Stephen Downs provides a lengthy description of educational blogs. This article is a combination of technical details and project descriptions. The reference section also provides links to many additional articles.
Stephen Downs provides a lengthy description of educational blogs. This article is a combination of technical details and project descriptions. The reference section also provides links to many additional articles.
The University of Iowa’s Virtual Hospital offers great images and short videos of human anatomy as educational resources. I happen to be going through brain anatomy in Intro Psychology and found the brain anatomy resources of great value.
THE Journal provides an article offers a five-step plan for monitoring and responding to technology abuse in your school. The topics range from cell phone courtesy to digital bullying. The links in the reference section are also useful.
The PEW Internet and American Life Foundation has just concluded a summary of how adults use IM (instant messaging). See the Washington Post for an analysis.
OK, I was wrong. The new Apple product was a 2 inch wide desk top computer. Some are complaining the cost is too high – approximately $1200. As a Mac user, this position annoys me. This is a high end machine. If you want something less expensive, the Apple eMac is about $800. Also consider the capabilities of the built-in hardware and software supporting multimedia (iTunes, iMovie, iPhoto, etc.). Purchasing an iMac would be overkill if you only want to word process and search the Internet. Maybe you have other types of projects in mind. I would agree that Macs do offer less flexibility in hardware configuration than systems based on other operating systems. We all make a personal decision as to how important this issue is. In my opionion, you either get what you pay for or you add stuff later ’cause what you paid for does not do what you had hoped.
I came across a link to a Copyright WebQuest through a listserv I follow and decided to check it out. It seems to be very well done and worth recommending to others.
I think online video represents a great educational resource of the future. I do not anticipate the value will be in complete presentations (e.g., expert lectures), but in catalogued collections of bits and pieces that can be used to see and hear things that are difficult to describe.
The Open Video Project may represent the beginning of such a collection. This site is worth exploring if even to raise expectations of what might eventually be available.