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Differentiation.

Differentiation

Best Practice. USEFUL,USEFUL. English Teaching Forum 2005, Volume 43, Number 1. English Teaching Forum 2005, Volume 43, Number 1. iPads. Materials writing. Graphic/ Writing Organizers. Professional Development. Apps4 SEN. Other Collections. ELT Mooc. Apps4 SEN. Training Teachers. Professional Development. Mindmapping Tools. Bindyuu. Learning Technologies. Blinded by Technology. Blog image. Tech Tips. Sheryl Sandberg: So we leaned in ... now what? The Frugal Teacher. Resources. Cool Cat Teacher Blog. Common Core Activities with Frolyc. 8 Jan Frolyc is a terrific tool for teachers looking to design their own lesson-based activities. Teachers can create activities for students like: completing a graphic organizer, identify cause and effect in a passage, draw a response to a question or take a quiz. Students can access activities that are assigned to them by a teacher using Frolyc’s iPad app Activity Spot.

As students complete the activity, teachers will receive feedback on student progress in real time! Not only does Frolyc let you customize your students’ experience by designing activities, teachers can access a library filled with Common Core aligned activities created and shared by other teachers. Sign up for a free account and check out their student iPad app! Tags: assessment, Common Core, iPad education, Lesson Plans, literacy. No More Bullet Points: Finding the “Right” Creative Commons Images for Presentations. December 9, 2013 by Joe Hardenbrook When I give a presentation, my slides tend to be more visual, or even abstract.

I ditched the death-by-bullet point long ago. No one wants to sit through that. Put a few important keywords on a slide, add the rest to your notes, and use a powerful image to convey the spirit of the information you are trying to relay. Finding Images For finding free Creative Commons-licensed images that I can re-use, I tend to stick with: Flickr (the Creative Commons search is available from their Advanced Search page)morgueFileGoogle Images (use the Advanced Search to limit to free images)Wikimedia Commonsthe Creative Commons search pageand free subscription services such as Haiku Deck Wither the Subject Heading Here’s the problem: on user-generated sites like Flickr, most people obviously are NOT librarians. Some Quick and Dirty Keywords You Can Use Got a great search tip to share when it comes to using images? Like this: Like Loading... Interesting Ways.