websites teachers use 3.17.16

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Websites Teachers Use Roger Strang

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Page 1: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Websites Teachers Use Roger Strang

Page 2: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Websites Teachers Use1. Pinterest2. Edchats (twitter)3. Lesson Sharing Sites

a. BetterLessonb. LearnZillionc. Curriki, Share My Lesson

4. EngageNY5. Scholastic.com6. NewsELA7. Discovery Education8. Google Expeditions9. Video libraries

a. Schooltube, Teachertubeb. Edutopia

10. Smithsonian Education11. Illuminations (math)12. Online Classroom communities

a. Edmodo, Moodleb. Google Classroom

13. Edthena14. Teaching Channel15. Teacher2Teacher

Page 3: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Pinterest = Pin + Interest

• Follow this link to a video about Pinterest.• Very popular with elementary school teachers.• Pinterest users make and curate digital bulletin boards.

They “pin” webpages of interest onto these “Boards.” A picture of the webpage shows up on the Board and is called a Pin. When someone clicks on a Pin, they are automatically taken to the original webpage, where they can learn more.

• Most teachers use Pinterest search for materials.• Pins often go to a blog or a product on Teachers Pay

Teachers (more on TpT later).

Page 4: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Pins: visual bookmarks of webpages

Name of the Board. Ppl make Boards to organize their favorite things.

Page 5: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Pinterest: Try it out!

• Click on this link.• Click on a picture of interest.• Click on the picture again.• You will be taken to the original website.

Page 6: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Edchats

• A specialized use of twitter• A scheduled time when educators “meet and

tweet,” about a topic (here is recent one on #BFC530: Educators juggle many tasks. What are your successful juggling tricks and tips?)

Page 7: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Popular Lesson Sharing SitesName of Website Who creates the materials?

Teachers Pay Teachers Regular teachers (Nicknamed Teacherpreneurs)

BetterLesson Master teachers

LearnZillion Master teachers

Curriki Regular teachers

Share My Lesson Regular teachers

Page 8: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Teachers Pay TeachersAn online marketplace where teachers can buy materials created by other teachers. Some materials are free. Here is a link to the product below.

Page 9: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

BetterLesson

• Betterlesson does two main things:1. Runs online Professional Learning Communities

= scheduled times for educators to get together and be coached.

2. Partners with educators called Master Teachers to create freely available lessons and units.

Page 10: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

LearnZillion

• Like BetterLesson because it hired Expert Teachers to make an exemplary curriculum for teachers all over the world to use.

• The difference: LearnZillion has created one curriculum per grade level, instead of multiple.

Page 11: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Curriki, Share My Lesson

• While BetterLesson and LearnZillion curate “Exemplary curricula,” Curriki (mission below) and Share My Lesson source their lessons from any regular teacher.

Page 12: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

EngageNY

• EngageNY provides an online, common-core aligned curriculum.

• EngageNY focuses on math and English language arts.

Page 13: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Scholastic.com

• Two Scholastic services are highlighted here:• Scholastic Book Wizard (free) lets teachers

and parents “level a book.” The “level” corresponds to the complexity of a text: higher levels for more advanced readers.

• Scholastic News (free/paid) is a collection of digital/paper magazines for students.

Page 14: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

NewsELA• Rewrites the news for different grade levels. – For example, a NYTimes article is rewritten for the 3rd,

4th and 5th grade levels.• Articles span topics from War & Peace to Sports.

Page 15: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Discovery Education

• Has an archive of virtual field trips. • Also has lesson plans.

Example of virtual field trip

Page 16: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Google Expeditions

• Software that provides field trips in virtual reality.

• In Beta testing now.

Page 17: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Schooltube, Teachertube

• Websites where teachers, students, media companies, etc. upload videos.

• Content is moderated, to make it school-appropriate.

Page 18: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Edutopia

• A video library.• Videos are professionally produced, and are

organized into series.• The series cover a diverse range of topics, but not

things like “How to teach ___________.”• Several video series on themes like project based

learning, teacher wellness.

Page 19: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Smithsonian Education

• Educational branch of Smithsonian Institute• Provides resources like interviews with

experts, lesson plans, links to relevant websites.

Page 20: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Illuminations

• Illuminations seeks to “illuminate” math with digital interactives (mobile games, activities), brain teasers and lessons.

Page 21: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Edmodo, Moodle

• Online communities for classes – teachers set up an online “class” that looks

something like a facebook group. – Students flesh out their profiles– Everyone can interact.

• Teachers can give quizes and polls through the online “class.”

• Students can view assignments (e.g. homework, projects) and submit work online.

Page 22: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Picture of Edmodo screenQuiz Results

Name of class

Student users

Page 23: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Google Classroom

• Similar idea to Edmodo and Moodle • “Google Classroom is your mission control for

class. Create classes, distribute assignments, send feedback and see everything in one place.”

Page 24: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Edthena

• Teacher uploads a video of him or her teaching• Teacher gives access to admin, colleagues, etc. to

view and add time stamped comments to video• An admin in the room often changes the way

students act; this a great way to counter that.

Page 25: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Teaching Channel

• A video library curated by the company. This is a key difference between this and Schooltube or Teachertube, which are not curated.

• The videos are for seeing how another educator does something (for students, with colleagues)

• Also provides a paid service similar to Edthena

Page 26: Websites Teachers Use 3.17.16

Teacher2Teacher

• Runs a weekly edchat • Actively promotes

collaboration on twitter between teachers

• Started a twitter hashtag: #WhyITeach (see picture)