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3 Great Special Needs Digital Tools

Ask a Tech Teacher

Using the free app, students can tape a live lecture, a Skype call, an online webinar on their iPhone or iPad (or directly to the software), transfer it to their dashboard where they can transcribe, annotate, highlight, edit, format, add to, delete, or simply play it back for reference. – See more at: [link]. Conclusion. Design: 5/5.

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mARch: Augmenting with Aurasma, Part 1.

SpeechTechie

Note: Aurasma is available for free for iPhone, iPod and iPad 2 and above. In this series of steps, you will see how to make an image aura from Aurasma''s own library of images "float" above a book page when the page is scanned. Aurasma is actually pretty easy to use! My apologies to readers with an iPad 1. What could you do with that?

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Kiddom: an easier way to manage standards-based grading

The Cornerstone for Teachers

That’s where Kiddom comes in–a free standards-based grading platform that comes with a vast library of standards-based content. Kiddom is pre-populated with academic and SEL standards which include the Common Core along with many others, so you can select the ones you want with just a click. An added bonus?

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Learning Revolution Free Events - ASB Online - Google Science Fair Deadline - More Ed Tech Month

The Learning Revolution Has Begun

We also highlight good conversations about learning taking place between educators, learners, leaders, and others from the school, library, museum, work, adult, online, non-traditional and home learning worlds. Don''t miss this super fun event sponsored by ClassFlow and featuring Kevin Honeycutt and the iPhone band.

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Why a K-12 Operating System is the Next Step in the Evolution of Edtech

Edsurge

My goal was to minimize the information asymmetry that tends to exist between what teachers know about their students and what students know about their performance. We then focused on the information asymmetry that exists between classrooms and their respective administrative bodies. Full size image here.

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A true gift from SHEG: DIY digital literacy assessments and tools for historical thinking

NeverEndingSearch

You may remember Stanford History Education Group (SHEG) for its groundbreaking and utterly depressing report, Evaluating Information: The Cornerstone of Online Civic Reasoning. Overall, young people’s ability to reason about the information on the Internet can be summed up in one word: bleak. You can now find out.