computer-assisted instruction

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computer-assisted instruction

Can we skip lunch and keep writing?

collaborating in class and online, grades 3-8
2011
Shows teachers how to weave technology throughout the curriculum to get students to be enthusiastic about writing, and includes selecting digital tools, differentiating instruction to meet individual needs, and more.

When writing with technology matters

2013
A teacher's guide to understanding and teaching writing with modern technology.

Animating calculus

Mathematica notebooks for the laboratory
1994

Crafting digital writing

composing texts across media and genres
2013
"Explores the questions of how to teach digital writing by examining the author's craft, demonstrating how intentional thinking about author's craft in digital texts engages students in writing that is grounded in their digital lives"--Back cover.

A classroom of one

how online learning is changing our schools and colleges
2003
Examines the benefits and shortcomings of courses taught entirely over the Internet, and discusses the implications of on-line learning for traditional educational institutions.

iWrite

using blogs, wikis, and digital stories in the English classroom
2010
The power of Dana Wilber's insight is in its simplicity. Students are texting, networking, and blogging--i.e. writing and reading--all the time, everywhere, just maybe in places we aren't necessarily paying attention to. Build on their authentic interest and motivation using the technologies they are already committed to and you've won half the battle. You won't believe how engaged they are; they won't believe they're learning for school. In iWrite, Dana shows you how to guide students through the complexity of new literacies, including: how to discern between media; how to account for audience and voice; how to choose appropriate genre; and how to harness what they already know to be more successful in school. Dana deftly elucidates the lives of Millennials, those students growing up around the turn of the 21st century, and the technologies embedded into their everyday reading and writing. She shows us how three accessible tools-wikis, blogs, and digital storytelling--can be used to scaffold learning for our students. And she demonstrates how they can help us address 10 key issues in the literacies of today's students: safety; authenticity; practice; relevance; meaning and identity; interest and inquiry; cognitive development; community; process; motivation. Let iWrite show you how to capture students' daily literacy practices and develop them for the kind of writing we want them to learn. --Publisher's description.

Learning science through computer games and simulations

2011
Discusses how science can be learned by using video games and computer simulation programs.

Linking literacy and technology

a guide for K-8 classrooms
2000
Examines the reasons why technology should be used to support literacy learning in kindergarten through eighth grade, with information on how to begin using technology in the classroom; presents ideas for using technology to support a variety of literacy goals; and looks at how teachers are integrating technology into the literacy curriculum.

Technology through children's literature

grades K-5
2003
Provides ideas and information on how to use technology and software, along with books, to teach children's literature, covering story elements, vocabulary, genre, book reports, and comprehension, and discussing Internet use and electronic books. Includes a look at how to extend lessons to other curriculum areas.

Technology for inclusion

meeting the special needs of all students
1997

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