There's a company named Kno that is creating a tablet for students. It appears the textbooks are loaded onto the tablet and the student can take notes and highlight things right on the tablet. It looks really cool! Check out the videos. www.kno.com
Showing posts with label HIGH SCHOOL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HIGH SCHOOL. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
KNO Tablet
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Saturday, April 30, 2011
Virtual Schools
Texas lawmakers are considering new legislation to make creating virtual high schools possible. If it passes, students could enroll in these virtual high schools and go through 4 years of high school without ever having to sit in a classroom. Current Texas law only allows high school students to enroll in a maximum of 2 virtual classes per semester.

Students wanting to use virtual learning is growing in Texas. In other states, virtual schools are thriving. In Florida, for example, there have been over 220,000 course enrollments in their virtual schools. Check out this article for more information.

Would you want your child in a virtual school?
Students wanting to use virtual learning is growing in Texas. In other states, virtual schools are thriving. In Florida, for example, there have been over 220,000 course enrollments in their virtual schools. Check out this article for more information.
Would you want your child in a virtual school?
Monday, March 28, 2011
Students and Technology
According to a recent survey, teachers believe that access to more technology would benefit students. “Teachers say that more opportunities for collaboration with other teachers and greater access to technology and other instructional tools would significantly improve their ability to help diverse learners succeed, both now and in the future.”
A high school in Delaware believes in this concept, that next fall all of their students will be carrying IPads instead of textbooks. "The goal is to prepare them for life after high school in a high-tech world, officals say."
I would have loved to have that option when I was in high school. What about you?
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Technology in the Classroom
According to an article by Bob Wheaton of the Jackson Citizen Patriot, many schools in the Jackson area are embracing technology in their schools. Quite a few of the local schools are "using high-tech gadgets such as Tablet PCs, Flip video cameras and document cameras. They’re podcasting, vodcasting and visiting teachers’ Wikipages." 14 teachers are also participating in a cell phone project where students can text their teachers questions with homework and get more personal feedback outside of the classroom.
These are just some of the things the article states are happening in the school regarding technology:
A sampling of some of the technology being used in Jackson County schools:
• Columbia: Nook e-readers for cognitively impaired students at Columbia Central High School; iPad tablet computers for fourth-graders at Brooklyn Elementary School.
• Grass Lake: Interactive long-distance learning technology that allows students at Grass Lake to take advanced placement classes by communicating electronically with teachers at Stockbridge High School; touch-screen SmartBoards at Grass Lake High School.
• Hanover-Horton: Document cameras that interface between computers and multimedia projectors; e-readers for special education students; CAD software, Fischertechnik robotics and stress analyzers for bridge trusses for pre-engineering students.
• Jackson Christian School: NComputing devices that make computers more available at Jackson Christian Elementary School; mobile language labs at Jackson Christian High School that includes 24 netbook computers, headsets and a printer so students can study as many as 32 languages.
• Jackson Public Schools: Airliner wireless tablets; teacher Wikipages for use by students and parents; cell phone project in which students or parents can call or text participating teachers after school hours; document cameras; computer response systems that allow the class to answer multiple-choice questions on a handheld clicker, with the results calculated and displayed; hand-held Neo computers and document cameras at McCulloch Academy of Technology & Science; new media center at Sharp Park Academy that will focus on technology.
• Jackson County Intermediate School District: LifeSize video-conferencing system used for Springport and Jackson Public Schools advanced placement biology class; e2020 online curriculum used by Jackson Area Career Center.
• Michigan Center: iPod touches; iPads; podcasting; vodcasting; Macbooks/laptops; morning announcements that are edited and put on the website SchoolTube.
• Paragon Charter Academy: Document cameras in grades K-8; amplification systems used by teachers; Flip video cameras; Promethean ActivExpression Learner and Student Response Systems that allow students to answer multiple-choice questions and have classroom results displayed.
This is definitely the direction that schools need to continue going. Technology, used correctly, can help teachers teach more effectively and students learn more efficiently. Do you think technology in the classroom can make a difference?
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Monday, January 24, 2011
An innovative way to teach your child about Business + Charity!
| Business instructor Bob Merrilees is teaching students to make money in his entrepreneur class at Northern Highlands Regional High School. The students sell items on eBay, with profits going to local charities. |
I am officially loving the ingenuity of Northern Highlands Regional High School's business teacher, Bob Merrilees. In an effort to teach real-life business skills to his students, he started an eBay selling project with his class. His students sell items on eBay and donate the profits to charities chosen by the students themselves. They learn the importance of customer service, advertising and marketing, shipping and payment logistics and the value of giving back to the community. You can read more about the article here.
