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How to Get Kids Ready to Video-Chat for Online Classes | Common Sense Media A list for teachers to share with the parents of their students so they can be ready for their online sessions/lessons.
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Webinars – Listenwise Teacher Support Center “At Listenwise, has been watching how the outbreak of the coronavirus has caused many schools to close temporarily and rely on remote learning. They have their weekly webinars in the month of April as they continue to discuss remote learning. You can also access recordings from previous remote learning webinars. You sign up for free and all webinars will be recorded and available to view afterward.”
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Free strategies for teaching K-12 online | Learning Keeps Going “Coronavirus is posing unprecedented challenges to educators around the globe. The COVID-19 Education Coalition is a community of nonprofit organizations who have come together to support the education field as they keep the learning going during extended school closures. Go to the Educator Help Desk to get answers to your online learning questions from experts”
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Remote Learning – Eduro Learning “Real Life Experiences with Long Term School Closures: Conversations with Educators & School Leaders in Asia, Europe and the Middle East. Watch or listen to our conversations with educators and school leaders who have been navigating school closures since mid-January.”
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Stuck at Home? These 12 Famous Museums Offer Virtual Tours You Can Take on Your Couch (Video) Some great opportunities to see some of the great artworks of the world without the expense of travelling there.
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Facts and Opinions Explained by Common Craft (VIDEO) Useful presentation.”Understanding the difference between a fact and an opinion isn’t difficult. What matters is being able to apply that knowledge responsibly. When someone presents information in the form of a fact, like “the blue whale is the largest animal on earth.” They are stating something that can be proven with evidence. That’s different from an opinion, like “blue whales are the most beautiful whales.” Here, they are sharing a personal belief that can’t be proven”
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Pedagogy: why child-led learning ‘does not work’ “Once you get to real academic learning, the child discovery approach is just not going to work,” explains David C Geary, Curators’ Professor in the Department of Psychological Sciences at the University of Missouri, keeping alight the eternal flame of debate about the best way to teach”
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Responding to Absenteeism During the Coronavirus Pandemic & Beyond – Classroom Q&A With Larry Ferlazzo – Education Week Teacher “The new question of the week is:
What are effective strategies—both school-wide and individually—to handle student absenteeism?
It’s a little bit ironic to publish a series on absenteeism at the same time that most schools are closed because of the coronavirus. But students not being “present” when teaching takes places was a problem before the pandemic, is an issue now when many of us are doing remote learning, and will be one after this crisis has passed.
Though the original responses to this question were written prior to school closures, most contributors have made significant modifications to their answers over the past month.”
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Free Technology for Teachers: ytCropper – Share a Section of a YouTube Video “ytCropper lets you share just a portion of a YouTube video by specifying the start time and end time of the video that you want others to see. To do this simply go to the ytCropper site then paste in the URL of the YouTube video that you want to share. Once you have done that you can specify the start and end time of the portion of the video that you want people to watch. ytCropper will generate a link to the cropped version of the video. Share that link to have people watch your specified portion of the video.”
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SafeShare.TV – The safest way to share YouTube and Vimeo videos A tool that allows you to take parts of videos and leave out inappropriate or off-topic (and ads) sections.
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Nik’s Learning Technology Blog: Cropping YouTube Videos to Create Activities Nik Peachey explains how to use SafeShare.TV. It is a tool that allows you to take parts of videos and leave out inappropriate or off-topic sections.
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Start Mixing “Drag On Tape” lets you splice portions of different YouTube videos with an online editor. It allows you to cut portions of one video and then let you put them all together.” It has quite a slick interface that isn’t as simple as some others are, so it might a little tricky for some non-tech savvy people like myself, but many should be able to figure it out.
Filed under: Education | Tagged: digital citizenship, online learning, online tools, remote learning, remote teaching, teaching tools, virtual tours |
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