Quixey - Search engine for apps
Free Alternatives to Paid Software
Google Apps Resources
Free Apps
On device apps/software vs. web apps
SmartPhone Experts - apps, reviews, tech tips, and more for all smartphones
Bonus:
11. Copyright and Citing Sources - educators need to understand copyright laws and rules, how to cite a resource, and how to integrate someone else's work into their's properly. This is pretty timely considering that some educators have been stealing my blog work (along with other blogger's work) without following proper copyright procedures.
Taking the Mystery out of Copyright
Citation Help
What do you think are the top tech skills educators need to know?
Related:
My Favorite Resources for Students and Educators
Differentiating with Web 2.0 Technologies
Technology I use Everyday as an Educator
Unfettered by Stuff - or "Why I don't lug stuff home every night"
Google for Educators
Evernote for Educators
25 Free Resources from Discovery Education
Technology has Helped During Absences and Injuries
Tools to Go Paperless in School
Monday, March 5, 2012
Open Education Week is this week - connect, create, share Education Resources
This week is the first ever, Open Education Week (March 5 - 2012). The purpose is to "raise awareness of the open education movement and its impact on teaching and learning worldwide. Participation in all events and use of all resources is free an open to anyone."
Educators, for the most part, share resources with each other. You can see this on blogs, Twitter and Google+ every day. We know that we are all in this together and we need to help other educators help our students.
This site and movement want that sharing to expand to all educators.
Open education is about sharing, reducing barriers and increasing access in education. It includes free and open access to platforms, tools and resources in education (such as learning materials, course materials, videos of lectures, assessment tools, research, study groups, textbooks, etc.). Open education seeks to create a world in which the desire to learn is fully met by the opportunity to do so, where everyone, everywhere is able to access affordable, educationally and culturally appropriate opportunities to gain whatever knowledge or training they desire.
The Twitter hashtag for Open Education Week is #openeducationwk
The site has some great resources:
ABOUT OPEN EDUCATION page for introductory documents and videos.
Once you have a feel for what open education is, there are many ways you can participate in Open Education Week:
CONNECT……..Visit the DISCUSSION page often to see the continuing global conversation happening via blogs, Twitter and postings. Check out the EVENTS AND WEBINARS schedule and join in – participation is open to everyone.
COLLECT………Find out about the diversity of open education efforts around the world. Visit thePROJECTS area and learn about open education resources and open learning opportunities available to you now. Find out what people are saying HERE. Check out the RESOURCES tab for links to even more information.
CREATE……….The “open” in open education means that you can modify them, mix them together in new ways, add your own perspectives and share them back to the world. Find out how through some of the video PRESENTATIONS. Put your thoughts down in a tweet or blog, create a video, or post a research paper.
SHARE…………Tell people about your discoveries via Twitter using the hashtag #openeducationwk. You will be able to see the live Twitter feed on the HOMEPAGE. Share your blog with us (find out how HERE). Let people know that there’s a world of free and open educational opportunities available to them now. Share your thoughts with us in the FEEDBACK area.
CONNECT……….COLLECT……….CREATE……….SHARE……….
Google is also supporting the Open Educational Resources movement:
http://googleresearch.blogspot.com/2012/03/keeping-oer-mind-about-shared-resources.html
Join it. Connect, Collect, Create, and Share educational resources with other educators.
Monday, January 23, 2012
What's in your bag? What's in my educator bag - conferences, etc.
I only carry my smart phone (Droid Incredible 2) with me. Everything else is synced through Dropbox between my home and school computers.
At school, if I am going to a meeting or training, I either use my smart phone or Google CR-48 Chromebook while in the building. The CR-48 battery lasts forever and it’s very light.
If I’m going out of the building to a conference or training, I do use a bag that will have the following things in it:
- HP TouchPad (in it’s case)
- Livescribe Pen and Pad
- regular pen and a small pad/post it notes combo
- charger for my smart phone and TouchPad (although I’ve only needed the TouchPad charger for multi-day events). I also have an external battery for my phone that I sometimes bring.
- business cards
- water
- tissues
- chap stick
- If I’m presenting at a conference, I usually bring the Chromebook and my remote.
I always have my Swiss Army Flash knife on my key ring. It has a knife, screwdriver, pen, LED light, scissors, and a 4GB flash drive. Between this and my Droid I2 I rarely need anything else.
I have a simple bag I got from the school that I put everything in.
If mobile/traveling for training and conferences:
tablet or laptop and charger
CD/flash drive with apps and utilities
pad and pen
dry erase markers
remote control
VGA cable
post it notes
water, snack, gum, chapstick, tissues
smartphone cable/charger
Mimio - turns any whiteboard into an interactive whiteboard.
What do you have in your bag?
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Jonathan Bird's Blue World

Friday, April 9, 2010
50 Free Collaboration Tools That Are Awesome for Education

Friday, April 2, 2010
How do we motivate students?

