Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Fakebook


Have students create a fake Facebook page for a famous author, scientist, historical figure, fictional character, renowned chef, business leader, inventor, theorist, mathematician.... the possibilities are endless.

This quick and simple project can be saved and shared with the click of a button.  Click here to see a 90 second tutorial or check out the example below.


View Fullscreen | Create your own

Friday, September 16, 2011

Remind101

 Do you think there's a fundamental problem in communication between teachers, students and parents?  Remind101 is trying to fix that problem.  

Remind101 is a free and safe way for teachers to text message students and stay in touch with parents. 

Remind101 is;

FAST:  Instantly message a class of students or their parents from your computer. 

SAFE:  Teachers never see students' phone numbers. Students never see theirs.

EASY:  Students and parents join by sending a text message. No computer needed.

 


Remind101 from remind101 on Vimeo.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Reinventing Textbooks


Matt MacInnis And Inkling Are Reinventing Textbooks For Tablets

Inkling Ipad App Anatomy
First Posted: 8/29/11 01:16 PM ET Updated: 8/29/11 01:49 PM ET
Inkling, a digital textbook company started by ex-Apple education exec Matt MacInnis, wants to make textbooks more like computers.

MacInnis told HuffPost that e-textbooks should be specially converted for digital consumption. They should be more, he said, "than just flat scans of the original material" -- a not-so-subtle dig at Inkling’s main competitor, digital textbook seller Kno. What makes Inkling’s textbooks better, MacInnis said with a bit of braggadocio, is that they "change the way information is consumed."

"There’s a generation that's grown accustomed to collaboration, searchability, and accessibility," MacInnis said. "The textbook is this horrible outlier. It’s isolating. Expectations have changed dramatically; the products that students use to learn have not caught up."

Inkling has released the 2.0 version of its iPad app, and the features it is rolling out drastically improve its -- and this will sound familiar to those of you who read the preceding paragraph -- collaboration, searchability and accessibility. It has added a journal panel, which combines all of the student's notes, highlights and questions; integration with Google and Wikipedia for in-book searching; per-chapter purchases, where students can buy one chapter from a textbook at a time from $2.99 per chapter and, perhaps most impressively, a live "expert" attached to each book -- often the author of the book itself -- who gives notes in addition to the book and can answer questions asked within the book's interface.

WATCH a (rather one-sided) Inkling-produced video about the advantages of their textbooks:



Though the journal panel, Google integration and social question-and-answer features are nice and necessary innovations for students. These are also e-textbook features that Inkling competitor Kno had added a few weeks prior, however. The major advantage of Inkling's digitized versions of the big publishers' textbooks is still that it presents the information in a way that makes you feel like you are gaining something from having your material on a tablet besides portability and convenience.

Inkling designs its textbooks with interactivity in mind. MacInnis displayed a music textbook that had audio clips and sheet music in line with the text, an American history book with documentary footage in video form and a biology textbook with 3D renderings of bones and muscles and molecules that you could spin around to see each part from every side.

WATCH MacInnis explain the advantages of his company's anatomy textbook with the pitch that "you’ll be a better doctor" if you use Inkling's edition:




Inkling’s anatomy and biology textbooks might not make you a better doctor, but they could make you a better medical student: Digital textbooks just make more sense for science subjects, and an informal survey of medical student friends reported that Inkling's books are much more intuitive and smarter than the heavy texts currently in use.

But what about subjects that aren't inherently visual? Take, for example, a chapter from Inkling’s edition of "Give Me Liberty!," an American history textbook. While e-books are generally cheaper than physical textbooks and undoubtedly lighter, this one in particular did little to "reinvent" the source material. To be fair, it's hard to imagine what could be done with the era from 1800 to 1840 to utilize a tablet's core strengths -- though, it would be a good start to make anything on a map that changes over time into a video, or a GIF or something that can really visualize the change.

