Are you ready to get wired?

Whether you're a new teacher or just new at heart, education is increasingly becoming a digital experience. Here's your place to find fun, functional, and (most importantly) FREE sources to enhance your classroom via the world wide web - and ways to fund it all. Okay maybe not ALL, but at least a great, big, giant portion of it. Are you ready to get wired?
Showing posts with label free resources. Show all posts
Showing posts with label free resources. Show all posts

Monday, September 3, 2012

Sunny D Book Spree

Gasp! She does exist!
Yes, I have been MIA in the bloggerverse for over a month. I figured between the majority of teachers being on "brain-cation" for the summer and then the whirlwind of setting up a classroom (which is essentially like setting up a home away from home), we all had enough to keep us busy. I did write some posts over the summer that you may want to read for this school year, so check out my June and July postings.
So...what better way is there to start out the new school year than receiving free books for your classroom? The Sunny D Book Spree is now going on until November 30th! It's pretty cut and dry (or should I say  freshly squeezed?): send in 20 UPC labels from eligible bottles along with the completed form (available here) and Sunny D sends you 20 books for your grade level.
Wee! It's a Book Spree!
I participated last year and can say that it's a great way to expand your classroom library. The books they send you are brand new, high-interest titles that will appeal to your students. The reading level of the books varies as well. Pictured above are some of the books I received last year from Sunny D.

Have your students bring in Sunny D labels for some new reads for your room! You could even tie in some math with this project and have your students calculate the percentage of labels they have brought in, or the probability of reaching your label goal by the postmark date. Either way, your classroom library will be "D-lighted" to add some more books to its shelves!

http://sunnyd.com/bookspree/for-teachers.php

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Create Your Own Webquests at Zunal.com!

So do you know what day of the week it is? Me neither. Isn't summertime grand?!
Remember when I told you about those technology classes I was taking last month? In doing so, I learned about another cool web tool that I can't wait to start using this upcoming year. Webquests are a fun, interactive means of having your students use online resources to learn about a topic and apply knowledge. Give your students a task, links for the activities they need for the assignment at hand, and they're off on a virtual learning journey.
That being said, my new favorite online "toy" for teaching is Zunal. This website allows you to create and store wonderful, structured webquests for your students for FREE. I had never heard of Zunal before and I am very impressed with how easy it is to use. When you go to create a new webquest, there are already preset categories and pages for the essential parts of your webquest, such as introduction, task, process, and evaluation. You don't have to create any buttons or pages yourself; all you need to do is enter the text, links, and images. To make your webquests even more engaging, you can also add files (great for if you want to include a study guide or worksheet you've created), video from YouTube, Vimeo, and TeacherTube (but not SchoolTube!!! Huge bummer!), pictures, and Vokis. It's up to you how "blinged" out you like to make your webquests, but Zunal give you plenty of means to make your webquests dazzle.
One of the best things about the template Zunal gives you is it includes a page in your webquest for evaluation that allows you to create a rubric for your task. All you have to do is enter the performance descriptors you want to inlcude for your final project. And since it's right there in the webquest, your students can refer to it as they work. There is also a mobile version of Zunal so your students can interact with the webquests you create using an iPad or Android device as well. As with most free resources, you can upgrade to the paid version where you can add more pages to your webquests, quizzes, games, etc. With the free account you can make as many webquests as you'd like.
Another plus is you can search for webquests created by other teachers on Zunal. There are literally thousands to choose from in any subject area and every grade level. If you have a Portaportal, you can bookmark your favorite webquests or ones you have created so they are easy for your students to access when needed.
Here's the link to a webquest I created on Abraham Lincoln. Check it out and others on Zunal, and soon you'll be setting up your own account so you can make webquests for your own classroom!
http://zunal.com/
http://zunal.com/webquest.php?w=156042

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Classroom Collaboration Series: VoiceThread

