"Cool Text is a FREE graphics generator for web pages and anywhere else you need an impressive logo without a lot of design work. Simply choose what kind of image you would like. Then fill out a form and you'll have your own custom image created on the fly."
Read more at the link below.
Source:
Cool Text: Logo and Graphics Generator
http://cooltext.com/
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
Cool Text: Logo and Graphics Generator
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
A. Kipta's Blog 11/30/2011 (a.m.)
-
East Anglian Film Archive: Wartime Radio: The Secret Listeners, 1979
Illustrated with archival film and photographs, as well as interviews with those involved, the documentary traces the evolution of civilian involvement in radio-based intelligence during both world wars. It was the tireless work of amateur radio enthusiasts during World War I, that initially convinced the Admiralty to establish a radio intercept station at Hunstanton. Playing an integral role during the war, technological advances meant that radio operators could pinpoint signals, thus uncovering the movement of German boats, leading to the decisive Battle of Jutland in 1916. Wireless espionage was to play an even more important role during World War II, with the Secret Intelligence Service setting up the Radio Security Service, which was staffed by Voluntary Interceptors, a band of amateur radio enthusiasts scattered across Britain. The information they collected was interpreted by some of the brightest minds in the country, who also had a large hand in deceiving German forces by feeding false intelligence.
Magnatune - license music for your project
Read more at the link below.
Source:
Magnatune
http://magnatune.com
Monday, November 28, 2011
lyricsfly.com - Song lyrics search database
Read more at the link below.
Source:
lyricsfly.com - Song lyrics search database
http://lyricsfly.com/
Sunday, November 27, 2011
SCORM - Atlas in Wonderland
A. Kipta's Blog 11/28/2011 (a.m.)
-
Real-Life Teaching in a Virtual World -- Campus Technology
Education is thriving in Second Life. This enthusiastic subculture is abuzz within the Second Life realm, constantly interacting inside and outside Second Life. Educators are exploring every possible tool the 3D virtual world offers and establishing best practices along the way.
tags: higher_education second_life
-
Creative and strategic application of modern technologies is a key to success in 21st century academia. An innovative approach for enhancing graduate courses through utilization of virtual worlds, Web 2.0, and cloud computing technologies was developed. To raise students' level of engagement and satisfaction, virtual educational tours and large-scale virtual colloquia were conducted. The goals of the approach were to enhance course learning objectives and support teaching cutting edge information technology topics in core multi-section information technology courses. For immersive virtual worlds, Second Life was utilized; for Web 2.0, Twitter and Twibes were applied; and for cloud computing, Google Docs and WebEx were used. Students and faculty confirmed that the approach provided new, rich, and effective extensions to the current educational platform. The virtual activities supported the pedagogical goals of being engaging, interactive, and reflective on student experiences. In this paper, the developed approach is presented, the utilized technologies and applications are defined, examples of enhanced course objectives and emerging IT topics are provided, findings from actual learning experiences and student reactions are shared, lessons learned and teaching strategies are related, and future plans for applying emerging technologies to teaching and learning are discussed.
-
The Great Chicago Fire & The Web of Memory
The Great Chicago Fire & the Web of Memory consists of two main parts. The first part, titled The Great Chicago Fire, includes five chronologically organized sections that together present a history of the fire. The sections of the second part, The Web of Memory, examine six ways in which the fire has been remembered: eyewitness accounts, contemporary journalism and illustrations, imaginative forms such as literature and art, the legend of Mrs. O'Leary and her cow, fire souvenirs of many different kinds, and formal commemorations and exhibitions. Each of the sections has three integrated components: thematic galleries of images, a library of texts, and an interpretive essay. The Great Chicago Fire & the Web of Memory also contains a Touring the Fire section that revisits the history of fifty-four different sites in Chicago today, called Landmarks, that have a connection to the fire. Individual Landmarks are organized into tours that are arranged geographically. In addition, there is an 1871 Timeline that recalls events in Chicago life during the year of the fire.
-
Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) Careers and Skills | ISEEK
STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) skills are foundational. That means once you know them, you have the groundwork to build specialized knowledge. Even if you're not planning to become a scientist or engineer, basic scientific and investigative methods can be applied to a wide variety of career fields. Do you know which STEM skills can be applied to your chosen career?
tags: science technology engineering math stem skills
-
CyberBridge is designed to help students transition from high school to the first year of Life Sciences courses at Harvard University. The Life Sciences concentrations include Biological Anthropology, Chemistry, Chemical and Physical Biology, Human Evolutionary Biology, Molecular and Cellular Biology, Neurobiology, Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, and Social and Cognitive Neurosciences. More information on the Life Sciences concentrations may be found online on the undergraduate education site. In addition, pre-medical students not concentrating in the Life Sciences typically take several courses in the Life Sciences.
