Olga LaPlante

SmartBoard: Resources

August 15, 2008 · No Comments

A number of resources collected for those who are interested in expanding their knowledge and use of interactive whiteboards. This is not necessarily limited to using just SmartBoard Interactive Whiteboards, - other than the training on the software specific to the SMART brand - but is also a collection of interactive resources from the web.

Good places to look for stuff:

- The WhiteBoard Blog

- Becky Rank’s Portaportal: Be Smart

- My Delicious bookmarks

- SMART Tech website: Support

- SMART Tech website: Educator Resources

- MISTM: Math Interactive Resources

Notes from the session in at the Camden Hills High School, August 19th, 2008 - see link below.

notes-from-session

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What is YouTube Community?

August 12, 2008 · 1 Comment

It’s very peculiar to go to youtube - everything seems to be there! Legally or not legally, you can find tons of stuff to watch, some of it will definitely be of poor quality, and some of it simply inappropriate if you think of school use.

Now, it does to a huge degree represent what people - with a computer, web access, and a web cam - can do, will do, won’t do, and how they put it together in front if a little camera that opens them to the world with very mixed messages, and often out of context.

There is a professional presentation by Michael Wesch on the YouTube community; wish I could give you a link, but he uses some authentic language that I am afraid to offer to students. But if you go to Will Richardson’s blog (link provided) then you will be able to view his presentation, which is very deep, very positive, very interesting, and very moving. I cried in the end - because it’s not just silliness and a waste of time, some people heal by joining this community, and learn to live in this world - not to be labeled “losers who have nothing better to do”.

Check it out - you will never think of YouTube - or a similar community - the way you think of it now. It’s simply amazing.

Anyway, just felt strongly about it. It’s worth every minute you spend on it.

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Cognitive Surplus

June 3, 2008 · No Comments

Have you already read this blog post from Clay Shirky? I found it rather interesting - the concept behind it, and very very TV with a mouseoptimistic - placing watching TV on the same scale as drinking gin, but yet stating it is a temporary stage - like a global societal adjustment to sudden free time and fast changes around. And that Wikipedia and similar projects are filling in the need for intellectual productive outlet. Now the problem seems to be (as Will Richardson mentions it in his latest post) that Wikipedia editors are most likely grown-ups who have chosen to participate - and in a very productive and safe way. How many of those contributors are teachers? Because if there were a lot, then their students are surely in good hands, for they will be modeled to how to use the web well.

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Looking into the next year

May 27, 2008 · No Comments

We would like to inform districts who qualify and are interested in continuing professional education the following information. Please download and review. Description.

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Inquiry-Based Learning and iMovie: Based on Science Lesson

May 13, 2008 · No Comments

Please go to Moodle at → No CommentsCategories: education

Firefox settings for PPS

May 9, 2008 · 1 Comment

Follow these steps to set up your MacBook for home (DIRECT CONNECTION) or for school (MANUAL CONNECTION).

Don’t forget to change the location as well.

Firefox settings

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Advanced Blogging

April 29, 2008 · 2 Comments

  • Okay so you have tried your hand at blogging on Portland Schools Blogging Server - now what?

Have you used this tool in the classroom? How? Have you used it outside of the classroom? How?

What are some things you would like your blog to do?

TEXT ANNOUNCEMENT IN SIDEBAR

Some of you have been using Donorschoose for raising money for your projects. Announce it on your blog! View a short video on how to do it.

One way to do this is add a text widget. Go to Presentation, Widgets, and add one Text widget (as simple as drag and drop. WARNING: If you have never changed your sidebar (with widgets), it’s the default configuration. This means that if you modify it in any way, the default sidebar WILL DISAPPEAR, and you will have to recreate it. Drag and drop all the widgets you find helpful. Some may be: calendar, links, meta (which allows you to log in from your blog’s page), recent posts, categories, archives.)

Once you have Text in your sidebar, click on it. Give it a SHORT, and concise name. After that if you are planning to link to your donorschoose page, use the following text:

<a href=”http://yourlink - copy and paste it” target=”_blank”>Your project name</a>

Around this html code you can have your short paragraph describing what this is and why anyone would visit it.

You can add your picture the same way if you would like, but the html will be a bit different.

<img src=”http://blogs.portlandschools.org/laplao/files/2008/01/photo-8.thumbnail.jpg” align=”right” height=”50″ hspace=”5″ />
To read more about me, go to the ABOUT page.

Your image has to already be online (upload it to your blog and then get the URL for it).

COPYRIGHT

We all know that there is an array of resources online - easily viewable, and not so easy to get through the filter. Here is what you must remember:

- if something is publicly available (you can view it from a site, hear it on a site or download it from the web), provide a link - it’s the safest way to share resources. If you would like to print an article, do so using the proper reference - only for your students. If there is no explicit permission to print or save a copy, ask the publisher - it’s safe, and fun in a way. Most likely, if you state your purpose, the publishers will give you permission. If they don’t respond, you may still use the material, but keep an eye for an email or a letter from the publisher, just in case it comes late and has a “NO” in it. If this is the case, just stop using whatever you were denied the permission to use.