Looking for a cool way this summer to keep your students engaged with technology? Here's a way you can make a virtual field trip, an online lesson, a display of student work, or a virtual discussion with your class - VoiceThread.
This is, in a nutshell, what you can do with VoiceThread. Add images or pictures (which could be screen shots of math problems worked out in class, pictures from a field trip, student illustrations, you name it) to create a slideshow. Then, for each slide, you as the teacher may choose to add your voice or type descriptions to each of the slides. You can also write on the images as you record your voice to reference points of interest.
Once you complete your VoiceThread, you can have your students find it online. As they view your VoiceThread, they can make comments on each slide! For example, you may want your students to respond to an image about a science experiment to show what they remember, or it could be as simple as having them leave their memories on a picture from a school field trip. They can comment by typing a response or leaving a recorded message. If you have a webcam available, your students can respond using that as well. What happens after your students comment on the VoiceThread is that you create an online conversation. You and the class can go back and view the show together to view each other's feedback - a great way to review information. Your students can go back and view the VoiceThreads on their own as well to reinforce content or take a virtual field trip of sorts over and over again. You can also download the VoiceThread app to your iPad so you students can access it there as well.
This resource is free...to an extent. Creating a VoiceThread Educator account is free, and the app for iPad is a free download as well. You get 250 MB of space (or 50 VoiceThreads) using your account on the computer, and you can make up to five VoiceThreads using the app. Each VoiceThread you create can have up to 50 slides on your free account (which I think is plenty). You can make it work for you as a free resource if you are willing to delete the VoiceThreads that you aren't using so you don't run out of space. And if you really like it, you can consider getting a classroom license so you can go further with this resource.
If you search on VoiceThread, you will find caboodles of examples of how you can use it in your classroom. Take a look and see the possibilities you could use this for in the fall!
https://voicethread.com/
http://voicethread.com/products/k12/educator/
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/voicethread/id465159110?mt=8

Saturday, June 9, 2012

TrackStar

So, this summer I'm going back to school - sort of. I'm taking some online technology classes through WVLearns because 1) they are free and 2) I don't know everything. I may be the techKNOW teacher, but if I want to stay that way I've got to stay on the up-and-up on how to do things. Otherwise I'll run out of things to blog about. The classes I'm taking have to do with creating WebQuests and virtual field trips. I utilize these in my classroom, but I want to be more skilled in how to make my own "stuff" to tailor to my own classroom.
One of the gems I have found to help me organize websites for virtual field trips is TrackStar. There are many fabulous web tools accessible through 4Teachers.org, one of which I reviewed two posts ago (RubiStar). I thought TrackStar was going to be too similar to Portaportal to be something I would start using, but it definately has its own place in the techKNOW classroom. You use TrackStar to group - or track - websites, online videos, Vokis, and interactives so they can be accessed by your students all at once for the purpose of a virtual field trip.
It's super simple. Once you create your free account (everything on 4Teachers.org is free, I believe), you will go to your account page and select the "Make New Track" button. Give your track a catchy title and a description, so your students as well as teachers who search for other tracks on TrackStar know what this grouping of resources is all about. You also choose what "type" of track this is going to be (I'll let you read that for yourself, as it's pretty self explanatory) in addition to the subject area.
Make a few other choices on that page and you're off to enter your online resources into your track. THIS is what makes it cool. You enter a title/topic for your website, paste the URL below, AND THEN...you can annotate! Yeah, I know, what's so great about annotating? LOTS! You can give your students an exciting description of what they are about to view, provide background information, or give questions for them to answer as they view the resource. It makes your virtual field trip something that can be done completely independently!
After you enter your websites and annotations, submit it and BOOM you have your track! On your account page, you will see the title of your track along with a number. You can have your students go to the computer lab and search for your virtual field trip by typing in this number OR...make a folder on Portaportal for your TrackStar creations and store the direct links to your tracks there! All your students have to do once they are on the track you have created is click "View in Frames" (my preference, you can view in text as well) to begin their virtual field trip adventure! When you view in frames, the links appear on the left hand side; all your students have to is click on them and the online resource will appear in a frame on the screen below your annotation. In other words, no clicking back  and forth to the list of resources.
It's great to see it all put together! If you want to experience a track yourself, you can view my virtual field trip on the Underground Railroad here. You can also search for other tracks that have already been created by keyword. As long as you don't choose that your track is a default (which is deleted after a week), it will remain on TrackStar indefinately. You can create virtual field trips to use this upcoming school year and beyond! Have fun!
http://trackstar.4teachers.org/trackstar/index.jsp
http://trackstar.4teachers.org/trackstar/ts/viewTrack.do?number=442504

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Classroom Collaboration Series: ClassChatter