-
Global warming: Propaganda creates myth of disagreement « Summit County Citizens Voice
A long-running propaganda campaign to cast doubt on climate science has apparently worked to some degree. On the one hand, there is near unanimous agreement among climate scientists that human-caused global warming is happening. But George Mason University researchers recently discovered that there is still a high degree of public confusion about the level of agreement among researchers. About two-thirds of the respondents in a national survey said they either believed there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether or not global warming is happening (45 percent), that most scientists think it is not happening (5 percent), or that they did not know enough to say (16 percent). These respondents were less likely to support climate change policies and to view climate change as a lower priority.
tags: science global_warming
Easily Publish Gorgeous Magazines | Scoop.it
Cathy Shrock: A Dose of Twitter for Every Day of the School Year
"This presentation provides an in-depth overview of the micro-blogging tool, Twitter. The links to the tips, tricks, tools, research, and other items included in the presentation are listed below."
Read more at the link below.
Source:
twittercure
https://sites.google.com/a/kathyschrock.net/twittercure/
Saturday, November 26, 2011
A. Kipta's Blog 11/27/2011 (a.m.)
-
Greenfoot teaches object orientation with Java. Create 'actors' which live in 'worlds' to build games, simulations, and other graphical programs. Greenfoot is visual and interactive. Visualisation and interaction tools are built into the environment. The actors are programmed in standard textual Java code, providing a combination of programming experience in a traditional text-based language with visual execution.
tags: programming java
-
Riviera for Skype is a Skype call recorder
Riviera for Skype is a Skype call recorder. It automatically records Skype calls and conversations to MP3 files. You may play call recordings with built-in player or any other external MP3 player. Why you need Skype call recorder? * Help your business * Protect your reputation * Record interviews, tech talks, conferences, audio casts, pod casts for learning later, etc. Features: * Automatic and manual Skype call recording * Records Skype calls of any type: Skype-to-Skype calls, SkypeIn / SkypeOut, Conference calls, calls to cells, etc. * Records Skype calls of any length * Recordings are stored in separate MP3 file * No functional limitations in free trial version. Only 14 days trial period * Skype Video Recording (soon) * Built-in MP3 player for playing recordings * Very easy to use – starts working immediately after launching, no configuration required * Free support and advice * Free lifetime updates and upgrades * Ideal for recording interviews, conferences, podcasts * System requirements: Windows XP/2000/2003/Vista/Windows 7 Free trial version has no functional limitations. It has 14 day trial period only. After trial period you must buy it or stop using the software.
-
About The Licenses - Creative Commons
All Creative Commons licenses have many important features in common. Every license helps creators — we call them licensors if they use our tools — retain copyright while allowing others to copy, distribute, and make some uses of their work — at least non-commercially. Every Creative Commons license also ensures licensors get the credit for their work they deserve. Every Creative Commons license works around the world and lasts as long as applicable copyright lasts (because they are built on copyright). These common features serve as the baseline, on top of which licensors can choose to grant additional permissions when deciding how they want their work to be used.
-
Adjuncts, LMSs and lack of training: an accident waiting to happen?
The use of underpaid, untrained adjunct faculty is one of higher education’s dirty little secrets, especially (but not only) in the USA. The two blog posts below discuss this issue. ... We all like to brag about the rapid increase in online enrollments, but it is being achieved often on the backs of highly exploited adjuncts.
tags: online_teaching bates.tony
35 Interesting Ways to use Twitter in the Classroom
"35 Interesting Ways* to use Twitter in the Classroom"
Read more at the link below.
Source:
35 Interesting Ways to use Twitter in the Classroom
https://docs.google.com/present/view?id=dhn2vcv5_118cfb8msf8
Friday, November 25, 2011
Twitter in the Classroom
"Twitter in the Classroom A Presentation by Tim Thompson & Debbie White"
Read more at the link below.
Source:
Twitter in the Classroom
https://docs.google.com/present/view?id=df7h5cxp_16ff25zff7&pli=1
Thursday, November 24, 2011
A. Kipta's Blog 11/24/2011 (p.m.)
-
Pain Pictures Slideshow: Surprising Reasons You're in Pain on MedicineNet.com
Often, the blame for our pain rests on the simple choices we make every day. The Cleveland Clinic Florida's David Westerdahl, MD, shares a few examples –- starting with flip-flops and foam-soled sandals. They provide poor arch support, leading to pain in the feet, ankles, and knees.
