Thursday, December 16, 2010

"Rules of the Road"



Our kids are growing up in public. They create lasting records of their lives whenever they post something online. In a world where anything can be copied, pasted, altered and distributed in the blink of an eye to a vast invisible audience, kids must understand that they hold the key to what kind of reputation they create for themselves.
As teachers we can help students understand the consequences of their actions and prepare them for the fact that what they post now can be pulled up at their first job interview. We have to help them think long term about posting pictures that will inevitably come back haunt then. Here are a few “rules of the road” that will help our kids as they grow up in public:
1. Guard your privacy. You control what people know about you.
2. Protect your reputation. What you post today may affect your future
3. Nothing is private online. Anything you say or do can be copied, pasted, and sent to people all over the world without your permission.
4. Assume everyone is watching. Posting online gives you a huge, vast audience.
5. Apply the Golden Rule. If you don’t want it done to you, don’t do it to someone else.
6. Don’t let the computer world take over your real world. Monitor the amount of time you spend infront of the computer.
7. Choose wisely. Not all content is appropriate.
8. Be an hones, trustworthy, and responsible human being online and off.
9. Think about what you see. Just because it’s online doesn’t make it true.
10. Be smart, be safe. Not everyone is who they say they are.
Helpful videos and links to share with students:

Monday, December 6, 2010

Blog or Wiki? What's the difference?

Blog:  A blog is an online diary or reflective journal where a person can post and publish their thoughts about what they have experienced or learned, text and pictures describing their life, interests and work experiences. These posts tend to be relatively short, but have enough information and interest to engage other readers. Other readers can usually leave comments about the post.  

Wiki:  A wiki is a web page that can be edited by many people, it is a co-created web page. Students will be able to see the information and edit it if they feel it is wrong or needs clarification. A wiki is open and collaborative work space. 

If you want to learn more about Blogs and Wikis, watch the movies found below.

Blogs in Plain English

Wikis in Plain English

Monday, November 29, 2010

Jamming Junk Email

Are you tired of getting junk email?  Would you like to block emails you don't want to get anymore?
Check out the following Screenjelly tutorial to learn how to set a filter on your email:

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Data Storage.... Did you back-up?


Do you back-up?  Why, of course you do!

There are two kinds of people, according to the ancient geek philosophy: those who have lost data and those who will.  Losing my external hard-drive data was painful!  I thought I had safely tucked that data away.  What I failed to understand is that no back-up plan is 100% fail-safe. 

A hard-drive crash may happen without warning. Other times the disaster will announce itself with strange whining, humming, and other ominous sounds.
Back up your files.  Then if (or when) your drive does crash, you can buy a new one but move on with your data intact.  Just make sure to save your data in more than one “box”.

Where, you ask?  There are many, many options!
            External hard-drive
Thumb Drive
Recordable CD or DVD or
Send your data to a cloud location

About 2 months ago, Darin King’s blog showcased Dropbox.
Dropbox is software that syncs your files online and across your computers.  You can even download Dropbox apps for your smartphone or mobile device (iPhone, iPad, Android, and Blackberry). Everything in your Dropbox is available from the Dropbox website, too.  Wow!  Talk about access!  Check out:  The Ultimate Dropbox Toolkit & Guide

http://web.appstorm.net/roundups/data-management-roundups/the-ultimate-dropbox-toolkit-guide/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+webappstorm+%28Web+AppStorm%29

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Critical Thinking and Problem Solving

It is not enough for our students to spit out facts — Today's Learners, Tomorrow’s Leaders need to apply creativity, critical thinking, problem solving, communication and collaboration skills to be successful in our global society.

What is Critical Thinking & Problem Solving?

Reason Effectively

  • Use various types of reasoning as appropriate to the situation

Use Systems Thinking

  • Analyze how parts of a whole interact with each other to produce overall outcomes in complex systems

Make Judgments and Decisions

  • Effectively analyze and evaluate evidence, arguments, claims and beliefs
  • Analyze and evaluate major alternative points of view
  • Synthesize and make connections between information and arguments
  • Interpret information and draw conclusions based on the best analysis
  • Reflect critically on learning experiences and processes

Solve Problems

  • Solve different kinds of non-familiar problems in both conventional and innovative ways
  • Identify and ask significant questions that clarify various points of view and lead to better solutions