Got that Portaportal page set up yet? Even if you don't, I'm moving on. I had a fabulous (or at least I thought so) series of posts a few months ago all about grant writing. My next "series" of posts which I will feature this summer will have to do with online collaboration for the classroom. I can't guarantee what day of the week I am going to post them like I did for my grant writing series because I'm on "island time" for the next 10 weeks and  four days (whatever - you counted, too) but they will appear weekly.
One of the wonderful things about using web tools for classroom collaboration is that it often makes your life a tiny bit less paperless AND it plays into your students' growing interest and understanding of how to use the Internet to communicate. We all know that  outside of school many of our kiddos chat online, e-mail, and social network, whether they are of age to do so or not. And although there are steps you can take to make sure parents and students know what's safe and appropriate, there's no stopping the access  your students have once they leave your classroom. That's why it's good - almost necessary - to give students web tools to display and communicate what they know and what they need to say so they learn the proper way to communicate online - for learning and social purposes.
The first item to add to your virtual toolbox (which is hopefully housed on your PORTAPORTAL page) is ClassChatter. I have used ClassChatter for several years and have found it to be teacher friendly and student adored. This is a way for you to create FREE, password protected blogs for your classroom. Your students can learn to blog in a safe environment that cannot be accessed by anyone else except the teacher and classmates. You create student accounts under your teacher account so that you see whatever the students write. There is also a "cMail" teacher account where the students can send messages to you without the entire class reading it.
As the teacher you can create topic blog posts for students to respond to - I usually make these anything from introducing yourself to the class to current events - and then (my favorite) you can create assignment blogs! This is where you create an assignment for students to respond to under your original post. Students can work on it and come back to it, checking the finished assignment button when they have completed their post. As the teacher you can see who is still working, who has finished, and who hasn't even started yet (Grrr!). I've made my assignment blogs anything from listing the factors of a selected number, to researching a volcano, to creative writing prompts. Each student automatically gets their own blog page when you create their accounts as well. You can set the purpose for this or encourage your students to create their own blogs about things that interest them - a great way to get your cherubs to WANT to write! You also get your own teacher blog page as well to keep the class informed about whatever you'd like.
What ClassChatter lacks in "pretty" - there's no changing the colors, theme, or overall look - it makes up 110% in functionality. In a way, it's good the students (and the teacher for that matter) can't really mess with the appearance because it makes you focus on the content over the bells and whistles. My class has always been so into "we have a blog" that they've never brought up what it looks like. Oh, you will see some advertisements to upgrade to ClassChatterLive, but the free version provides you with plenty to get your class blogging safely and purposefully. Check it out and consider setting up your account for next year!
http://www.classchatter.com/

Thursday, May 31, 2012

A Few of My Favorite Things

Hey, there! It's been a while!
Sorry, but you know how it is. I was sucked into the giant vortex called the End of the School Year, but have managed to emerge victorious. I survived! You survived! And now (sound the drums of anticipatioin)...it's Summer Vacation - even though there are a few weeks of spring left. If you are not able to share in our summertime joy yet, I apologize.  It's not my fault Old Man Winter took snow season off. But please, stay in the techKNOW this summer - because now is as good of a time as ever to organize, plan, and recharge for next school year.
So, since many of you are still recoiling from the craziness or are still embroiled in it, I've decided to dedicate this post to the basics. Now is the best time to take stock in what went right this past year, what went wrong, and what wasn't really right or wrong - just could have been a bit better. The sites I'm going to list are oldies but goodies - but if you are about to embark on a teaching career in the Fall, you may want to acquaint yourself with them. Now. Get organized NOW - or at least after you've soaked up some sun and sleep.
Here are a few of my favorite techKNOW things - the "trusty blue jeans" of resources that you can always count on and can't live without:
Portaportal - Yes, that's right. Portaportal. No, not port-a-potty, althought that would be pretty funny. Make a (free) account on here, and you'll never have to worry about writing a website on the board for your students to visit or forgetting the name of your favorite sites again. Portaportal allows you to save all of your internet bookmarks to your own page so you can access them from ANY computer at ANY time. Not only that, you create a username for your page that your students can type in to access your bookmarks. That way, you can take your class to the computer lab, have them find the link on your page and BOOM they're there - no more trying to type in the website character for character. It saves you and your students tons of frustration and valuable time. You can create folders and subfolders for all of your links to make it ultra-organized. Every website I use in my classroom is on my Portaportal page - it's almost like my online classroom! And since there's no limit to how many bookmarks you can put on your page, you can do that! You can even bookmark other teacher's Portaportal pages! If you want to be a true techKNOW teacher, this is the first step to saving your sites as well as your sanity.
Rubistar - Want to make a rubric for assessment fast? Go here. In record time, Rubistar allows you to make a rubric for just about anything with very little effort on your part. Choose the type of project or subject area, select the areas you want to assess, and BOOM (again) you get an awesome rubric with preset performance indicators you can choose to keep or modify. You can print your rubric out or download it to your computer so you're sure to have it for future use. If you want to search other teacher's rubrics for similar projects, you can do that, too. Best of all? You know me - it's FREE.
Pete's PowerPoint Station - Not quite sure who Pete is, but he's pretty amazing for this collection of HUNDREDS of awesome PowerPoint presentations and games. Any subject, any topic, any grade level - you will find the PowerPoint for your lesson. If you have just been bestowed the awesomeness that is an interactive whiteboard of ANY kind, this is the first place you want to go (right after you make your Portaportal page!) to find ways to quickly techKNOW-logized your classroom. Sometimes they aren't perfect and you have to modify to meet your needs, but the PowerPoints you find on this site will save you all kinds of time. And there all FREE!
SMART Exchange - If you have a SMART board or are about to get one in your classroom... Here.You. Go. You could easily spend your entire summer on this site searching for incredible, already created templates and interactive presentations. From cool ways to take attendance to hands-on lessons on the parts of speech - tailor you search by grade and subject level and BOOM (one more time!) your SMART notebook files await for you to preview! Once you create a FREE account, you can even download them to the computer connected to your SMART board so you can access them later.
These resources alone could keep you busy all summer long, so check them out now before I load you down with more ;-) And if you all ready know your stuff and use these cool tools...good for you. But don't worry, there's more coming - because I'm out of the vortex and back on the blog.
http://www.portaportal.com/
http://rubistar.4teachers.org/
http://www.pppst.com/
http://exchange.smarttech.com/#tab=0