Wednesday, November 23, 2011
A. Kipta's Blog 11/24/2011 (a.m.)
-
Using a diamond-tipped needle, Barbara Posuniak etches a design on a copper plate and dips it in an acid bath that bites away at the surface exposed by the scratches. She then runs the plate through a printing press located 1,300 miles away from the university she attends, while working out of a spare bedroom in Roswell, N.M.
tags: art online_education
A. Kipta's Blog 11/23/2011 (p.m.)
-
Tired Students Skip Sleep for Texting - Technology - The Chronicle of Higher Education
Many people, especially young adults, feel a sense of attachment to their phones and view the devices as a social lifeline that they can't do without, even when the anxiety the phones produce keeps them up at night, say researchers studying students' use of cellphones. Sue K. Adams, an assistant professor of human development and family studies at Rhode Island, wasn't thinking about cellphones when she asked her students to keep sleep journals—she was just curious about their sleeping habits. But through those journal entries, she began to notice the effects phones were having on their sleep.
tags: technology health
-
10 ways to change the minds of tech-reluctant staff | eSchool News
We often hear about tech-savvy educators and administrators who have an array of best practices and whose love for technology is evident. But as anyone who’s ever been part of a school or district knows, not all teachers and administrators are as comfortable or familiar with technology. In a recent “Question of the Week,” we asked our tech-savvy readers: “How do you get tech-reluctant teachers and administrators to use technology effectively?” Here are our readers’ top answers (edited for brevity).
tags: technology teaching
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Free Android Anti-Virus Apps are Proved Useless
"Now though a test by AV Test.org has showed that the current batch of free anti-virus packages for Android are pretty useless. In their tests they found that the best overall virus and malware scan result from these packages found on 32% of malware when performing a manual scan with four out of the seven packages tested finding nothing at all."
Read more at the link below.
Source:
Free Android Anti-Virus Apps are Proved Useless
http://www.ghacks.net/2011/11/13/free-android-anti-virus-apps-are-proved-useless/
A. Kipta's Blog 11/22/2011 (p.m.)
-
David Rumsey Historical Map Collection | San Francisco Aerial Photographs 1938
We have put online a set of 164 large format, sharp, black and white vertical aerial photographs of San Francisco taken in 1938 from an airplane by Harrison Ryker, a pioneer in aerial photography. The photographs overlap each other and cover the entire city. The resolution is generally better than one foot or even higher with high contrast features allowing visibility of even the paint striping on a basketball court. Relative heights are frequently discernible based on the shadows cast of objects and structures. A handwritten date on the index map indicates the photographs were taken in August, 1938. The photographs are owned by the San Francisco Public Library and are a continuation of our collaboration with them on scanning and putting online important historical maps and views of San Francisco (including our prior collaboration on the 1905 San Francisco Sanborn Insurance Atlas).
tags: history photographs maps
Monday, November 21, 2011
Turkey in a Pumpkin Writing Assignment
Read more at the link below.
Source:
Free Other Free Printables Printables. Print Our Stuff Yourself For Free!
http://www.momsbreak.com/printable/thanksgiving/free-turkey-writing-assignment.shtml
Vocaroo | Record and send voice emails
Sunday, November 20, 2011
A. Kipta's Blog 11/21/2011 (a.m.)
-
45 Free iPhone and iPad apps and games
Don’t forget to check out the recent update of the Free Stuff Times iPhone app, and the new iPad app! Make sure the price is $0, these change price very frequently.
tags: apps
-
50 Free Apps We're Most Thankful For
The popular apps are some of the more obvious, however, so be sure to look further down the list for new free software you may not yet know about.
tags: apps lifehacker
-
Free Arts & Crafts Style Fonts
Some of these fonts are well drawn most are not (whaddaya want for nutin?), characters shown are the only ones available for each font. I found these fonts at a website called Randomville. They posted to the American Bungalow Bulletin Board that they had A&C fonts available for PC. Mac fonts have been compressed with Stuff It. PC fonts are not compressed. To the best of my knowledge these fonts are freeware. Please let me know if this is not the case. For a very large collection of high quality postscript fonts to buy, try http://www.myfonts.com/.
Chirbit - Record, Upload and Share Audio Easily - Micro Podcast - Audio Sound Bites
Check this out on Chirbit
Saturday, November 19, 2011
typoGenerator
Friday, November 18, 2011
A. Kipta's Blog 11/19/2011 (a.m.)
-
tags: online_learning richardson.will
-
Network Monitor Software and Windows Development Tools
One of the fundamental jobs of a network administrator is networking monitoring. Networking monitoring is the process of checking the computers, systems, and services that comprise a network. This examination allows a network administrator to maintain a robust network and even to improve upon the network. While a networking monitoring system can provide information about problems, it can also provide information about improving the network. A good system will allow you to generate log files and performance charts that detail your system's capabilities and responses. With this data, you can tweak your settings to find the optimal set-up. On this site, you find a complete listing of network-related Monitor Tools available today.
tags: network monitoring
-
If PDF is electronic paper, then pdftk is an electronic staple-remover, hole-punch, binder, secret-decoder-ring, and X-Ray-glasses. Pdftk is a simple tool for doing everyday things with PDF documents.