YouTube Logo- If you find a cool educational video on YouTube and YouTube is blocked - talk to your network administrators. They need to know that the school system fails to provide you with educational materials, and you should make a case to change the district/school AUP policy and the “no-no” list. You are the ultimate decision-maker - that’s why you were hired as teacher - to provide best possible education for your students. Stand up for your rights.
TeacherTube
This also means that you may be canny, or cunning, enough to work around it - like, say, download a video from YouTube (in case you can’t find a copy of it on TeacherTube.com) and play that copy off your computer. DO NOT upload the video to your own blog - that is a violation of copyright (unless it is explicitly stated that you may download and redistribute this video). Always reference the source. You may also embed the video using YouTube code, but don’t expect it to play at school. Students may view it later though, as soon as they cross the street to go to the library.

- The same is true of images. There are some things to remember:

  • if you use your own image - excellent! Just make sure it is scaled down so you can upload it safely and quickly. Big images are awesome - they are high resolution - but not suitable for the web. Make them smaller. Your photo upload application can do it, iPhoto can do it (export or share your photos and define the size), or use Bitmap - does the same. Grabbing the corner of the image to resize it is not going to work - it just makes your huge file look smaller, but does nothing to the properties of the 1-2 Mb file. Be nice to your visitors, too; if your blog takes too much to download on a computer, who would want to go there? Not these kids!
  • If you are about to use someone else’s image - make sure it’s okay to use it. Do you have the permission? If not, obtain it! Then, scale it down if the image is too big. Normally, 20-30 Kb is plenty.
  • Do not insert an image by copying its location (although it seems ok). Well, at least try not to. When you insert an image by using its URL, your page pulls the image off the original server, thus using its bandwidth. Wikipedia calls it “bandwidth theft” among other things. I assume you will cite the source anyway, but it’s not quite enough in this case.

EMBEDDING FLASH FILES

If you find videos online that add meaning to, or a different perspective on, the topic, you may link to them. Linking is easy.

Or, better yet, and in compliance with copyright, you may embed the video in your blog. Oftentimes, video collections give you the opportunity to embed (spread the word about) their video(s) by providing you with the [code] which you can copy and paste like I did below. That sounds really easy. And it sometimes is. Just copy the embeddable code and paste it in the CODE VIEW of the post. Normally, the default mode is VISUAL, so you will have to switch.

Layout

The trick then is to find the right code! For example, if you embed a video from TeacherTube, use their EduBlogs version of embeddable code. Like I did below.

Find the right code

- NOTE: Search a video collection for “in plain English”, great resources! Another note - if your video is from Google Video or YouTube, it will not miraculously bypass the school’s filter. But it will play at home or at a library.

Download Video: Posted by leelefever at TeacherTube.com.

HANDLING DOCUMENTS

If you have a document you would like to share with your readers, you can upload it to your blog! Easy, right? The best part - if you simply must keep your files in .doc format, anyone can still preview them by using the ThinkFree Viewer - just click on the word VIEW - URLS Kit Resources

SHUTTER

If you liked how you can see the images in this post when you click on them, you can do it too! This feature can be found under Plugins. All you need to do is activate it. Try clicking on the picture below. See? Very sleek!

Shutter Reloaded - Plugin from the Library

→ 2 CommentsCategories: blog · education · profdev · school

Course management options

April 15, 2008 · 1 Comment

So, you decided to go paperless - that’s great! How are you going to do it?

If you would like to ask questions, go to (in Firefox):

http://show.zoho.com/remoteclient.sas?_inv=C7705nI6875sBd670ml9VN0qgy7J9Ed88T8Fx80×6G0×67020x703GT7c1

Luckily, for schools, there are simple and complex solutions totally free! In fact, you might discover that your school already has an account all set up.

One option worth exploring is Think.com.

 MEVL - Maine Virtual learning Site.

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Some tips on using DreamWeaver and embedding sound files.

April 10, 2008 · No Comments

This came in one of the emails on the eMINTS listserv, and I thought it would be nice to share it. Dan Tripp is the author of the tip below.

This is not a true podcast, but I discovered how to add audio to your webpage. I have added voice over for my WebQuests so students can listen to the text on the page. This is great for struggling readers and a way to differentiate.  In Dreamweaver, you can add a plug-in to listen to the music, but it plays automatically when you open the page, or you can add a sound behavior, but it plays on another page. Here is the script to embed music so it does not play automatically: you have to add the autoplay=false and loop=false

<embed src=”sound.wav” autoplay=false loop=false width=”150″ height=”32″></embed>

Here is a video tutorial that I made that shows how to record your voice and add it to your WebQuest or Web Page.  *I don’t know if this works for MP3’s.

http://www.teachertube.com/view_video.php?viewkey=838f2daf9aadf44ca5ba

Dan Tripp

There you have it! You might want to explore TeacherTube as well, and contribute to it with your own video tutorials.  It’s not blocked in PPS!

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Kidspiration: Mapping Interdisciplinary Projects

April 9, 2008 · No Comments

Soooooo…

Let’s first learn a little bit about Kidspiration and how it works:

A collection of video tutorials from AtomicLearning

Now, browse examples of how Kidspiration may be used in the classroom.

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