So, here is Inkling's big problem going up against Kno or Amazon Kindle Textbooks Rental or Barnes & Noble's NOOK Study: Do they add enough to their versions to differentiate themselves from the pack?

Inkling can pump out a new textbook in about 4 to 6 weeks, according to MacInnis, and right now they are approaching 100 natively-rendered e-books. MacInnis said that these books make up over 50 percent of the textbooks used in the United States, but when you compare this with the over 100,000 books that Kno has scanned for iPad, with the same basic note-taking and social media features, most non-scientists might just choose based purely on price and the convenience of having all their receipts from one place.

MacInnis worked in Apple's education wing for 10 years, and recalled a particular visit to a classroom where Apple was piloting laptops for students. He became frustrated by the disconnect between the computer and the book, he told HuffPost. "We’d be giving students $1400 laptops," he said. "And then the teachers would say, 'Turn to page 176.' And I would be like..."

He made a low, guttural sound and shook his head to express his disappointment with the physical textbook, from its flatness to its inability to move.

The crowdsourced social knowledge and Notebook (and price discount) are good first steps toward changing the format of the 21st century textbook that caused MacInnis to shake his head in disgust ten years ago -- and Inkling is on its way toward reinventing the look and functionality of the digital textbook. In order to truly deserve the entirety of the tablet-toting student market, however, MacInnis and Inkling will have to continue to reinvent.

Monday, September 12, 2011

15 Cool & Useful Things You Can Do With Google



  1. Convert Units:  You can use Google to convert between many different units of measurement of height, weight, and volume among many others. Just enter your desired conversion into the search box and we’ll do the rest. 
  2. Get a definition. If you want a definition without having to track down an online (or a physical) dictionary, just type “definition:word” to find the definition of the word in your results (i.e.: “definition: serendipity” will track down the definition of the word “serendipity”).
  3. Search within a specific kind of site. If you know you only want results from an educational site, try “site:edu” or for a government site, try “site:gov” and your search term to get results only from sites with those web addresses.
  4. Search within a specific website. If you know you want to look up Babe Ruth in Wikipedia, type in “site:wikipedia.org Babe Ruth” to go directly to the Wikipedia page about Babe Ruth. It works for any site, not just Wikipedia.
  5. Calculate with Google. Type in any normal mathematical expressions to get the answer immediately. For example, “2*4″ will get you the answer “8.”
  6. Google Scholar. Use this specialized Google search to get results from scholarly literature such as peer-reviewed papers, theses, and academic publishers.
  7. Make a study group with Google Groups. Google Groups allows you to communicate and collaborate in groups, so take this option to set up a study group that doesn’t have to meet face-to-face.
  8. Google Code University. Visit this Google site to have access to Creative Commons-licensed content to help you learn more about computer science.
  9. Learn what experts have to say. Explore Knol to find out what experts have to say on a wide range of topics. If you are an expert, write your own Knol, too.
  10. Create online surveys for research projects. Quickly and easily create online surveys for any research project that requires feedback from others. The answers are saved to your Google Docs account.
  11. Use the Tasks as a to-do list. Use the Tasks available in Gmail as a way to stay on top of assignments, exams, and project due dates.
  12. Highlight mail with labels. Use labels to mark your messages. You can find them easily while in your inbox and do a search for all the messages with that label after you archive them
  13. Consolidate email accounts. If you have a Gmail account, an account through school, and any other account you are juggling separately, combine them all into Gmail to cut down on time spent checking all those accounts.
  14. Get a text message with your daily agenda. Keep up with all that you need to do for the day without ever having to log on to your Google Calendar.
  15.  Take Notes while searching the web.  This note taking application allows you to organize all of your online research quickly and easily. With Google Notebook, you can clip text, images, and links from web pages while browsing. Your notes and clips are saved to an online “notebook” that you can access from any computer, and may also be shared with others. So whether you’re planning a vacation or writing a school paper, Google Notebook makes it easy. To get started, go to Google Notebook’s main site.