Thursday, November 17, 2011
A. Kipta's Blog 11/18/2011 (a.m.)
-
Georgia Tech Wipes Class Wikis From Web - Wired Campus - The Chronicle of Higher Education
"In his post, Mr. Guzdial recounts how he and two Ph.D. students created the Swiki, or CoWeb, in 2000, so that students would have a place to 'construct public entities on the Web.' The Swikis served intentionally undefined purposes, such as providing a forum for cross-semester discussions and a home for public galleries of student work. 'All of that ended yesterday,' he wrote, because of Georgia Tech’s concerns about Ferpa, the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act. ... Steven J. McDonald, general counsel at the Rhode Island School of Design, said that because students themselves are not subject to the provisions of Ferpa, if they are the ones posting the material, and not faculty members, then they are acting outside the confines of the privacy act."
Sketchcast
Read more at the link below.
Source:
Sketchcast - A new way to express yourself - Sketchcast.com
http://sketchcast.com/
A. Kipta's Blog 11/17/2011 (p.m.)
-
'My daughter deserved to die for falling in love' | World news | The Observer
It was her first youthful infatuation and it would be her last. She died on 16 March after her father discovered she had been seen in public talking to Paul, considered to be the enemy, the invader and a Christian. Though her horrified mother, Leila Hussein, called Rand's two brothers, Hassan, 23, and Haydar, 21, to restrain Abdel-Qader as he choked her with his foot on her throat, they joined in. Her shrouded corpse was then tossed into a makeshift grave without ceremony as her uncles spat on it in disgust.
'Death was the least she deserved,' said Abdel-Qader. 'I don't regret it. I had the support of all my friends who are fathers, like me, and know what she did was unacceptable to any Muslim that honours his religion,' he said.tags: iraq religion human_rights
-
IITs, IIMs devise ways to deal with stress among students - The Economic Times
This year, seven students have taken their lives across the country's premier technological institutes, an unsettling new high. While 5,857 student suicides were reported across India in 2006, the figure jumped to 7,379 in 2010, according to data released by the National Crime Records Bureau recently.
tags: stress students higher_education
-
The emergence of e-mentoring - CNN.com
Over the past 10 years, 25,000 struggling students from poverty-stricken schools have gotten guidance, encouragement and advice from volunteer mentors. And they haven't met face-to-face even once.Could Be, a New York-based nonprofit, uses online tools to connect students with those willing to lend a hand. It is one of a growing number of groups that specialize in what they call "e-mentoring." The technology, of course, has existed for years. But the movement is just beginning to find its footing as groups work through various obstacles, such as insuring privacy and safety and establishing that there is, in fact, value in such online relationships.
tags: mentoring
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
A. Kipta's Blog 11/17/2011 (a.m.)
-
Microprocessors: Happy 40th birthday - 11/15/2011 - Electronics Weekly
40 years ago today, Intel Corporation introduced the 4004, the world's first commercially available microprocessor. The 2,300 transistor device was made on a 10µm process in 1971 for Japanese calculator firm Busicom. From there came the 8008, the 8080, and then the x86 processors that are still Intel's bread and butter today, and the influential Z80. Federico Faggin designed the chip at Intel, from the architecture of Dr Ted Hoff and Stanley Mazor. Dr Masatoshi Shima of Busicom wrote the functional description and designed its logic.
tags: history electronics
-
Telecommunications I, Telecommunication System Analysis, Electrical Engineering Study Course
Introduction lecture course in RF telecommunications. Electromagnetic wave propagation in free space, antennas, line of sight transmission (directive gain, beam width, polarization, impedance), RF components (amplifiers, mixers, up converters), receivers, and transmitters. Laboratory assignments and demonstrations include antenna gain and field strength. Further studies in component and box level design are covered in the follow on course, Microwave Amplifiers.
-
Satellite Communications, Electrical Engineering Study Course
A graduate level satellite communications course designed to provide students with the theory of satcom communications and practical design tools. Fundamentals of satellite orbital parameters, satellite hardware, link budgets, modulation techniques including multiple access techniques, operational considerations, power and controls, uplinks and downlinks, bent-pipe, and satellite communication systems are discussed. Additional topics include global positioning (GPS), satellite cross links, VSAT and mobile networks, low earth orbital (LEO) systems, and advanced satellite electronics.
-
The following tutorials may be printed, and photocopied, as long as the author's name is not altered, or removed; but these tutorials cannot be republished, or modified, in any manner without prior permission.
tags: electronics tutorials
RSS Mix - Mix any number of RSS feeds into one unique new feed!
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Slydial
Monday, November 14, 2011
Pipes: Rewire the web
Sunday, November 13, 2011
Moms Break, Print Our Stuff Yourself For Free!
"Looking for a Thanksgiving giving activity for the kids? Something to keep them busy while the adults cook dinner or relax afterwards! Then try this free Thanksgiving word search game."
