BGBlogging is coming to BWP's Mid-Winter Conference!
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Labels: Scott_S_Floyd, TXBWP
Labels: Scott_S_Floyd, TXBWP
Labels: blogging, Scott_S_Floyd
Labels: iPod, iQuiz, literacy, Scott_S_Floyd, technology, TXBWP, Web2.0
Schools say iPods becoming tool for cheatersThis quote from a CNN article got me to thinking about us moving backwards instead of forwards. Why do we start throwing bans at things that we have yet to teach students about? Some things (like weapons, drugs, inappropriate clothing, etc) I understand. But if we are talking about an educational tool, how can we just make a statement like above begging for universal bans?
Kemp said she does not have hard statistics on the phenomenon but said it is not unusual for schools to ban digital media players."I think it is becoming a national trend," she said. "We hope that each district will have a policy in place for technology -- it keeps a lot of the problems down."
Comments?The music players proved to be invaluable for some courses, including music, engineering and sociology classes, said Tim Dodd, executive director of The Center for Academic Integrity at Duke. At Duke, incidents of cheating have declined over the past 10 years, largely because the community expects its students to have academic integrity, he said.
"Trying to fight the technology without a dialogue on values and expectations is a losing battle," Dodd said. "I think there's kind of a backdoor benefit here. As teachers are thinking about how technology has corrupted, they're also thinking about ways it can be used productively."
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Labels: administration, Scott_S_Floyd, technology, TXBWP, Web2.0
Labels: Jennifer_Wagner, literacy, Miguel_Guhlin, online_projects, professional_development, Scott_S_Floyd, technology, TXBWP, warlick, Web2.0, Will_Richardson
Labels: collaborative, Google, Google_Earth, literacy, literature, Scott_S_Floyd, TXBWP, Will_Richardson
Welcome to the 7th Annual Great Egg Roll Online Project sponsored by
TechnospudProjects.com!
Registration for this project will open on
March 19, 2007!
Each registering classroom needs to pair up with one other classroom at their school with whom they will be
rolling their eggs. Together, you will be gathering averages, adding measurements, and more!
(It does NOT need to be the same grade level, so feel free
to roll with your "buddy" classes!)
All eggs will need to be 2" plastic eggs filled with
3 Level Tablespoons of White (uncooked) Rice!! You are welcome to start
filling and gluing your eggs now for this project!
The project dates will be from
March 26 - April 13, 2007.
Jennifer Wagner
Technospud Projects Coordinator
Labels: collaborative, Jennifer_Wagner, online_projects, Scott_S_Floyd
I have increased my vocabulary.
You can think outside of the box.
It's like making your own books of thought.
You can smell the million dollar aroma of words.
It's like you are reading a blogging dictionary.
You paint stories in your mind.
Labels: blogging, elementary, Scott_S_Floyd
Sponsored by TechnospudProjects.com - PreSchool through Third Grade Students all over the world are welcome to join in the fun as we use the contents of a "General Mills Lucky Charms" 14 oz size box of cereal! Registration is now OPEN!! There will lots of great activities, as well as St. Patrick Ideas, which will help to make the week of March 12th through 16th, a fun filled -- EDUCATIONAL -- week!!
St. Patrick's Day -- Online Project 2007
If you happen to be in school next week (and you teach PK through 3rd), you might take a look at what Jennifer Wagner, fellow educator and NASCAR fan has working over at Technospud. It is a world-wide collaborative event that has over 600 educators and 12,000 students in it right now. Jennifer has everything laid out for you already from national standards to worksheets. You just need some kids and some Lucky Charms and get registered by Friday, March 9th (Awesome math and technology tie-in here!). So go on over there and register and join in the international fun. It is gauranteed to be magically delicious (lame slogan theft, I know).
Oh, the NASCAR fan part really has nothing to do with the project. I am just glad to find a female educator that enjoys watching cars go around in circles and run into each other as much as I do (or even at all).
Labels: collaborative, Jennifer_Wagner, math, Scott_S_Floyd, Technospud, TXBWP
Labels: literacy, redefine, Scott_S_Floyd, tcea07, warlick
The Blurb
The Blurb is a daily, weekly or sometimes monthly news show created and maintained by some seriously motivated students living in cyberspace! Check out our news and views regularly
Labels: anagrams, blogging, literacy, Scott_S_Floyd
Labels: Scott_S_Floyd, tcea07
Labels: Scott_S_Floyd, TXBWP, Web2.0
It seems like Connecticut is off to the right start, unlike Texas. I expect I will get way more information on how this will benefit public schools when I sit in at the TCEA conference with the new group I joined (thanks to a post by Miguel Guhlin) that is just now forming, the SOS-SIG. I am looking forward to hearing what others have done in this area. My push is piloting Linux boxes for my classroom using only open source and free Internet-based applications with each student using their own flash drives. While this is more than likely not an original idea, it would be a stretch for my ISD.General Assembly
Proposed Bill No. 5299
January Session, 2007
LCO No. 782
Referred to Committee on Government Administration and Elections
Introduced by:
REP. O'BRIEN, 24th Dist.
AN ACT CONCERNING COMPUTER SOFTWARE PURCHASED BY STATE AGENCIES.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Assembly convened:
That the general statutes be amended to require state agencies to consider the
availability of open source code software when purchasing, licensing or
procuring computer software, as an alternative to proprietary software, based
upon a comparison of costs and quality standards.
Statement of Purpose:
To require state agencies to consider the use of open source code software as an alternative to the use of proprietary software.
Labels: Linux, Miguel_Guhlin, opensource, Scott_S_Floyd, SOS-SIG, TCEA
I know, I know. Even now you are thinking, “but Dad, wouldn’t just going to college be easier?” It might, yes. And depending on what you end up wanting to do, college might still be the best answer. But it might not. And I want to remind you that in my own experience, all of the “learning” I did in all of the college classrooms I’ve spent time in does not come close to the learning that I’ve done on my own for the simple reason that now I am learning with people who are just as (if not more) passionate to “know” as I am. And that is what I want for you, to connect to people and environments where your passions connect, and the expectation is that you learn together, not learn on your own. Where you are free to create your own curriculum, find your own teachers, and create your own assessments as they are relevant. Where you make decisions (and your teachers guide you in those decisions) as to what is relevant to know and what isn’t instead of someone deciding that for you. Where at the end of the day, you’ll look back and find that the vast majority of your effort has been time well spent, not time wasted.
Weblogg-ed » Dear Kids, You Don’t Have to Go to College
Is this scary or what? I love the idea since I am that type of learner. I have learned far more on my own directive than any other situation I have been placed in. Web 2.0 has offered me a connected on-going professional development I could not afford to get elsewhere. I choose to take advantage of the offerings for the benefit of my own learning and that of my students. It makes a difference because I want it to. This is the learning Will is talking about. Learning beyond the books. Learning what I feel necessary for my career and self-growth.
Just some wonderings out loud. Feel free to comment. Or not.
Labels: Scott_S_Floyd, TXBWP