I have been thinking of ways to teach my own kids business skills from when they're young and I love this idea. Perhaps instead of having a simple yard sale, a better way of getting rid of the extra clutter may be this:
1. Have your kids help you organize the items for sale in bins according to categories.
2. Have them help in taking the pictures of the product. Teach them how to lay the product out in a way that will entice buyers and teach them how to use the camera and the different settings. Depending on their age and skill level, you could even show them how to edit pictures.
3. Show your kids how to upload the pictures onto eBay or craigslist or your local online barter site. Show them with the first item how to describe the product and list the price. Allow them to lead the product descriptions and pricing for the other items, only interjecting to direct them along the right path.
4. Teach them how to reply to emails.
5. Show them how payment is processed and how credit cards works. This may be a great time to teach them about good and bad debts.
6. Have your kids learn how to process shipping labels through usps.com, fedex.com, or ups.com. Teach them how to properly package the item.
7. You can start a family fund with the proceeds that can go towards a family trip/outing or your family could donate the proceeds to a local charity.
Some other business ideas include:
1. Lemonade/Juice/Hot Chocolate/Cookie Stand.
2. Making crafts and selling them on eBay, Etsy, at a local arts and crafts store, or chic boutique.
3. Selling their framed artwork on Etsy. I know of a lot of people who love kid's artwork.
4. Have them publish a book and sell it online through Scribble Press, Lulu, or Etsy.
5. Have your kids pick a topic and create their own magazine for other kids. They can create and publish their magazine on MagCloud. This can be done on a monthly or quarterly basis.
6. Have your older kids start a lawn mowing, dog walking, or babysitting business. Help them open a bank account and show them how to use Quickbooks or Quicken to manage their business accounts, send customer invoices, and so on.
Please comment if you have any other fun ideas to teach your children, both young and older, the value of business. I would love to hear your thoughts and ideas!!!
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Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Be INVOLVED with your kids' education!
A lot of parents often ask me the age-old question: "What can I do to help my child improve in school?" The answer is a simple one. Take an active interest in their education. There are many ways you can do so. Here are some ideas:
1. If there is a PTA in your child's school, find out how you can be a part of it. It doesn't have to be a full-time job as many parents perceive being in the PTA to be. Often times, there is a parent who leads the group and is the one who is most active in running in. Being a part of the PTA and volunteering the hours you can afford to is the first step to knowing what's going on in your child's school. The PTA is also a great way to help turn things around in school. For example, if a certain subject is not taught up to par, the PTA, as a whole group, can be influential in encouraging the school board and administration to turn things around. In addition, the PTA is usually the first one to know of any activities or new trends going on in your child's school. Being a part of it will ensure that you are kept in the loop as well. It's also a great way to meet other parents who are similarily interested in their children's education. Having that mutual support is important.
2. Get to know your child's teachers well, if not VERY well. Teachers love parents who want to be an active participant in their child's education. Find a chance to meet your child's teacher(s) the first week of school and make sure you exchange contact information. Let the teacher know that you want to be involved and if there's anything you can do to help, he/she should feel free to contact you at any time. Of course, be careful of not skipping over to the annoying side of being a concerned parent. Be respectful to the teacher while communicating the fact that you are and want to be aware of what's going on. If you can afford the extra time, volunteer to be an aide in your child's classroom. This will give the teacher more time to spend one-on-ones with each child.
3. Get to know the parents of the kids your child hangs out with. Form play groups, extracurricular groups, or homework groups together. When your child has a good group of friends who all have the same goals towards studying, it helps generate a higher interest in learning for your child.
4. It's good to have your child be independent in taking charge of their own homework. However, it can be a huge mistake on the parents' part to not know what homework they have or when their tests/quizzes.projects are or are due by. Set a time each day after school to sit down with your child and go through what they have done in school. I find this most effective for kids kindergarten through sophomore in high school. It's bets to do so after lunch, a snack and a short break. Have your child do their own homework but it's always good to look (at least briefly) through their assignments after they have all been completed. This way, you will know what your child is learning and what he/she is having a harder time coping with in school. This goes for the same even if your child has a private tutor. Leaving everything to the tutor is not the most ideal, although having someone is supervise your child's work is sometimes better than nothing! :)
If you have any other ideas or comments, feel free to share with us!