Read more at the link below.
Source:
Moms Break, Print Our Stuff Yourself For Free!
http://www.momsbreak.com/printable/index.shtml
WordItOut - Generate word clouds
Read more at the link below.
Source:
WordItOut - Generate word clouds (and make custom gifts)
http://worditout.com/
Saturday, November 12, 2011
Floorplanner.com
Read more at the link below.
Source:
Create floor plans, house plans and home plans online with Floorplanner.com
http://floorplanner.com/
Friday, November 11, 2011
A. Kipta's Blog 11/12/2011 (a.m.)
-
Hobbs & Hopkins Ltd. | ProTime Lawn Seed | Fleur de Lawn
tags: @shopping
-
10 Different Creative Commons Projects That You Should Definitely Pay Attention To
What we would do without open access on the web? Probably dole out a substantial portion of our incomes on consuming and sharing content. Thankfully, the spirit of sharing has been kept alive (and encouraged) by Creative Commons among other things. Creative Commons broken down to its basic core are a set of flexible copyright laws that allows creators and authors maintain ownership of their works while giving everyone else a chance to enjoy and share it. Creative Commons has succeeded in championing the cause of open content. So much so that large swathes of intellectual properties are being kept open in the public domain…all licensed under Creative Commons.
tags: creative_commons
-
danah boyd | apophenia » Why Parents Help Children Violate Facebook’s 13+ Rule
Many general-purpose communication platforms and social media sites restrict access to only those 13+ in response to a law meant to empower parents: the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA). This forces parents to make a difficult choice: help uphold the minimum age requirements and limit their children’s access to services that let kids connect with family and friends OR help their children lie about their age to circumvent the age-based restrictions and eschew the protections that COPPA is meant to provide. In order to understand how parents were approaching this dilemma, my collaborators — Eszter Hargittai (Northwestern University), Jason Schultz (University of California, Berkeley), John Palfrey (Harvard University) — and I decided to survey parents. In many ways, we were responding to a flurry of studies (e.g. Pew’s) that revealed that millions of U.S. children have violated Facebook’s Terms of Service and joined the site underage. These findings prompted outrage back in May as politicians blamed Facebook for failing to curb underage usage. Embedded in this furor was an assumption that by not strictly guarding its doors and keeping children out, Facebook was undermining parental authority and thumbing its nose at the law. Facebook responded by defending its practices — and highlighting how it regularly ejects children from its site. More controversially, Facebook’s founder Mark Zuckerberg openly questioned the value of COPPA in the first place.
tags: facebook coppa parenting
-
Uncreative Writing - The Chronicle Review - The Chronicle of Higher Education
For the past several years, I've taught a class at the University of Pennsylvania called "Uncreative Writing." In it, students are penalized for showing any shred of originality and creativity. Instead they are rewarded for plagiarism, identity theft, repurposing papers, patchwriting, sampling, plundering, and stealing. Not surprisingly, they thrive. Suddenly what they've surreptitiously become expert at is brought out into the open and explored in a safe environment, reframed in terms of responsibility instead of recklessness. We retype documents and transcribe audio clips. We make small changes to Wikipedia pages (changing an "a" to "an" or inserting an extra space between words). We hold classes in chat rooms, and entire semesters are spent exclusively in Second Life. Each semester, for their final paper, I have them purchase a term paper from an online paper mill and sign their name to it, surely the most forbidden action in all of academia. Students then must get up and present the paper to the class as if they wrote it themselves, defending it from attacks by the other students. What paper did they choose? Is it possible to defend something you didn't write? Something, perhaps, you don't agree with? Convince us.
tags: plagiarism higher_education writing
How To Prevent Your Laptop From Overheating [Windows 7]
This tip might come in handy not just for gamers and people who wish to run resource intensive application in the wake of overheating laptops, but also if, for some reason, you are unable to return a laptop with a heating issues (perhaps due to warranty constraints), or are dealing with an old laptop, which won’t take the brunt any more.
Before explaining the method of reducing the maximum processor state, let us take a look at the logic behind reducing the maximum processor state to prevent overheating of your laptop. Reducing the maximum processor state for your laptop (both when it is on battery or when the power cable is plugged in), reduces the processor’s performance a notch (depending on your settings) and prevents it from being used at optimum potential by an application or game, which will reduce thermal heating. For example, if you are playing a game that is consuming 100% of your processor’s capacity, then it may also result in heating up your system, whereas reducing the battery power state to, say 80%, can resolve this problem, and also result in battery power conservation.
To change these settings, go to Power Options from the Control Panel or the system tray menu.

Now go to Change Plan Settings –> Change Advanced Power Settings.

In the new window that pops-up, expand Processor Power management –> Maximum processor state, and reduce the on battery and plugged in power settings. The settings you keep will depend on your preferences and the capability of your system.
