Archive for May, 2007

Windows Live Writer Beta 2

Just upgraded to Windows Live Writer  Beta 2 to write my blogs, which now also supports tables and now has an auto spell check, which is good for me. Sadly. Wordpress doesn’t support the update of pages. Nice layout though! :)

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New Oxfam Resources

Received an emailed from Is Allen, communications coordinator at Oxfam .

Oxfam has three new education resources available for teachers to tackle issues that are in the news.

FREE ONLINE NOW!

Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)

Mid-Point Poster Competition Make posters - win prizes!

Schools are invited to take part in our MDGs mid-point poster competition and win books, a poster set, and a visit to Oxfam HQ in Oxford! Use our great resources about the MDGs to help pupils design their own posters encouraging world leaders to work harder to meet the MDG targets to halve poverty by 2015.

G8 teaching materials

If you or your pupils were involved in Make Poverty History and want to know how world leaders are doing on keeping their promises to reduce debt, make trade fair, and increase aid, these resources will help you. Link your teaching to the current G8 summit, taking place on June 6th, and explore the issues behind the headlines.

AVAILABLE FROM FRIDAY 1st JUNE

Climate change ‘Summer Week’ activities.

Stuck for something to keep your pupils interested after SATs? Our Summer Week activity Climate Chaos: Exploring the Human Cost of Climate Change is here to help. Bring this hugely important global issue to life using our series of lesson plans that are designed to work as a week of cross-curricular themed activities, but can also be used separately.

Aimed at 9-11 year olds, Climate Chaos investigates the causes of climate change, the impacts - particularly on those in developing countries, and how young people’s own choices can make a difference.

Be the first to find out about new teaching resources from Oxfam - sign up to our termly e-newsletter.

Let me know if you use any of these…

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Picture Dots

I’ve enjoyed playing with Picture Dots today, basically an online website that allows you to produce your own dot to dot puzzles. It’s easy to use and when finished you can download a PDF of your creation. Here’s an example of one I created. Which country is this?

How could be use this? It could make a fun little starter, I’ve copied my image and pasted it into PowerPoint, a kind of mystery starter for a country study, a student could come up to the IWB and solve it, alternatively they might like a fun little exercise for revising diagrams. How about getting students to create them?

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Formulator Tarsia

Rob has just finished a brilliant mini-unit on Israel for us, his first task for students is a jigsaw puzzle of the main geographical features of the country. He has used a piece of freeware called Formulator Tarsia, from the Hermitech Laboratory, originally designed to create maths problems, but it has a number of cross-curricular applications.

Once downloaded and installed, it is relatively simple to use, it took me about twenty minutes to get the hang of it, you can choose from three types of puzzle, jigsaw, dominoes and card.

When you have chosen your puzzle type, you can type in the contents for your puzzle, this is in the input screen, when you have completed one field, click on the next number in the sidebar and a new input field will appear.

You can check your puzzle contents by clicking the table tab at the bottom of the screen.

Clicking on the output tab will reveal the puzzle that students will be given, of course, you could cut these up before the lesson, but the puzzle will already be unsorted.

Clicking on the solution tab will reveal the solution to your puzzle; particularly useful if you don’t want to solve it yourself, or want to provide students who are struggling with the finished answer.

You can print off the pages, with the exception of the input page, I haven’t got a printer so I use Primo PDF to print to a PDF file , this means I can print it later, as well as saving an electronic copy in this format.

You can save your puzzle by pressing the disc icon, but you will not be able to open these on a College computer, this file will only be recognised by the Tarsia programme, hence the need to print a copy.

This is an example of a parquet jigsaw of 12 pieces that I produced on European capitals, of course this is the solution!

What I really like about the programme is that you can insert images, here is an example of an 8 piece dominoes activity solution, that I produced using Ordnance Survey map symbols.

 

To insert images, in the input screen, click on the image icon at the top of the screen. The image is automatically resized for the puzzle, so you need to think carefully about the quality of the image you use.

I think this has legs, it could be used to produce simple a starter or plenary exercise, alternatively a more complex puzzle could be produced as a mini-topic review.

Let me know what you think…

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Making Posters in Excel

A bit of a test to see if I can embed Teacher Tube videos into the blog. I thought this was a simple idea which might come in useful for someone.

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Resources for EAL students.

Thanks to Helen, for directing me to the Ethnic Minority Attainment website, a great wealth of practical information here, including a developing section of resources for different subjects.

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Thanks

Thanks to all for the kind comments and feedback on the newsletter. Wishing all staff and other readers a happy half-term.

Also welcome to Alan Parkinson, online colleague and writer of Geography and all that Jazz, who becomes the blog’s first external link. Don’t be turned off by the ‘Geography’ bit, Alan is the best web watcher I know, if it’s new, he usually knows about it, and more than often there is cross-curricular application.

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Vidipedia.org

Vidipedia is a developing video wiki, it has some interesting videos uploaded, for example, the video tour of  Antarctica. As always, check to make sure that the content is appropriate. You can download the videos if you want to use them stand-alone. The download is a flash video, which you can’t show on our network, but you can convert the file by using Zamzar, make sure you choose an mpeg or avi file.

Tends to like Firefox to Internet Explorer. :(

Hat-tip Russel Tarr

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TAL Newsletter- Summer Term Part.1

I’m happy to announce that the first edition of K.H.C.T.C.’s Teaching and Learning newsletter. The newsletter will be published each half-term.

Thanks to all those that have made contributions.

I’d welcome feedback from colleagues and other educators. Feel free to post comments below.

Anyone can contribute to the newsletter, please send me your submissions via email.

We are also keen to hear from other educators and would be happy to publish guest articles.

Best Wishes

Tony

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Mega Quiz…

Over the last half-term I’ve observed some good practice using PowerPoint to create simple quiz activities, utilised as either a starter or consolidation exercise.

For my last Geography lesson, before the first exam, I produced the Mega Quiz below, based on our Paper.1. It looks massive, but it was simply a case of duplicating a set of ten slides at a time. I set up the quiz to progress every twenty seconds, so that I only had to manage the class. As the students completed the quiz, I played an album in the background…

On my first attempt with one class, I went through the answers by forwarding the slides by hand. On reflection, I decided I could time the whole presentation, so they could self-mark as well. As a result, I applied a transition of twenty seconds to all slides for my following class, though I now feel the transitions for answers could have been ten seconds to speed the process.

At the end of the quiz, I then reviewed the question numbers that students got wrong.

You can download this PowerPoint at slideshare, if you wish to adapt the template.

Any other ideas for quirky PowerPoint quizzes?

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