Thursday, April 1, 2010
Great Educational Ideas from Colleges and the Boy Scouts


WPI also has some great programs for incoming freshmen to introduce them to the school and STEM topics and help prepare them for the rest of college. High Schools would do well to have similar programs that would help freshmen obtain the skills necessary to be successful in high school.
Resources/more information: http://educationaltechnologyguy.blogspot.com/2009/05/how-to-get-started-with-project-based.html
Thursday, March 18, 2010
it's learning Course Management System

accounts are free.
it’s learning is a user-friendly and flexible learning platform that can be used for:
§ Communication and cooperation
§ Administration, reporting and evaluation
§ Production and management of learning resources
it’s learning is not adapted in any specific pedagogical direction. We supply the tools that are used to build up courses, while the teachers and schools fill the learning platform with content. it’s learning supports learning activity, new learning forms and simple access to knowledge. We support standardised e-learning standards such as AICC, IMS and SCORM.
User-friendliness is an important factor for successfully implementing a learning platform, whether in private or the public sector, or in an educational institution. Even if different e-learning systems often seem to include the same functions and tools, it is the intuitiveness of the user interface that in practice decides if the learning platform is actually used. When our customers choose it’s learning, it is most often because of the user-friendliness.
Communication and cooperation
it’s learning has a number of built-in learning tools. The application can easily be set up so that only parts of these tools are made available for the users of the learning platform. This is an arena in which the participants cooperate, both synchronously and asynchronously. Available tools for communication and cooperation are, for example: the internal message system, e-mail, discussions,process-oriented documents, bulletin boards and news services.
Administration, reporting and evaluation
it’s learning is also an administrative tool, both for system administrators, course administrators and teachers. The idea behind the learning platform is that the teachers themselves have the flexibility to choose their own methodology in their educational work. Teachers are not dependent on a superior administrator to set up and administrate their learners and content resources. Reports are automatically generated providing overviews of the learning process, either of a single learner or that of a group. it’s learning also supports assessment portfolio evaluation, and provides possibilities for individual follow-up and reflection.
Production and management of learning resources
it’s learning is a powerful tool for production, organisation, updating and re-use of learning resources. We allow both internal and external tools for producing content.
Our users are interested in content production. By using the Add function in it’s learning, you can access about 15 different tools that allow you to add your own learning tools and organise them within a subject. You can organise course content in many different ways, for example, thematically, chronologically and functionally. For the more advanced users we recommend the additional module Library. The Library allows teachers to create and share lessons. Our customers can also make their own learning tools by means of the proxy tool function.
Friday, February 12, 2010
List of Resources I've recently posted to Twitter

Monday, February 1, 2010
Practical Physics

Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Great Web 2.0 resource site

Tuesday, January 5, 2010
The Value of Educational Technology

- Organization - things like Google Calendar, iGoogle, Evernote help keep us organized and more efficient
- Collaboration - Google Docs, Twitter, Prezi, Blogs, Wiki's, Scriblar, and more allow teachers and students to interact, work together, and work with others.
- Web 2.0 - in general, allows students and teachers to create and interact instead of just observing
- Personal Learning Network (PLN) - learning and sharing what you know
- Professional development - online resources, informal through PLN, online classes
- Research/Information - the internet ('nuff said)
- Virtual labs, trips - take your students to places they'd never get to see otherwise, do labs and experiences with them, even when you don't have the supplies or equipment.
- Save time and money
- Provide new learning experiences and help improve education
- Connect with students and parents easier - email, websites, blogs, etc.
- Provide differentiated educational experiences (video, audio, print, interactive, help and tutoring)
- My physics classes do not have a textbook because I use two free online physics texts, three great websites, and a free downloadable pdf version of a physics textbook. Savings of $140 per student. (the textbook we have is very old and out of date)
- I don't print out anywhere near the amount of paper for students that I used to because I post things on the class blogs and website. Savings of literally tens of thousands of pieces of paper and copier toner and my time.
- Electronic grade book, attendance, note taking, etc. has saved money on grade books and paper (and allowed parents to keep track of their child's performance)
- Free online virtual labs and simulations instead of paying for licenses or lab equipment
- Free software / services (Google Docs, Sites, Blogger, Evernote, etc) instead of paying for licenses - students can therefore do things at home that they normally couldn't afford to do either.
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Harvard WIDE World Online Classes


Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Great idea for technology and kids

Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Free Resource from Edutopia

Tuesday, August 11, 2009
New Teacher Advice
WELCOME NEW TEACHERS!
As I was realizing that summer was almost up, I also realized that there will be a new batch of teachers to join our distinguished profession. So here it is, my advice to new teachers.
Your best resource as a new teacher is yourself. Use what you learned in school. Seek out more information from colleagues and the Internet. Use your creativity. Remember what it was like to be a student yourself.
Ask for help. Don't be afraid to ask other teachers for help. Do not isolate yourself in your classroom. Make connections with other teachers, whether it is in person, by email, Facebook, Ning, Twitter, web sites, or blogs.
Don't reinvent the wheel. Use the resources that are available to you. Most textbooks now come with instructor resource CD-ROMs and companion web sites. Use the resources that they have and then modify them as needed. Search the Internet for lesson plan ideas, activities, classroom management tips, and other tips and tricks.
Stay organized. You need to stay organized. Make sure you have a lesson plan guide and calendar of some sort. You can use a paper based planner and lesson planner or use an electronic or web-based system. Smartphones, such as those from Palm (Centro), RIM (Blackberry), and Apple (iPhone) are great for staying organized. You can also use online resources like Google, Yahoo, Evernote and others to keep your files, calendar, tasks, and lesson plans organized.
Write things down and make sure you have your classroom materials organized and labeled.
Take advantage of professional development opportunities. Your district and school will run professional development sessions, but don't limit yourself to those. Look for free online sessions, webcasts, conferences, and sessions run by your local educational resource agency.
Join a professional society in your area. As a physics teacher, I have joined the National Science Teacher's Association (NSTA) and the American Association of Physics Teachers (AAPT). Find out what organizations are in your area and join them. You will find resources and contacts through these organizations.
Read journals. Subscribe to and read educational journals. Most are free, so you don't have to worry about the money. There are journals on general education, educational technology, pedagogy, assessment, and just about every other area of education.
Be creative with your lessons. Think outside the box. Come up with new, fun ways to teach the students. Use projects and project-based-learning as a way to engage and teach your students. You can find a huge number of resources and ideas for projects on the web.
Read some books on education. My personal favorites to start with are "First Days of School", by Harry Wong, and "Your First Year as a High School Teacher", by Lynne Rominger, et al.
Don't pay for things if you can get them for free. There are tons of free resources, from software to web sites, that can help you in your classroom.
Make connections with the secretaries and custodians in your building. They will be some of your best resources for supplies, ideas, and help.
Make connections with local businesses, especially those that are related to your subject area. They can be a huge resource for guests, supplies and equipment, and funding. Many local businesses, such as Staples, have Teacher Appreciation Days with discounts and free gifts. Find out about these. Remind businesses that instead of throwing out things, they can donate usable items to your school as a tax write-off.
Get to know the publisher's representative for your class's textbook. They can get you a lot of resources.
Be flexible. Remember Murphy's law. Have plans for when your lessons run short or long, to deal with interruptions and fire drills, assemblies, and days when much of your class is absent because of a field trip. Have back up plans for everything and especially have backup plans in case of technology issues.
Know your local and State curriculum. Know what is expected of you. Know what is expected of the students.
Track your personal expenses and save receipts. There is a tax deduction for educators.
Keep up on your certification requirements.
Ask for help, and look for help. Again, don't be afraid to ask for help.
Good luck and welcome to the profession!
Here is a list of my favorite sites and resources (all are free / have free versions)
Google for Educators: http://www.google.com/educators/index.html
Evernote: http://www.evernote.com/
SugarSync: https://www.sugarsync.com/referral?rf=c6g3ccjrtagq2
Tech&Learning Magazine: http://www.techlearning.com/
THE Journal: http://thejournal.com/Home.aspx
Engrade: http://www.engrade.com/