Based on our experience, we have noticed that that the laptop overheats when the processor is running at 100% processor state. Reducing the processor state by a few notches results in the reduction of temperate by 10-20 C, which results in a minor performance dip. We used Speccy to check for temperate during testing, based on which the processor running on 95% processor state gave the same performance (barely noticeable dip), with a drop of 10-20 C. You can keep an even lower processor state (such as 80-85%) to make sure that your laptop heats up even less.

The above mentioned tip should easily prevent your laptop from heating up; however, make sure that the processor state is not reduced very low in order to prevent reducing your processor’s performance to an undesirably low level.
Related Articles:
Thursday, November 10, 2011
Filter RSS feeds with Feed Rinse
A. Kipta's Blog 11/10/2011 (p.m.)
-
Are Apps Making Cookbooks Obsolete? - NYTimes.com
With features like embedded links, built-in timers, infographics and voice prompts, the richness of some new apps — like Baking With Dorie, from the baking expert Dorie Greenspan; Jamie Oliver’s 20-Minute Meals; and Professional Chef, the vast app released last month by the Culinary Institute of America — hint that books as kitchen tools are on the way out.
tags: apps
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
ShowDocument web meeting and doc sharing
Read more at the link below.
Source:
Web Meeting and Document Sharing | ShowDocument
http://www.showdocument.com/
The History Channel Veterans Hub
Classroom discussion ideas from The History Channel Veterans Hub:
1. Who does Veterans Day honor? How is it different from Memorial Day?
2. What are some of the reasons the veterans in the documentary describe for joining the armed forces?
3. What are some of the benefits of a career in the military? What are some of the biggest risks?
4. When was Armistice Day first declared a holiday? Why was the name of the holiday changed to Veterans Day
5. What are some of the military jobs the veterans in the documentary describe? Which ones sound most interesting to you?
6. What are the branches of the military? What are the different tasks of these various branches?
7. What are some of the qualities which make a good soldier according to the people in the documentary?
8. Do you have any family members who have been or are in the military? What were or are their responsibilities in the armed forces?
9. Why do you think many families have multiple members and generations who join the military?
10. How do you think veterans should be honored in our society for their willingness to serve their country?
A. Kipta's Blog 11/09/2011 (p.m.)
-
Cedille Records - John Mark Rozendaal
John Mark Rozendaal specializes in performing and teaching stringed instrument music from the Baroque and Renaissance eras. As founding Artistic Director of the Chicago Baroque Ensemble, Rozendaal performed and led seven seasons of subscription concerts, educational programs, radio broadcasts, and recordings for the Cedille and Centaur labels. Rozendaal has served as principal ’cellist of The City Musick and Basically Bach, and has performed solo and continuo roles with many period instrument ensembles, including the Newberry Consort, Orpheus Band, The King’s Noyse/Boston Early Music Festival Violin Band, Parthenia, The New York Consort of Viols, Repast, Four Nations Ensemble, and the Catacoustic Consort.
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
A. Kipta's Blog 11/09/2011 (a.m.)
-
Computer Experts Building 1830s Babbage Analytical Engine - NYTimes.com
Researchers in Britain are about to embark on a 10-year, multimillion-dollar project to build a computer — but their goal is neither dazzling analytical power nor lightning speed. Indeed, if they succeed, their machine will have only a tiny fraction of the computing power of today’s microprocessors. It will rely not on software and silicon but on metal gears and a primitive version of the quaint old I.B.M. punch card. What it may do, though, is answer a question that has tantalized historians for decades: Did an eccentric mathematician named Charles Babbage conceive of the first programmable computer in the 1830s, a hundred years before the idea was put forth in its modern form by Alan Turing? The machine on the drawing boards at the Science Museum in London is the Babbage Analytical Engine, a room-size mechanical behemoth that its inventor envisioned but never built.
-
A Before-Its-Time Machine - Interactive Feature - NYTimes.com
Researchers are planning to build a working version of the Analytical Engine, which Charles Babbage conceived of in the 1830s but never completed.
-
At Waldorf School in Silicon Valley, Technology Can Wait - NYTimes.com
Schools nationwide have rushed to supply their classrooms with computers, and many policy makers say it is foolish to do otherwise. But the contrarian point of view can be found at the epicenter of the tech economy, where some parents and educators have a message: computers and schools don’t mix. This is the Waldorf School of the Peninsula, one of around 160 Waldorf schools in the country that subscribe to a teaching philosophy focused on physical activity and learning through creative, hands-on tasks. Those who endorse this approach say computers inhibit creative thinking, movement, human interaction and attention spans. The Waldorf method is nearly a century old, but its foothold here among the digerati puts into sharp relief an intensifying debate about the role of computers in education.
tags: education k-12 technology
Creaza Education
Read more at the link below.
