I noticed a new function called Explore at the bottom of my slides today. Here is an explanation video showing how to use it effectively.
Tuesday, October 11, 2016
Sunday, September 11, 2016
Boost your use of te reo Māori
- Look at Kotahi Mano Kaika, a Ngāi Tahu initiative, where children can make online, personalised Māori Language books.
- Choose a phrase, whakataukī and/or kīwaha of the week each week. Encourage students to explore their meaning, find examples, and share their learning at home.
- Use the iPad/iPhone app Sock Puppets to record conversations in te reo Māori and share them with your community on the school website or class blog.
- Find interactive te reo Māori websites on wickED.
- Tellagami is a mobile app (ios and Android) that lets you create and share a quick animation. Tellagami is a great way for students to share their mahi in a non-threatening way and hear themselves speaking te reo Māori.
- Why not watch an episode of Māori Spongebob Squarepants? See if students can retell the story using some key phrases.
- Download the Kura App to find a range of games modules that allow users to improve their knowledge and understanding of the Māori language. Users are timed and can pit their skills against others via a scoreboard. To download the app for android, go to: https://play.google.com/store/search?q=Kura&c=apps. To download the app for Apple, go to the iTunes Store and search "Kura".
- Check out great Te Reo resources here and here
These ideas and resources are from TKI, find more videos about teaching practice here too
I wonder how many schools are using the PaCT tool to ascertain student progress? I think it is certainly a great tool for teachers but underutilized perhaps?
Have a look at the basics in the introductory video
Have a look at the basics in the introductory video
Friday, September 2, 2016
Saturday, August 20, 2016
i-TunesU on the I-Pad for the classroom
Find out all about using the i-Tunes U app on the i-Pad for your classroom!
Friday, May 13, 2016
Thursday, April 21, 2016
Sound recording on the web
Teachers often ask what tools they can use to record voice and share. Here are some tools that might be useful for this: Twisted Wave which saves to Google Drive, Vocaroo which is the simplest of the tools in this list, SoundCloud which still offers browser-based recording even though the mobile apps don’t, AudioPal, and AudioBoom.
(From http://practicaledtech.com/2016/04/03/practical-ed-tech-tip-of-the-week-5-good-tools-for-creating-audio-recordings-online/ - there are how to videos here too)
Thursday, April 14, 2016
Struggling readers - great tool to support them!
The Read Write Chrome extension - Scan pages from reader and upload to Google Drive as a PDF (right click and choose open in Google Docs) then use the read write extension from the Chrome web store to have the text read back to the student. This makes any reading material accessible for students who struggle to read but will be able to access understanding when it is read back to them. The Read Write extension comes as a free trial and when the free trial expires you can still access the reader so a great free tool to unlock possibilities for students!
Select the text to read and click on the call out mark with the arrow to have the text read out when hovering, click the play button to read all.
There is another extension which does this called Speak It but the Read Write one is better as it highlights the words as they are read which is better for the student when reading to associate the text with the speech.
Select the text to read and click on the call out mark with the arrow to have the text read out when hovering, click the play button to read all.
There is another extension which does this called Speak It but the Read Write one is better as it highlights the words as they are read which is better for the student when reading to associate the text with the speech.
Tuesday, March 1, 2016
Wednesday, January 27, 2016
Tuesday, January 26, 2016
Teaching as Inquiry
The latest update on NZ Curriculum site provides a more comprehensive look at teaching as inquiry within the innovative learning context. I like this quote:
Teaching as inquiry FAQ link
The success or failure of my students is about what I do. I am a change agent"
John HattieTeaching as inquiry FAQ link
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