Comment to this post with a brief overview of your work from the previous week. Include details of sites you may have visited, articles you may have read and work you may have completed.
This websites gives a great list of real-world connection for using inquiry based processes in their life, as well as a list of skills and processes helpful in research and information fluency
Is there a way to add these as a hyperlink, so others can access them more easily???
Are we meeting at school or somewhere else next week?
http://www2.ed.gov/pubs/NatAssess/sec5.html http://www.d91.k12.id.us/west/TitleI/Parent%20Involvement.pdf. http://www.esc16.net/dept/isserv/title1swi/files/Newsletter%20February%202010%20English.pdf Springate, K, & Stengelin, D (1999). Building school and community partnerships through parent involvement. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice Hall. Adams, K. (1999). Trust and the family - school relationship examination of parent-teacher differences in elementary and secondary grades. Journal of School Psychology, 38(5), 477-497.
Hi Michelle, I don't think we did decide on a place other than Nettleton to meet for next week. Not sure how to hyperlink sites on the blog, either. Good Jay question. :0) Thanks to you and Ruth for all the cool websites. I have been researching via the internet for forms and policies regarding positive behavior support plans for teachers/classrooms. Had to access several sites to compile info. and start to create a form we can use consistently for behavior and expulsion prevention. I guess that ties in pretty well with ISTE 3/Research this week. I still have to search for an article to report on.
This week I decided to see if blogs were something I would ever keep up with, or on. After my informal sampling I decided that it would take a lot of research before I found something I thought worth my time to view regularly. Are these written by people with no friends with whom to interact personally? I wanted to focus on science blogs and here are a few I read through: http://scienceblogs.com/ - Main site with links to a bunch of blogs. Below are a few I sampled, based purely on the titles. http://scienceblogs.com/confessions/?utm_source=bloglist&utm_medium=dropdown –Confessions of a science librarian. Very eclectic and weird postings on science, and not. http://scienceblogs.com/drugmonkey/2010/03/ - DrugMonkey. an NIH-funded biomedical research scientist and an NIH-funded med school faculty member are among writers. Our money well spent? http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/ - Not exactly rocket science. Science based and eclectic, and apparently won an award for science blog of the year. http://scienceblogs.com/sciencepunk/?utm_source=bloglist&utm_medium=dropdown - Sciencepunk . As with others, eclectic but some fun stuff. Look up Gömböc and see if you’d write about it! http://scienceblogs.com/principles/?utm_source=bloglist&utm_medium=dropdown – Uncertain Principles. Physics, politics and pop culture. A few references to a book titled How to teach physics to your dog. I may have to check it out.
http://www.greenwichschools.org/page.cfm?p=1006
ReplyDeleteThis website gives a great overview of the thin, plan, do model for guided inquiry
http://nets-implementation.iste.wikispaces.net/Research+and+Information+Fluency
ISTE's website gives a handful of teacher scenarios and strategies that real teachers have used in their classrooms
http://21c.qataracademy.wikispaces.net/Constructs+for+Learning#toc5
This websites gives a great list of real-world connection for using inquiry based processes in their life, as well as a list of skills and processes helpful in research and information fluency
Is there a way to add these as a hyperlink, so others can access them more easily???
Are we meeting at school or somewhere else next week?
http://www2.ed.gov/pubs/NatAssess/sec5.html
ReplyDeletehttp://www.d91.k12.id.us/west/TitleI/Parent%20Involvement.pdf.
http://www.esc16.net/dept/isserv/title1swi/files/Newsletter%20February%202010%20English.pdf
Springate, K, & Stengelin, D (1999). Building school and community partnerships through parent involvement. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice Hall.
Adams, K. (1999). Trust and the family - school relationship examination of parent-teacher differences in elementary and secondary grades. Journal of School Psychology, 38(5), 477-497.
http://www.familyfirst.net/
http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Indiana+Schools+Increase+Communications+with+Parents+Using...-a0206108911
http://www.nctm.org/resources/content.aspx?id=9320
http://www.projectappleseed.org/titlei.html
This were all great sites or articles on enhancing commumication with parents via the web!
Hi Michelle,
ReplyDeleteI don't think we did decide on a place other than Nettleton to meet for next week. Not sure how to hyperlink sites on the blog, either. Good Jay question. :0) Thanks to you and Ruth for all the cool websites. I have been researching via the internet for forms and policies regarding positive behavior support plans for teachers/classrooms. Had to access several sites to compile info. and start to create a form we can use consistently for behavior and expulsion prevention. I guess that ties in pretty well with ISTE 3/Research this week. I still have to search for an article to report on.
This week I decided to see if blogs were something I would ever keep up with, or on. After my informal sampling I decided that it would take a lot of research before I found something I thought worth my time to view regularly. Are these written by people with no friends with whom to interact personally? I wanted to focus on science blogs and here are a few I read through:
ReplyDeletehttp://scienceblogs.com/ - Main site with links to a bunch of blogs. Below are a few I sampled, based purely on the titles.
http://scienceblogs.com/confessions/?utm_source=bloglist&utm_medium=dropdown –Confessions of a science librarian. Very eclectic and weird postings on science, and not.
http://scienceblogs.com/drugmonkey/2010/03/ - DrugMonkey. an NIH-funded biomedical research scientist and an NIH-funded med school faculty member are among writers. Our money well spent?
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/ - Not exactly rocket science. Science based and eclectic, and apparently won an award for science blog of the year.
http://scienceblogs.com/sciencepunk/?utm_source=bloglist&utm_medium=dropdown - Sciencepunk . As with others, eclectic but some fun stuff. Look up Gömböc and see if you’d write about it!
http://scienceblogs.com/principles/?utm_source=bloglist&utm_medium=dropdown – Uncertain Principles. Physics, politics and pop culture. A few references to a book titled How to teach physics to your dog. I may have to check it out.