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

FREE Financial Literacy Resources from Visa


Here's a way to gain some economics resources...without spending a penny!
Practical Money Skills, a program sponsored by Visa, provides teachers with fun, interactive ways to help students learn to be smart spenders and savers. All you have to do as a teacher is go to their website and order the materials you would like for your classroom - and it's FREE. I've know about this one for a few weeks, but I wanted to wait and post about it until after I had received my order - and I can tell you that neither you or your students will be disappointed! Here's a rundown of some of the resources from Practical Money Skills that I think you'll want to check out:
Marvel Comic Book - With the movie coming out this summer, your students will enjoy reading about Spiderman and friends as they learn about managing finances...and save the world while they're at it! It's definitely geared more for upper elementary and middle school. There's also a free teacher's guide to download as well.
Money 101 Booklet - This handy little guide teaches your students important facts about saving and spending, with some fun facts and websites thrown in the mix, too. After viewing it, I'd like to get enough for each student in my class.
And now for the games!!! I was most eager about getting these to try out, because...well, you're never too old to learn to play new games. Each game came on separate CDs to run on the computer. The games run directly from the CD (you can't download them to your computer, but that's only a minor inconvenience). All of them ran perfectly and were high quality, interactive, and beneficial to learning about money and finances.
Peter Pig's Money Counter - Eh, this one was okay...if you teach K-2 (third graders might like it at the beginning of the year). Upper grades...no. Just no. However, for learning the value of different coins and counting change, this is a super resource. Students have to move the coins on the screen as they count and represent different amounts of money. I can see this being great to use on an interactive whiteboard as a class review or as a station.
Money Metropolis - Very cute (in a cartoonish sort of way), very interactive. My girls especially like it. After designing your character, your students choose a financial goal (from buying a game to going on a trip). They then have to buy and perform chores around town (which they choose from an interactive map) to meet their financial goal. The "chores" are all interactive, from mowing the lawn to sorting books at the library. You get paid if you do your job accurately and in a timely manner - another great concept to get across.
Financial Football - Oh, my. Every fifth grade boy's dream game. It looks and sounds like the NFL, right down to the background music and the animated players. You can choose your NFL team and the opposing team, as well as the level of difficulty ("rookie" is the suggested level for ages 11-14; the age levels go up to high school). As you make your plays, you answer questions about financial literacy. Best of all, there's a free app for Financial Football you can download to your iPad that's just as cool as the computer version. It's so authentically football that your students will forget they are learning.
Financial Soccer - Okay, I liked this one better than Financial Football simply because I understand soccer better than football. It's very authentically done in the style of the Soccer World Cup (which I don't know much about but my students were pretty impressed). The same concept of Financial Football is there, except it's a different ball game. There's a little more strategy with Financial Soccer though; the harder questions are closer to the best shots for the goal. Both Financial Football and Financial Soccer would be enjoyed by students in grades 5 and up, up through high school.
These are just a few of the resources available on Practical Money Skills. Check it out and choose a few things for your class! You literally have nothing to lose!
http://www.practicalmoneyskills.com/resources/free_materials/
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/financial-football-hd/id387095643?mt=8