1. If there is a PTA in your child's school, find out how you can be a part of it. It doesn't have to be a full-time job as many parents perceive being in the PTA to be. Often times, there is a parent who leads the group and is the one who is most active in running in. Being a part of the PTA and volunteering the hours you can afford to is the first step to knowing what's going on in your child's school. The PTA is also a great way to help turn things around in school. For example, if a certain subject is not taught up to par, the PTA, as a whole group, can be influential in encouraging the school board and administration to turn things around. In addition, the PTA is usually the first one to know of any activities or new trends going on in your child's school. Being a part of it will ensure that you are kept in the loop as well. It's also a great way to meet other parents who are similarily interested in their children's education. Having that mutual support is important.
2. Get to know your child's teachers well, if not VERY well. Teachers love parents who want to be an active participant in their child's education. Find a chance to meet your child's teacher(s) the first week of school and make sure you exchange contact information. Let the teacher know that you want to be involved and if there's anything you can do to help, he/she should feel free to contact you at any time. Of course, be careful of not skipping over to the annoying side of being a concerned parent. Be respectful to the teacher while communicating the fact that you are and want to be aware of what's going on. If you can afford the extra time, volunteer to be an aide in your child's classroom. This will give the teacher more time to spend one-on-ones with each child.
3. Get to know the parents of the kids your child hangs out with. Form play groups, extracurricular groups, or homework groups together. When your child has a good group of friends who all have the same goals towards studying, it helps generate a higher interest in learning for your child.
4. It's good to have your child be independent in taking charge of their own homework. However, it can be a huge mistake on the parents' part to not know what homework they have or when their tests/quizzes.projects are or are due by. Set a time each day after school to sit down with your child and go through what they have done in school. I find this most effective for kids kindergarten through sophomore in high school. It's bets to do so after lunch, a snack and a short break. Have your child do their own homework but it's always good to look (at least briefly) through their assignments after they have all been completed. This way, you will know what your child is learning and what he/she is having a harder time coping with in school. This goes for the same even if your child has a private tutor. Leaving everything to the tutor is not the most ideal, although having someone is supervise your child's work is sometimes better than nothing! :)
If you have any other ideas or comments, feel free to share with us!
Thursday, August 12, 2010
10 Ways to Use The New York Times for Teaching Literature
Katherine Shulten and Holly Ojalvo wrote a great article on using The New York Times for teaching literature. Here are the 10 ways they suggested:
1. Certain classics have appeared on a majority of high school English lists every year since the 1960’s, and many, if not most, are likely somewhere in your own school’s curriculum. We have made special Teaching Topics pages of Times and Learning Network resources for many of these, including:
To find Times articles from 1851-present related to almost any book, use Site Search. Click on Advanced Search (on the right-hand side of the Search page) to narrow your search. To go back further, search the archives from 1851-1980. (Note that some articles are not available for free.) As needed, sort your results by “newest first,” “oldest first” or “closest match.”
Take, for example, “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.” If you do a site search for “Huckleberry Finn,” you’ll see that one of its very first mentions in The New York Times came in 1885 in the form of an editorial republished from the Springfield Republican. Headlined “Trashy and Vicious,” it comments on the Concord Library’s ban of the book. Among other things, you would also find:
3. To enrich students’ understanding of works’ settings, you might use Times Topics pages and the Multimedia/Photo Archive to find related articles, photographs, video, interactive graphics or podcasts.
For example, if you’re teaching “The Grapes of Wrath”, the Great Depression page has a short overview of the social, political, and economic conditions of the period, as well as photo slide shows of both black and white and color photographs from the era. The page also highlights several videos in The New Hard Times series in which people who were alive during the Great Depression compare it to conditions today.
Similarly, Anne Frank’s “Diary of a Young Girl,” Elie Wiesel’s “Night” or “The Book Thief” might be taught using resources from the Times Topics page on the Holocaust, or with our special Holocaust collection.
And just for fun, the interactive Literary Map of Manhattan might teach your students about writers like J.D. Salinger and Ralph Ellison, or might inspire them to create their own map or itinerary that features the literary landscape of another region, state or country.