Source:
Home - Creaza Education
http://www.creazaeducation.com/frontpage
A. Kipta's Blog 11/08/2011 (p.m.)
-
Let's Deregulate Online Learning - Online Learning - The Chronicle of Higher Education
Let's think back to the mid-20th century, when accreditation first became the gatekeeper for students' eligibility for government grants and credit. At the time, the basic economic model of a university was, more or less, the same that it had been since the 1500s. Because subject-matter experts were scarce and real-time communication options were limited, it made sense to build impressive campuses to attract professors and enable teaching. With such large fixed costs, adding a few more professors was relatively cheap. A critical mass of professors attracted a critical mass of students, who attracted more professors, and so on. That model—substantial fixed costs with low marginal costs (the cost to offer one more class)—is the economic model that was "hard-wired" when colleges' accreditation status and revenue streams were inextricably linked. Because the strongest signals of value in a high-fixed-cost model are the physical plant and faculty credentials, accreditation mostly measures variables related to those. Because student mobility was quite limited, standards governing the transfer of credits were unnecessary. All that worked—for a long time. But online learning has a fundamentally different economic structure. Real-time and speedy synchronous and asynchronous communication options abound. The location of the professor and the student is irrelevant. Content can be cheap or free.
-
How Technology Can Improve Online Learning - Online Learning - The Chronicle of Higher Education
A report from the American Enterprise Institute called "Diplomas and Dropouts" documented the wide disparity in graduation rates across 1,300 traditional colleges and universities, even between those with similar admissions criteria and students. The Washington Monthly's 2010 College Guide listed 50 "dropout factories"—all bricks-and-mortar institutions with graduation rates from 5 percent to 20 percent. A 2010 meta-analysis and review of online-learning studies, published by the U.S. Department of Education, concluded that online learning was as good as or slightly more effective than traditional face-to-face instruction.
Monday, November 7, 2011
A. Kipta's Blog 11/08/2011 (a.m.)
-
Another strategy is to let students use Turnitin on their own drafts. That's the approach taken by Paulette Swartzfager, a lecturer at the Rochester Institute of Technology who has taught freshman writing for 40 years. In her case, the idea came from an unlikely source: a student. Ms. Swartzfager was discussing inadequate paraphrasing last year when the student asked if she had used Turnitin. She replied that she had not; like other Turnitin resisters, she wanted to teach, not police. But the student explained that Turnitin can be set to allow students to read its reports. The lecturer gave it a try, and now all of her students screen their work as a default. "What's happened as a result of this has just been wonderful," Ms. Swartzfager says. "They use it as a tool. They keep resubmitting it and working on it until it gets appropriately in their own words, or in quotations, or cited." The students, she adds, are "not nearly so nervous."
tags: plagiarism higher_education
280 Slides - Create & Share Presentations Online
Read more at the link below.
Source:
280 Slides - Create & Share Presentations Online
http://280slides.com/
Sunday, November 6, 2011
A. Kipta's Blog 11/07/2011 (a.m.)
-
FeedDemon - Free Windows RSS Reader
FeedDemon is the most popular RSS reader for Windows, with an easy-to-use interface that makes it a snap to stay informed with the latest news and information.
tags: rss aggregator
-
USS Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor - Official Site
Pacific Historic Parks supports and funds educational materials, museum exhibits, and interpretive programs for four National Parks throughout the Pacific: World War II Valor in the Pacific National Monument at Pearl Harbor, Kalaupapa National Historical Park on the island of Molokai, American Memorial Park in Saipan and War in the Pacific National Historical Park in Guam. Formed as a non-profit cooperating association with the National Park Service in 1979, Pacific Historic Parks (formerly known as the Arizona Memorial Museum Association) changed its name in June 2010 to better reflect its increased scope of support.
Ahead - Flash presentations
Source:
Ahead
http://ahead.com/#view/lilaspaces/main/welcome?scene=HOME*
Saturday, November 5, 2011
A. Kipta's Blog 11/06/2011 (a.m.)
-
The Science of Vision and the Emergence of Art
Color Vision and Art is one of several exhibits in the WebExhibits online museum, all of which promote discovery through multidisciplinary approaches that support all learning styles. WebExhibits is a public service of the Institute for Dynamic Educational Advancement (IDEA).
-
Teaching Institute for Excellence in STEM
The Teaching Institute for Excellence in STEM (TIES) designs and engineers statewide systems of innovative STEM education networks focused on project-based learning in the disciplines of Science, Technology.
