Showing posts with label Links. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Links. Show all posts

Monday, August 4, 2014

Free EdTech for the ESOL classroom


Whoa buddy, technology is a battleground buzzword in the teacher world.  Personally, I love the concept of EdTech and finding a way to work smarter, not just harder.  I've been sorting through my hundreds of bookmarks and pins to glean out the little gems I might be able to use this, my first year as an ESOL teacher.

Queue the chorus of well-seasoned teachers giggling in unison.

The following is the beginning of what promises to be a GIGANTIC list of free EdTech tools I am exploring for use in the classroom, in project-based learning groups, by gen ed teachers, or by students:

WordNet® is a large lexical database of English. Nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbs are grouped into sets of cognitive synonyms (synsets), each expressing a distinct concept. Synsets are interlinked by means of conceptual-semantic and lexical relations. It's nice to have a reference source like this readily at hand.

The Google has so many resources that have yet to become household names. Let's make them classroom names, instead! The Cultural Institute is a hub for viewing high quality photos of different aspects of the humanities. More to come when I develop the PBL ideas marinating in my head right now with this great tool, but there is so much potential for getting our students engaged in these virtual field trips and insights in the world's many facets.


Google's Open Gallery - Virtual field trips to galleries and museums around the world.

Google Map Maker – a map editor wherein you impart your local knowledge to help improve Google's map features. This is a good PBL idea waiting to happen.

Google Knowledge - Help support your students' (and your) media literacy by learning tips and tricks of researching online from the experts.

Goo.gl – URL shortener for both Google and non-Google websites. Rather than needing to make sure the link is bookmarked on every computer (for those with somewhat antiquated networks), quickly plug in the link here and you will easily write the shorter link on the board.

Panoramio – Photos of the world.

Google Classroom - Are you brave enough to be a beta tester? Google Classroom is a content management system for schools that aids in distribution and grading of assignments and providing in-class communication. "Simple assignments, communication with Classroom, teachers can create and organize assignments quickly, provide feedback efficiently, and communicate with their classes with ease. Classroom lets students organize their work in Google Drive, complete and turn it in, and communicate directly with their teachers and classmates."

GeoGuessr - I spent way too much time walking around unknown parts of the world, trying to guess where Google had virtually dropped me while using this tool. This would be a fun Geography hook or 5-minute time stretcher.  Students use and collaborate their knowledge of landmarks and landscape to figure out where in the world they are, all the while realizing how similar some parts of the world are to others!

I will add to this list... I promise Google doesn't pay me to push their products. I just got started on one Google product and daisy-chained my way around the suite! This list will grow!

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Uncovering through teaching and other links

[caption id="attachment_137" align="aligncenter" width="448"]Image courtesy of digitalart / FreeDigitalPhotos.net Image courtesy of digitalart / FreeDigitalPhotos.net[/caption]

These are my favorite education (and education-adjacent) links from the past week. One of my classes requires that we stay up on current education events, something I should have already invested time, so here comes accountability:

7 Tips For Parents Of Struggling Readers | TeachThought


Highlights from the SMU National Center for Arts Reform Report | SMU NCAR


"5 Reasons You Should Be Teaching Digital Citizenship" | TeachThought

"Sport phrases" | BBC Learning English - It's so charming that these phrases can be read in a British accent.


Why New Teachers Need Mentors | Edutopia - Yes, please.

"The Second Lives Of 'Stuff' In Chicago Public Schools" | NPR - I have always wondered about this.

Persuading an Audience Using Logos, Pathos and Ethos | NYT - The Learning Network - Don't pretend that teaching isn't made up of lots of little performances and persuasive speeches.

Lexical distance between European languages | Flowing Data


"10 Innovative Ways to Bring STEM to Schools" | Mindshift - My strengths are the humanities, but I have a little engineer in my head and I'm motivated to introduce kids to STEM.

Tips for incorporating nonfiction into the ELA curriculum | Smartblog on Education

42 Idiom Examples & Explanations | TeachThought

Fun schtuff:


Highway traffic reorganized by color | Flowing Data - This is both helpful for and too indulgent of my OCD.


Elaborate New Portraits Drawn on Vintage Maps by Ed Fairburn | Colossal - Beauty.

Facial hair trends over time | Flowing Data - Methinks the beard graph should start ascending again.

Kris Trappeniers' Flickr albums - He draws portraits with one continuous line. Wow. Then, sometimes he Exacto-cuts out the negative space. Wow. Then, sometimes he uses that as a stencil to spray paint the portrait onto something else. Dang.