I have been playing with a new Web 2.0 presentation tool called SlideRocket. It is pretty slick and pretty easy to use.
Here is a presentation I put together.
Showing posts with label presentations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label presentations. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Sunday, June 22, 2008
Wireless and Beyond in Education
Some colleagues are I put together a presentation on innovative uses of wireless technologies in schools. We focused on elementary schools, middle schools, and school administration.
Have a look. Let us know what you think.
Have a look. Let us know what you think.
Sunday, May 18, 2008
NYSCATE 2008 Metro Conference Presentation
Here is the slideshow from my NYSCATE 2008 Metro Conference Presentation, entitled "What Happens When Students are Given a Voice?"
Labels:
conferences,
dreams,
edtech,
NYSCATE,
presentations
NYSCATE 2008 Metro Conference
I was fortunate enough to present at and attend the NYSCATE 2008 Metro Conference this past weekend.
I will post later about my presentation (as soon as I have a chance to turn it into a podcast). For now, I just wanted to say how struck I was by presentations that I attended. Here are some highlights:
I left so inspired and so challenged and with so many ideas to try and sit with and let percolate.
I will post later about my presentation (as soon as I have a chance to turn it into a podcast). For now, I just wanted to say how struck I was by presentations that I attended. Here are some highlights:
- A librarian (and her colleagues) in a Rockland County, New York district came up with a low cost way to do video conferencing using laptops and camcorders and free software. Check out their wiki here. They then created intra-district events that were really innovative. They took struggling Middle School readers, gave them picture and story books, which they would normally be too embarrassed to read, even if those books were at their reading level, and then created a video conference where those students read those books to elementary students. The Middle Schoolers practiced their reading (without knowing) and then had the opportunity to contribute to the younger students, all in a way that engaged all the students.
- Educational Technology staff members in the Bronx (here's their wiki) shared a program where High School students created documentaries, and in the process learned storytelling and research skills. And created a really compelling documentary on the history of their High School.
- A graduate student in Instructional Technology at NYIT shared research she did in which she allowed struggling students create their own curriculum with technology and through which the students did amazing work.
I left so inspired and so challenged and with so many ideas to try and sit with and let percolate.
Labels:
conferences,
dreams,
edtech,
innovation,
NYSCATE,
presentations
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