4. Show students the relevance of what they read to “the real world” by having them connect key quotes from the work to news articles, photos and editorials in The Times that echo this idea. How do these three famous quotes, for example, resonate today? What contemporary connections can students find in The Times?
“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.” (“A Tale of Two Cities”)
“No man, for any considerable period, can wear one face to himself and another to the multitude, without finally getting bewildered as to which may be the true.” (“The Scarlet Letter”)
“How wonderful it is that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world.” (“Diary of a Young Girl”)
5. Maybe your students are reading contemporary fiction like “The Kite Runner,” “The Brief, Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao” or “Life of Pi”. Or perhaps they’re recommending new titles to each other in preparation for a book group.
If so, the Books section offers podcasts and a blog with news and interviews about these and other popular books and writers. In December each year The Times also chooses 100 Notable Books of that year to recommend.
6. Or, perhaps, you teach young adult literature or pair YA novels with classics. In our lesson It’s the Same Old Story we highlight commonalities between the “Twilight” series and other literature, and the lesson can easily be adapted to work with any young adult novel, from the “Harry Potter” series to “The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian”.
To give your students models of how to think critically about YA books, you might assign such pieces as the 2006 essay by Naomi Wolf about the “Gossip Girl,” “A-List” and “Clique” novels and the 2009 essay by Ned Vizzini about stereotypes in young adult fiction.
7. A common literature class assignment: to consider or create adaptations of literary works. Students might rewrite a portion of a literary text, either updating it, writing a point of view or recasting it in a new genre or under new conditions.
You might also point out the many published works that reinvent classics, such as the recent legal battle over the “Catcher in the Rye” sequel illustrated. This article lists many famous “sequels,” including the critically acclaimed “The Wide Sargasso Sea” and the creative "Pride and Prejudice and Zombies".
And if your students are critically reviewing film adaptations – or drafting their own ideas for the movie version of a book they’re reading – they might find and read the Times movie review and other commentary on adaptations (such as Joyce Carol Oates’s Opinion piece on the Disney version of “The Scarlet Letter”). These two lessons will help students compare book and movie versions of the same work: Setting the Stage From the Page and What a Character! Comparing Literary Adaptations.
8. If your students are delving into author biography, a good place to start is the Times Topics pages about them. Find them quickly and easily using the drop-down menu on the right-hand side of the Books section, which features many writers from Jane Austen, Nikolai Gogol, Ernest Hemingway, George Orwell, Edgar Allan Poe and Albert Camus to Raymond Carver, Stephen King and Edwidge Danticat.
Use these pages to discover intriguing tidbits about writers, like how Amy Tan came to write “The Joy Luck Club,” why Sandra Cisneros got mostly C’s and D’s in 5th grade and how Salman Rushdie uses his computer to compose his works.
9. Graphic novels, such as “Persepolis” and “Maus,” are taught across the curriculum in many schools. Here are two useful essays about graphic novels, one about the genre in general, and another about their use in schools. Our lesson That’s the Story of My Life has students creating their own storyboards for graphic novels about adolescence.
10. For more ideas, explore our ever-expanding trove of language arts lesson plans. (Tip: All of our lessons on literature since fall 2009 are tagged “literature,” but there are many more, going back to 1999.)
You’ll find a range of lessons about particular authors and genres, as well as activities encouraging having fun with and opening new vantage points on literature.
1. Certain classics have appeared on a majority of high school English lists every year since the 1960’s, and many, if not most, are likely somewhere in your own school’s curriculum. We have made special Teaching Topics pages of Times and Learning Network resources for many of these, including:
- Major plays by Shakespeare, such as“Romeo and Juliet” and “Hamlet” .
- 50 Years of ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’
- J.D. Salinger and ‘The Catcher in the Rye'
- “The Odyssey”
- “The Great Gatsby”
- “Frankenstein”
- “The Lord of the Flies”
To find Times articles from 1851-present related to almost any book, use Site Search. Click on Advanced Search (on the right-hand side of the Search page) to narrow your search. To go back further, search the archives from 1851-1980. (Note that some articles are not available for free.) As needed, sort your results by “newest first,” “oldest first” or “closest match.”
