I know that I am definitely preaching to the choir as many of my American followers are already in their classrooms and I so appreciate all the information they have been sharing through their blogs! It is very helpful to read what other teachers are doing and see what might fit with my classroom too. It is my hope that some of my posts can be just as helpful. With that being said, I will be adding these new additions to my lists of resources under the Fav Websites heading.
1 ) 101 Questions
- Organized and curated by Dan Meyer, this website features
short film clips and images that are designed to perplex and stump our
students. This website is awesome for getting students to ask
appropriate questions and learn to question the world around them.
- Users can answer the question on the website and submit it to see
what other users have answered. It is really neat to see the different
perspectives and could make for interesting discussion about why
people answered in the way that they did.
- I think this website would be really neat to utilize as a morning routine
and feature a different question each morning. It would also be neat to
pick very specific questions to fit in with certain lessons as a unit progresses.
- http://www.101qs.com
2 ) Interactive Bloom's Taxonomy Wheel
- Bloom's Taxonomy, most often represented as a wheel, is an
important aspect of a teacher's planning to ensure students not only
understand information but can also utilize it effectively in various
situations.
- This interactive wheel would be perfect for new teachers who are
becoming familiar with Bloom's Taxonomy or simply a good review
for teachers at any level. It allows the user to explore each of the 6
levels on the taxonomy, understand what each of them means, and get
ideas of what activities fit in with each level.
- There are even specific links for teachers to explore various ed tech
tools that meet each level!
- http://eductechalogy.org/swfapp/blooms/wheel/engage.swf
3 ) Copyright in a Copy-Paste World
- This is one of the BEST copyright and plagiarism information
websites for students that I have found so far. Through the use
of articles, interactives, images, and film clips this website covers
the following questions: Is It Really Stealing? Why Should I Care?
What Does It Look Like? What Tools Can I Use? How Can I Use
My Own Brain?
- There are specific tabs for students and teachers and allows students
to actually self-check their own work to ensure that they aren't
plagiarizing in their work; awesome!
- This is a website that I will definitely be sharing in my classroom and
with my colleagues!
- http://www.pleasedontcheat.com/
Happy Monday everyone!
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