Extension Choices
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Resources
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| "To Teach is to Learn Twice"--help someone else
learn something you
already know...you'll get to practice your teaching skills, they'll learn the computer skill
you're teaching, and if you're lucky, you'll probably learn something new along the way
(or at least reinforce what you already know). |
How
to Help Someone Use a Computer
"Sage on the Stage" vs. "Guide on the Side"
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Practice your newly acquired skills. Can you
find another way to do it (keyboard shortcut, right click, . . . )?
Try some of the tutorials as a means of practicing your new skill.
Which one did you like or not like? Why?
Figure out what can go wrong when using this feature so you can help
troubleshoot when your students are using it.
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| Try out the lesson plans associated with the
given topic(s) and see
if they really work. What did you learn from them? How would you modify
them for your grade level, your teaching style, your unit plan? |
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| Search for other lesson plans that teach the
given topic(s). Share your good findings with the group. |
Lesson
Plans that Integrate Technology into the Curriculum |
| Create your own lesson plan from scratch or
document the new lesson
plan you would create that is modified from an existing lesson plan (be
sure to give credit to the source). |
From University of North Texas: downloadable
Word documents of 4
different lesson plan formats that provide some frameworks for planning
for different kinds of instruction
Lesson plan template in .html, WordPerfect or Word formats for you to
fill in
North Central Regional Technology in Education Consortium (NCRTEC), a
subdivision of North Central Regional Educational Library (NCREL) has a
fill-in-the-blank online lesson plan creation tool that allows you to
save your final plan to disk
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| Create your own lesson plan template or find
other lesson plan templates besides those listed above and use them. |
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