Monday, June 18, 2012

Re-search : Top Search Results Don’t End With “oogle”

There are so many options to search on the internet and it is difficult to believe how little cross over there is at times. I thought Twurdy was a great search engine. I liked how it provided information about ease of reading and suitable ages.I also love Wolfram Alpha - I have used this quite a bit at home with my children, particularly for Maths and Science. I hadn't visited many of the search engines that you mentioned, but have now and will again. Blekko was one I hadn't heard of and I discovered that Podscope no longer exists. Some of the other search engines I like to use are search-cube, yometa, quadoople, boolify,  and spezify. I try to introduce my students to a variety of search engines, but it is hard to break their habit (and their teachers) of "googling".

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Week Seven - Picture Pop : The Image Culture

WOW! I had fun exploring and sharing with family and friends this week. Again I visited every site. Loved tag galaxy - shared this with my husband who then shared it with colleagues at his school. Ffffound was interesting although it is not a site I would probably use often. The editing sites were great. I usually don't spend time "playing" with images - my children love doing this and have shown me some of their creations - but after this I think it is a tool I will utilise more frequently, especially Pixlr and  BeFunky.
Here are some of my creations :

Friday, June 1, 2012

Week Six - Video Killed The Radio Star : Sourcing Audio Visual Content


Wow! There is so much "great stuff" available to use and some very talented people willing to share. I went to each of the sites suggested. I have always loved what TED has offered, finding them very entertaining as well as informative and thought provoking. I love this video looking at the future possibilities of books - A next-generation digital book It is great to see the addition of TED ED. This was the first time I had visited Youtube EDU. I found some great videos that I could use in the classroom. I like this one on extreme alliteration Extreme Alliteration I will certainly be accessing these sites again to inspire and educate my students. Although the Khan Academy had some worthwhile material, I found the tutorials were a little monotonous and very American-based. 

Week Five - Presently Surprised : A Standing Ovation

My husband introduced me to Prezi a couple of years ago and I was very impressed by the product. Although I never created any presentations myself, I have seen several. Sometimes it takes a task, like this, to give you the incentive to investigate further and take the plunge.  I loved the Romeo and Juliet presentation that I discovered while exploring. I created a very basic presentation  about the book Nanberry. There is a variety of tools to use and I am hoping to utilise these to create a "great" presentation for work. I also played around with SlideRocket and found their tutorials helpful. I decided to import an existing powerpoint that I had. I then edited some of the slides.Here is the link to the presentation. http://portal.sliderocket.com/BXUIW/TheFourCandles