Loading Clusty Cloud ...
Thursday, April 10, 2008
Blogs, Wikis, & Web 2.0 in the Classroom
Blogs, Wikis, & Web 2.0 in the Classroom
Presentation for Wisconsin State Reading Association | February 8, 2008
© Dawn Hogue | Sheboygan Falls High School
This presentation is about how Web tools, like Blogs and Wikis, help us create community and collaboration within our classrooms. And in doing so, we may also
- get students excited about writing and thinking
- teach students about being responsible Web content generators
- give students an authentic audience for whom to write
- help students participate in the collaborative community of Web 2.0
- give students practice in using tools that the real world uses
- eliminate walls--school can be anywhere there is a computer and the Internet
- time and space really are relative--we can collaborate with anyone, anywhere, anytime (in different time zones)
- learn more, ourselves, about how technology integration pushes our thinking as teachers
- and more . . . .
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
activity adobe blogger blogs calendar comment conference courses create documents edison edited educators epi-students-spring-2008 folder frontpage gmail google groups henry hill history hours log login minutes online page paulas pb pbwiki powerpoint preparation presentations science sidebar skills spreadsheets spring teachers tech thinking thoughts view web welcome wetpaint whatever wiki wikieducator
created at TagCrowd.com
Thursday, April 3, 2008
What's a VoiceThread anyway?
What"s a VoiceThread anyway? from VoiceThread introduces this new Web 2.0 application.
Wondering about Web 2.0 from Voice Thread
Wondering about Web 2.0 from Voice Thread offers a voiced slide presentation on one school district's efforts to bring blogs, wikis, voice threads, Youtube, Gmail, and other 2.0 technologies into the school, into the classroom, and into the lives of students, teachers, parents, and the community.
Note: Use the large arrows at the bottom right and left of the screen to move forward and back in the slide presentation.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)