-
Study Skills Tip Sheets & Advice | Emory College | Atlanta, GA
Advice From Students: Essential Tips for Freshmen (and other students too) (PDF); Science and Math Tips for Success (PDF); Humanities and Social Science Tips for Success (PDF). Study Skills Tip Sheets: Learning Styles (PDF); Memory & Concentration (PDF); Note-taking (PDF); Reading (PDF); Time Management (PDF); Test Preparation (PDF); Test Taking (PDF). Links to Academic Resources: GPA Grade Calculator; Raise Your GPA Calculator.
tags: study_habits tips
-
MapsTutorials | Knight Digital Media Center
KDMC produces a wealth of digital media tutorials to support our training sessions and classes. While the focus of some tutorials is on technology and journalism, most are general enough to be of use to anyone.
tags: digital_media tutorials
-
Serendip Home | Serendip's Exchange
There are plenty of websites out there which will tell you what to think. Serendip instead aims at helping you to think for yourself, and in the process of discovery to formulate new questions and new explorations.
VIDDIX - Mix video with the web
Read more at the link below.
Source:
VIDDIX - Mix video with the web
http://www.viddix.com/
Friday, November 4, 2011
A. Kipta's Blog 11/05/2011 (a.m.)
-
Welcome packets for students at Western Governors University now include a free Webcam, part of an extensive monitoring program used by the online university to make sure test-takers are who they say they are. At Western Governors, the average student is 36 years old, has a family, and takes a full course load on top of holding a full-time job. Because it’s convenient for them to be able to take tests from home, students have embraced the technology, says Janet W. Schnitz, associate provost for assessment and interim provost at the university. The university, which first started handing out cameras in July 2010, now has over 30,000 Web cams in use.
-
ECAR National Study of Undergraduate Students and Information Technology, 2011 Report | EDUCAUSE
The ECAR study of undergraduate students and information technology sheds lights on how information technology affects the college experience. ECAR has conducted this annual study since 2004, and though students' ownership and utilization of technology changes from year to year, students consistently rely upon their instructors and institutions to meet their technology expectations and needs. The 2011 study differs from past studies in that the questionnaire was reengineered and responses were gathered from a nationally representative sample of 3,000 students in 1,179 colleges and universities.
tags: research higher_education
Skitch - image sharing
|
Christmas Printables for Kids
Read more at the link below.
Source:
Christmas Printables for Kids (Coloring Pages and More) | FamilyFun
http://familyfun.go.com/christmas/christmas-printables/
Thursday, November 3, 2011
VUVOX - slideshows, photo, video and music sharing, Myspace codes
Read more at the link below.
Source:
VUVOX - slideshows, photo, video and music sharing, Myspace codes
http://www.vuvox.com/
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
A. Kipta's Blog 11/03/2011 (a.m.)
-
It may be inconceivable for you to misuse a word, but a quick look around online reveals plenty of people doing it. And it’s all too easy when we hear or see others use words incorrectly and parrot them without knowing it’s wrong. We know by now that great copy and content often purposefully break the rules of grammar. It’s only when you break the rules by mistake that you look dumb. So let’s take a look at 27 commonly misused words. Some are common mistakes that can cost you when trying to keep a reader’s attention. Others are more obscure and just interesting to know.
-
A favorite of permaculturists worldwide, the idea of a keyhole garden is to create a raised, no-dig garden that allows the gardener maximum access to each square inch of soil, without ever having to step on the bed itself. Because Lesotho is so mountainous, building these beds using rock walls also helps regulate temperature, as well as to combat soil erosion.
Classic Cat - making Classical music more accessible
Sooo ... I searched for "Monteverdi Beatus vir"
Edit 6/22 20:30:
I forgot to credit the source of this excellent recording: New Trinity Baroque an ensemble from Atlanta, Georgia. I'd love to hear them live!
Vivaldi, Concerto for Strings in C major, Ciaconna, 3rd movement
Telemann, Suite in A minor for recorder, strings, and b.c., Rejouissance, 5th movement
... played on this page with that Streampad thingy you should see at the bottom of the page.
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
ScreenCastle - one-click screencasting
A. Kipta's Blog 11/01/2011 (p.m.)
-
It’s easy to get started with these applications. Users can sign up using their Twitter accounts (although GroupTweet does get a little more involved). Each of these tools has the benefit of being web based – you don’t have download anything to your computer to use them, and you can access them from anywhere via a web browser. Lastly, they all have free versions that provide robust functionality.
-
BBC News - 7 billion people and you: What's your number?
The world's population is expected to hit seven billion in the next few weeks. After growing very slowly for most of human history, the number of people on Earth has more than doubled in the last 50 years. Where do you fit into this story of human life? Fill in your date of birth below to find out.
-
Should You Flip Your Classroom? | Edutopia
At its core, "flipped instruction" refers to moving aspects of teaching out of the classroom and into the homework space. With the advent of new technologies, specifically the ability to record digitally annotated and narrated screencasts, instructional videos have become a common medium in the flipped classroom. Although not limited to videos, a flipped classroom most often harnesses different forms of instructional video published online for students.
tags: flipped_classroom khan.salman



![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_c.png?x-id=b6ab8ccc-9bf3-411e-a828-4301e723eb43)