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         From Ruben A. Cirillo High School Library

April 21, 2009

Podcasts for science teachers

Filed under: Science, Technology — Jacquie Henry @ 9:30 am

Forwarded from Scout: Exploratorium: Teacher Institute: Podcasts [iTunes]

Created by science teachers for science teachers, the Teacher Institute Podcasts are five-minute podcasts that give educators science facts, science history, and pedagogy tips for new teachers. The podcasts are hosted by the Exploratorium in San Francisco, and support for the project comes from the National Science Foundation, The Noyce Foundation, the Carnegie Corporation of New York, and others.

Visitors can browse through the podcast series, and they will find thoughtful and fun suggestions on how to make a straw oboe, how to better manage the classroom, and how to build a Brazilian instrument called the cuica. Also, visitors can read up on the Teacher’s Institute’s summer institute program for science educators and also sign up to receive new podcasts via iTunes or RSS. [KMG]

To find this resource and more high-quality online resources in math and science visit Scout’s sister site – AMSER, the Applied Math and Science Educational Repository.

February 25, 2009

Freebies are good.

We have a free trial right now from Gale – a company that produces very high quality databases.  College professors will require students to use scholarly resources from databases, and not depend so heavily on websites from the free web.   If you want to know more about scholarly resources, check out this video.

I am not sure how long the trial lasts – but it will be at least a month.

This particular trial covers several subject areas.

ENGLISH – LITERARY RESEARCH

For Students Online

Literature Resource Center

Literature eBooks

OTHER SUBJECT AREAS – BOOK CENTRAL

Arts
Biography
Business
Dorling Kindersley Collections
Education/Careers
History
Law
Medicine
Religion
Science
Technology
Nation and World

June 17, 2008

Video in the classroom? Not just for Social Studies anymore.

Filed under: All Staff, Technology — Jacquie Henry @ 7:11 pm

Video in the classroom is WAY more than showing DVDs or streaming video. What about student-created videos as a learning tool?

Digital Storytelling Carnival #5

Many of the videos linked here depend on YouTube. Yes I know – you can’t watch them from your computers. But, that doesn’t mean it can’t be done. Student created videos can be uploaded to Teacher Tube or School Tube which is not filtered. Yes – I know. White box computers. But that can’t last forever – and we have the computer labs to solve that problem. For otger ideas – check out this link I posted a few days ago. Educational Alternatives to YouTube

There are some amazing ideas and tools here. Well worth the look. Don’t miss this powerful video:

Split screen inspired by Radiohead by Dan Meyer. Contrasts a typical day in the life of a child in a western nation with the life of a typical child in a third-world country using a split-screen video.

June 10, 2008

Educational Alternatives to YouTube

Filed under: All Staff, Technology — Jacquie Henry @ 9:13 am

Teacher Tube

School Tube

Video Online from Shambles.net
A extensive list of video sources. Some might be blocked by BESS

Video Library – Research Channel
Some great free sites – comes in Spanish also

The Open Video Project
A digital video archive sponsored by the School of Information and Library Science, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill.

New York Public Library Digital Gallery

Teachers’ Domain

TED:Ideas Worth Spreading – Technology, Entertainment, Design
Video talks by such famous people as Jane Goodall, Isabel Allende and Al Gore. “This site makes the best talks and performances from TED available to the public, for free. More than 200 talks from our archive are now available, with more added each week. These videos are released under a Creative Commons license, so they can be freely shared and reposted.”

UChannel
Participating universities contribute video and audio recordings of lectures, seminars, panels and interviews to a virtual pool of academic content.

VIMEO (Probably blocked by BESS)
Free and can be password protected so you can choose who views your videos.

May 31, 2008

Technology – Under Construction

Filed under: Technology — Jacquie Henry @ 11:28 am
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