Thursday, October 28, 2010

Take 5! Integration Update - October 28, 2010 (Vol.2/#8)


Issue #8
“Take 5” is a weekly update containing information related to teaching and learning for today and beyond...

Take just 5 minutes (or less) to look over these resources and see what might be helpful for your and/or your students. Better yet, set aside at least 15-30 minutes a week (yes, that's been increased from last year!) to focus on finding resources and ideas that will improve student learning and prepare them for their future!

===================================

Tips and Tools for Teachers 
  • That Quiz  – Quick, easy, and good for review... Multiple choice quizzes for math (mostly), but also geography, language, and science review (foundational knowledge). Students log in with a "quiz code" from a quiz you have already set up, they take it, and either show you the results, print a copy, or you log in to see their results.  [Thanks, Maria Pratt-EP, for sharing this site!]
  • Vocaroo  Record a sound and then email to someone or post online (in a web page, blog, or wiki). Do you need to explain something rather than type it? What about singing a song or pronouncing a word or phrase in a foreign language? Perhaps give instructions on what to do when someone goes to your webpage? Any of these uses and whatever else works! (Just be sure to click the "Allow" button to make the recorder work on your computer.)
Ponderings
  • ARTICLE: In School Turnarounds, the Human Element is Crucial -- Some key points:

    At the heart of all reform efforts are the people who bring the strategies to life.
    ...And one of the most powerful tools—one that has taken an inner-city Cincinnati high school from absolute failure, by any measure, to being named a national Blue Ribbon School—is embarrassingly plain and lacking a data column: It’s about relationships.

    ...Over the past decade, Taft’s graduation rate has risen from 25 percent to 95 percent. In 2010, the percentage of 10th graders scoring proficient or higher in math is up from 33 percent to 96 percent, and from 68 percent to 96 percent in reading. The school, once in “academic emergency,” the state’s lowest designation, has moved to “effective”—and, just recently, to “excellent,” Ohio’s highest rating. 

    ...Smith (Principal) also did something counterintuitive: He kept the staff he inherited. Old teachers, the thinking goes, resist change and prevent transformation. In many turnarounds, much of the staff is let go as a “fresh start” message. Instead, Smith met individually with teachers in their classrooms and spent an hour hearing from each of them about what was working and what wasn’t.

    Real and sustained improvement... depends on building bridges that allow students to grasp the reward of hard work. It must be rooted in relationships throughout the process of change and in a recalibration of expectations that students have for themselves.

Learning Opportunities
  1. In-District Professional Development Opportunities - Calendar
  2. NWO STEM Symposium on Nov. 6 (Saturday) at Penta Career Center from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. The event is an opportunity for preK-12 teachers, pre-service teachers, administrators and higher education faculty to share and learn from one another in a common effort to advance science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) education for people of all ages. Online registration of $40 closes Oct. 29. The on-site registration fee is $50. Undergraduate students can attend for $20.
  3. In the right margin of this blog, enter your email to receive future postings into your email Inbox (Take 5s and more!) -- plan on 1-3 posts per week.

;-) Just for Fun! (and a little learning, perhaps)
  • Create Your Own Font(s) - Two tools/websites to get you started: one is free, but limited functionality (but cool!) and the otehr is not free, but potentially worth it! You decide:
  • Pilot Handwriting - Basically an advertisement (thus, it's free), but the "coolness factor" is high for this one! Another downfall, the writing has to be done from their website - font is not download-able. (NOTE: editing of your letters is difficult, too)  
  •  Fontifier - Create a font to use on your computer for $9 (download)

 

Monday, October 25, 2010

Any other "ings" out there???



Observational Commentary:
There’s
Jing — for screen capture images and video; Ning – for educational, organizational, and social networking; Bing — Microsoft’s newest search venture... And now (as of September), Ping — for iTunes users to connect to and follow what music others’ like or are talking about.

In case you're looking for another Web 2.0 name, here’s what’s left, minus vowels (aing, eing, iing, oing, uing... Although iing or i-ing sounds like it aptly describes this entire phenomenon!) Looks like the pick-
ings are pretty slim!!!
Cing – Cingular (who doesn’t exist anymore) might like this one
Ding
Fing
Ging – a type of catapult???
Hing
King – too many of these
Ling – a type of fish???
Ming - a Chinese dynasty
Qing – another Chinese dynasty
Ring – too many uses to list here...
Sing – ditto
Ting – a noise...
Ving – Mr. Rhames might not like it being used elsewhere
Wing – too many uses
Xing – crossing slang
Ying – Ying (is a famous panda)
Zing — This one has potential... Any takers????

Then there's always the possibility of adding more letters in front... or behind... And suggestions???



Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Take 5! Integration Update - October 20, 2010 (Vol.2/#7)


Issue #7
“Take 5” is a weekly update containing information related to teaching and learning for today and beyond...

Take just 5 minutes (or less) to look over these resources and see what might be helpful for your and/or your students. Better yet, set aside at least 15-30 minutes a week (yes, that's been increased from last year!) to focus on finding resources and ideas that will improve student learning and prepare them for their future!

===================================

Tips and Tools for Teachers 
  • Teachers Love SMART Boards (blog) - A wonderful resource for elementary teachers (and often JH/HS, too). Sign up in the right margin to get email updates when they post a new resource or tip!
  • Twiducate (A Twitter-like website) - From their site:
    Create an online community of  your classroom
    Share inspirations, ideas, readings, thoughts
    Post discussions, deadlines, homework
    Instantly create surveys for students
    Keep parents informed of daily projects
    How could you use Twiducate for your classes, team, group, teachers, staff, etc?

