Tag Archives: online

Help the Poorly Organized Student. Please.

I’m the poorly organized student’s mom. Let me tell you: the poorly organized student needs all the help she can get. Don’t get me wrong: I think the poorly organized student needs to be responsible for her homework. She needs to write down assignments in her student planner. She needs to put completed homework in her folder and take it to school. She needs to clean out that locker and she needs to stop leaving socks all over the living room. Continue reading

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The Broadband Act and Protecting Children in the 21st Century

In October of 2008, the United States Congress passed into law the Broadband Data Improvement Act (S.1492, Public Act 110-385). The intent of the Act was to improve the quality of data, at both the Federal and State levels, around broadband services across the United States. Insofar as the United States falls well below other nations in broadband penetration, the intent also included the promotion of affordable broadband deployment throughout the country. The Act required that the Department of Commerce, through the National Telecommunications Information Agency (NTIA), conduct studies around broadband deployment so as to inform future legislation, enhance economic development, and further public safety, health care and educational opportunities through broadband. Basically, the Act was intended to help bring the United States up to speed, technologically. Think: rural electrification in the 1930’s, nation-wide phone service…now, in the 21st century, broadband deployment and impact. Continue reading

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The Teen Sexting Problem and What Schools Can Do about It

In the recent past, the term “sexting” has come into our lexicon. Sexting can be defined as creating, sending and/or receiving sexually explicit images or texts. It has been described as a 21st century variation of you-show-me-yours-I’ll-show-you-mine game. However, with the added factor of 21st century technology, it is a whole new game!

There is a lot of conversation among law enforcement, the legal community, educators, prevention-intervention people, counselors and others as to whether sexting falls into the category of criminal activity as child pornography. There is no single, simple answer. Each situation is different.
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User Beware: A New Type of Phishing Attack – “Tabnabbing”

As educators, we’re online a lot. We enter our grades and attendance online, we e-mail parents, we store our lesson plans electronically and we sometimes check our personal e-mail accounts or online bank statements. In other words, teachers aren’t so different from most people: we’ve become used to using the computer for all kinds of work and personal tasks and we wonder how we ever lived before Google, Excel, and Farmville. Continue reading

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Four Online Resources for Classroom Images

May means a lot of things. It’s the unofficial field trip month: just try reserving a school bus in May and you’ll find out just how many field trips occur in your district. May is test month. Students take state standardized tests and AP tests in May. They’re stressed until the middle of the month. May is senior month with another senior activity every other day: the senior banquet, the senior field trip, the senior graduation practice, the seniors’ last baseball game or track meet. It’s concert season, it’s the rainy season, and kids are squirrely. You’re packing up, tearing down, collecting, cataloging, figuring grades, and making sure your seniors are on track for passing your class.

May is also project month. We have just weeks left of school; no one wants to lecture students who squirm in their seats and watch the clock. Better to keep them engaged with the content and let them direct their own learning with a project. Continue reading

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Students Online: Time Wasters or Innovators?

Your students are spending a lot of their free time online. Think of the number of hours you estimate they spend online. Double it. The doubled number is probably closer to the truth.

According to the Norton Online Living Report 2009, parents believe their children spend 21 hours online. The reality is that students in twelve countries reported spending 39 hours online. Don’t tell me these kids don’t have time to finish their assignments or clean their rooms. Continue reading

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Overcoming the Technology Resistance Movement

Despite many recent online learning inroads in schools, many professional educators and administrators remain hesitant, reluctant, and perhaps even highly resistant to try online learning and teaching with technology. However, with accelerating demand for online learning, significantly reduced budgets, and the emergence of hundreds of free or relatively inexpensive Web technologies, that resistance is coming to a sudden halt. While some may prefer to wait for massive instructor attrition, lightning to strike, or made-for-movie serendipitous events to occur to change this situation, I prefer more direct approaches. Listed below are 10 such ideas. Continue reading

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Study Finds that Students Are the Digital Advance Team

If you’ve ever had a technology failure in your classroom, you know that your best resources can be your students. When the DVD player spins and blinks, but doesn’t play, a half dozen students will volunteer to fix it. If your presentation file becomes corrupted, chances are you have a guru sitting in the front row who can open it and save your lesson plan.

Students as technology guides. The latest research proves what you already know: our students are digital experts. Project Tomorrow’s Speak Up National Research Project has interviewed 281,000 K12 students in all 50 states for its latest report “Speak Up 2008 for Students, Teachers, Parents and Administrators.” The researchers call our students the Digital Advance Team. These students are an asset to adults, especially those whose job is to plan these kids’ education and prepare them for 21st century jobs. Continue reading

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Benefits and Audiences of Online Learning in K-12 Environments

Web-based instruction has transformed traditional notions of education so swiftly that there has been scant time to reflect on why this is occurring. In a June 8, 2009 front page story in my local paper, the Herald Times, Bruce Colston, Director of the Indiana University High School (IUHS), was interviewed about the growth and benefits of programs like the IUHS. Colston outlined ten distinct audiences for the courses at the IUHS. The audiences he mentioned and several additional ones are listed below. Continue reading

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Pearl Harbor Lesson Plan

Most of your students can tell you where they were on 9/11, just as a generation ago people could remember where they were when President John F. Kennedy died. Each generation has its pivotal moment; for the WWII generation, that event was Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941.

National Geographic has captured Pearl Harbor’s events in a multi-media timeline and map that would work well as a history mini-unit, stretching over one or two class periods. http://plasma.nationalgeographic.com/pearlharbor/ax/map.html The site’s interactive timeline pulls up maps of the Hawaiian Islands with ship and aircraft movements. Clicking on Full Story reveals a paragraph about each event on the timeline, photos from the moment, and sometimes first-person testimonials about the event. Continue reading

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