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Literacy Mashups: Great for Special Ed

October 23, 2008 Janetta Garton Leave a comment

K12 Online Conference Presentation: Free Tools for Universal Design for Learning in Literacy by Jennifer Kraft

Takeaways

Jennifer started her presentation by discussing student examples. These student struggle with reading and as a result find everything else difficult and frustrating, and sometimes aren’t able to participate in the same activities as their classmates.

She then discussed way to use technology to support literacy. (Used Glogster in her presentation.)

These tools could be combined to create Literacy Mashups.

Documents/Books Read Aloud

Notes Taken and Kept in one Place

Concept Mapping Read Aloud

Universal Design for Learning requires:

  • Multiple means of representation, to give learners various ways of acquiring information and knowledge (text to speech, ability to access textbook and reading for enjoyment)
  • Multiple means of action and expression, to provide learners alternatives for demonstrating what they know (speech to text, concept mapping, and researching)
  • Multiple means of engagement, to tap into learners’ interests, offer appropriate challenges, and increase motivation (use tools to present information in various ways to engage them)

URLs of session and further resources:

I am familiar with several of these tools. But the way in which Jennifer combined them to meet the needs of students and apply universal design for learning principals is insightful.

I recommend that our special education teachers view this presentation and investigate the suggested tools. I’ve just installed the Meriam Webster Firefox tool that adds this dictionary as a search choice in my Firefox search box.  Having watched the quick introduction video at Evernote, I want to create an account and try this out. I want to investigate the Adobe reader text to speech feature. For my personal use, I may install the FireFox Click Speak Add on. In the evenings when I find time to catch up on the feeds in my reader, my eyes are often tired. I would like to be able to just listen to the articles.

Recently Tagged 092708

September 27, 2008 Janetta Garton Leave a comment

Sites I have recently tagged in my delicious account

  • Start your 2008-2009 Classroom digital scrapbook *RIGHT NOW* on Voicethread.com! Great idea here from Kevin Jarrett. Start a VoiceThread now, add to it each month, and you have a classroom scrapbook of this school year.  You can register for a free account and then request a free upgrade to a pro account so as to make as many VoiceThreads as you want. See my handout for directions.
  • Secret Files: vocabulary, put the words in the correct drawers; can set difficulty level
  • World War II Remembered: from Scholastic, projects and activities.
  • SMARTBoards and the Shrink and Grow Reveal Challenge: from James Hollis. Watch the video on creating a Shrink and Grow Template in Smart Notebook 10. We have several teachers in our district with new smartboards who will find the Teachers Love SMART Boards blog a great source of screencasts and instructional ideas.
  • Webspiration: concept mapping Web-based Inspiration, beta, share concept map with others and assign permissions (all access, edit, or just view), revision history, can import from Inspiration 8, concept map view or notes view; currently free but suspect it won’t always be

Browser-Based Brainstorming

November 8, 2007 Janetta Garton 1 comment

mmeister.jpgMindMeister is a great browser-based, concept mapping tool. Features I like:

  1. FREE: Free account option along with a paid subscription; The first month you will have access to the premium account features. Once that expires, basically, you will see some ads and lose access to the code to embed a map in a webpage. A free account is limited to 6 maps stored at one time. So if you get to 6, you can delete 1 and be able to create a new one. You do need an email address to create an account. They require you click a link in a verification email to activate your account before you will have access.
  2. EXPORT: Export as an outline to Word (WOW!), pdf, or an image
  3. COLLABORATION: Can have multiple people working on the same map at the same time; edits are color coded. There is a history of edits with the option to revert back to a previous version.
  4. PRINT: You can print the map scaled to 1 page, or at 100% spanning multiple pages.
  5. MASHUPS: Click the Google icon under information to do an instant search on the text of a node.
  6. SUBSCRIBE: Can receive email notifications whenever something is edited on a collaborative map. Too bad it doesn’t offer RSS as well.
  7. NOTES: Can add notes to nodes

Demogirl.com has published a short screencast that will get you started.

mindmap2.jpg

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