Ponderings (& Resources!)
  • Brain Rules for Babies - A great website resource (FREE) or you can buy the book. A follow up to the excellent for anyone, Brain Rules: 12 Principles for Surviving and Thriving at Work, Home, and School by John Medina. The 'baby version' is for raising "smart and happy children from age 0 to 5 (after that, apparently, you're on your own... or he'll have his next book out by then, I presume!) Some things we can all learn, no matter what age we teach or how many children we have:

Why you shouldn't praise your kid's intelligence
• The amount of TV kids under two should watch
• The best predictor of academic performance


Learning Opportunities -- LOTS!!! ("Fall into Learning!")
  1. In-District Professional Development Opportunities - Calendar
  2. NWO STEM Symposium on Nov. 6 (Saturday) at Penta Career Center from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. The event is an opportunity for preK-12 teachers, pre-service teachers, administrators and higher education faculty to share and learn from one another in a common effort to advance science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) education for people of all ages. Online registration of $40 closes Oct. 29. The on-site registration fee is $50. Undergraduate students can attend for $20.
  3. BGSU hosts Early Childhood conference on Nov. 13 - a one-day conference for preschool and kindergarten educators on Saturday, Nov. 13, on its campus. The keynote presenter is Laura Barker, a clinician and educator. The registration fee is $59 until Oct. 15 and $69 after. The conference website http://cee.bgsu.edu/container.php?x=early_childhood has program and CEU details and a registration link.
  4. SMART Board User Group Meeting at Lucas Co. ESC - Thursday, Nov. 18 from 4-6pm (2 contact hours) - FREE to REVS staff (more info on THIS FORM)
  5. In the right margin of this blog, enter your email to receive future postings into your email Inbox (Take 5s and more!) -- plan on 1-3 posts per week.

;-) Just for Fun! (and a little learning, perhaps)
  • Extreme Pumpkins - In case you thought you'd seen it all... here are some creative (and some gross!) ideas for this year's carving tradition. 


MS Word Mail Merge: Not making cents?


This issue comes up when writing a mail merge letter where you are including dollar amounts from a calculated formula column — such as... “Money Turned In” and “Money Still Due/Owed.” 


In some cases you can just change the cell format to Text, but not if that column/cell has a formula in it and needs 2 decimals to show cents! 

Below is a link to instructions that worked just wonderfully the other morning... BUT (one change to the instructions...) you will need to use “0.00x” for 2 places after the decimal (such as for cents), and “0.0x” only goes 1 place after decimal.

http://wordprocessing.about.com/od/usingmailmerge/qt/NPFSwitch.htm



Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Excel- Selecting several cells rather than one?


When you click/select ONE cell in Excel, do more than one get selected?
Apparently, it’s the scroll wheel on your mouse... (more info here)
http://www.computing.net/answers/office/excel-click-1-cell-selects-multiple-update/8691.html
Try this to fix it:
  1. Click on scroll wheel (and let go), you’ll get a compass-like 4-arrow symbol. 
  2. Without clicking, move the mouse up, down, left, right — your screen will scroll in those directions. 
  3. Now press the wheel again to go back to normal mouse mode. 
  4. Now left-click a single cell — it should just select ONE cell. If not, try again! (or leave a comment below and I’ll do a Jing video to show you what to look for)


Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Take 5! Integration Update - October 6, 2010 (Vol.2/#6)



Issue #6
“Take 5” is a weekly update containing information related to teaching and learning for today and beyond...

Take just 5 minutes (or less) to look over these resources and see what might be helpful for your and/or your students. Better yet, set aside at least 15-30 minutes a week (yes, that's been increased from last year!) to focus on finding resources and ideas that will improve student learning and prepare them for their future!

===================================

Extra Help for Neighboring Schools...
Perrysburg Schools is asking for your help in voting for their Pepsi "Refresh Everything" grant.
  • A daily vote online (at http://www.refresheverything.com/perrysburg - you'll need to set up an account first, but it's fairly painless!)  
  • AND a text message vote (text 103023 to Pepsi at 73774, you will get a reply text letting you know it went through).  
  • Maumee's Wayne Trail Elementary also has a project up for voting this month, so feel free to use your 10 daily online votes for them as well, if you'd like! A few seconds of your time could help benefit our neighbors...
Tips and Tools for Teachers 
  • Cyber Safety Week (Oct. 3-9) – Although only a couple days left in this week, keep this Ohio Attorney General's site in mind -- Click on the Cyber Safety Toolkit. Plus, attend a parent training seminar on Thursday, October 7th at St. Rose in Perrysburg at 7pm. More information is on this flyer.


Ponderings (& Resources!)
  • What's so special about Sunday, October 10th? (especially at 10:10am)... How about 10/10/10...10:10:10 
  • Power of 10 (famous video of scale)
  • Ten by Ten (current events in images, shown 10x10)

Learning Opportunities
  1. In-District Professional Development Opportunities - Calendar
  2. NWO STEM Symposium on Nov. 6 (Saturday) at Penta Career Center from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. The event is an opportunity for preK-12 teachers, pre-service teachers, administrators and higher education faculty to share and learn from one another in a common effort to advance science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) education for people of all ages. Online registration of $40 closes Oct. 29. The on-site registration fee is $50. Undergraduate students can attend for $20.
  3. In the right margin of this blog, enter your email to receive future postings into your email Inbox (Take 5s and more!) -- plan on 1-3 posts per week.

;-) Just for Fun! (and a little learning, perhaps)