Take, for example, “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.” If you do a site search for “Huckleberry Finn,” you’ll see that one of its very first mentions in The New York Times came in 1885 in the form of an editorial republished from the Springfield Republican. Headlined “Trashy and Vicious,” it comments on the Concord Library’s ban of the book. Among other things, you would also find:
- a 1902 letter from Mark Twain on the Omaha Public Library’s ban
- a 1984 piece by Norman Mailer on the novel’s 100th birthday
- a 1992 article about the source of Huck’s voice
- the 1995 article “Teaching Huck Finn Without Fear”
- a 1957 editorial on the New York City Board of Education dropping the book
- a 1996 article comparing the novel to “Uncle Tom’s Cabin”
- a 1995 essay on “Huck’s” influence on literary portrayals of childhood
For example, if you’re teaching “The Grapes of Wrath”, the Great Depression page has a short overview of the social, political, and economic conditions of the period, as well as photo slide shows of both black and white and color photographs from the era. The page also highlights several videos in The New Hard Times series in which people who were alive during the Great Depression compare it to conditions today.
Similarly, Anne Frank’s “Diary of a Young Girl,” Elie Wiesel’s “Night” or “The Book Thief” might be taught using resources from the Times Topics page on the Holocaust, or with our special Holocaust collection.
And just for fun, the interactive Literary Map of Manhattan might teach your students about writers like J.D. Salinger and Ralph Ellison, or might inspire them to create their own map or itinerary that features the literary landscape of another region, state or country.
4. Show students the relevance of what they read to “the real world” by having them connect key quotes from the work to news articles, photos and editorials in The Times that echo this idea. How do these three famous quotes, for example, resonate today? What contemporary connections can students find in The Times?
“No man, for any considerable period, can wear one face to himself and another to the multitude, without finally getting bewildered as to which may be the true.” (“The Scarlet Letter”)
“How wonderful it is that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world.” (“Diary of a Young Girl”)
5. Maybe your students are reading contemporary fiction like “The Kite Runner,” “The Brief, Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao” or “Life of Pi”. Or perhaps they’re recommending new titles to each other in preparation for a book group.
If so, the Books section offers podcasts and a blog with news and interviews about these and other popular books and writers. In December each year The Times also chooses 100 Notable Books of that year to recommend.
To give your students models of how to think critically about YA books, you might assign such pieces as the 2006 essay by Naomi Wolf about the “Gossip Girl,” “A-List” and “Clique” novels and the 2009 essay by Ned Vizzini about stereotypes in young adult fiction.
7. A common literature class assignment: to consider or create adaptations of literary works. Students might rewrite a portion of a literary text, either updating it, writing a point of view or recasting it in a new genre or under new conditions.
You might also point out the many published works that reinvent classics, such as the recent legal battle over the “Catcher in the Rye” sequel illustrated. This article lists many famous “sequels,” including the critically acclaimed “The Wide Sargasso Sea” and the creative "Pride and Prejudice and Zombies".
And if your students are critically reviewing film adaptations – or drafting their own ideas for the movie version of a book they’re reading – they might find and read the Times movie review and other commentary on adaptations (such as Joyce Carol Oates’s Opinion piece on the Disney version of “The Scarlet Letter”). These two lessons will help students compare book and movie versions of the same work: Setting the Stage From the Page and What a Character! Comparing Literary Adaptations.
8. If your students are delving into author biography, a good place to start is the Times Topics pages about them. Find them quickly and easily using the drop-down menu on the right-hand side of the Books section, which features many writers from Jane Austen, Nikolai Gogol, Ernest Hemingway, George Orwell, Edgar Allan Poe and Albert Camus to Raymond Carver, Stephen King and Edwidge Danticat.
Use these pages to discover intriguing tidbits about writers, like how Amy Tan came to write “The Joy Luck Club,” why Sandra Cisneros got mostly C’s and D’s in 5th grade and how Salman Rushdie uses his computer to compose his works.
9. Graphic novels, such as “Persepolis” and “Maus,” are taught across the curriculum in many schools. Here are two useful essays about graphic novels, one about the genre in general, and another about their use in schools. Our lesson That’s the Story of My Life has students creating their own storyboards for graphic novels about adolescence.
10. For more ideas, explore our ever-expanding trove of language arts lesson plans. (Tip: All of our lessons on literature since fall 2009 are tagged “literature,” but there are many more, going back to 1999.)
You’ll find a range of lessons about particular authors and genres, as well as activities encouraging having fun with and opening new vantage points on literature.
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