Digital Learning Day: Resource Roundup

The second annual Digital Learning Day was on February 6, 2013. We compiled some useful resources on digital learning to help you celebrate the day with your class.

The second annual Digital Learning Day was on February 6, 2013. We compiled some useful resources on digital learning to help you celebrate the day with your class.

Integrating Technology into Schools

Back to Top

Online Learning and Blended Classrooms

  • Blended Learning Series, by Lisa Michelle Dabbs, Andrew Miller, and Heather Wolpert-Gawron (2012)

    This three-part blog series covers tips and strategies for incorporating blended learning -- a combination of both online and face-to-face education -- in the classroom.

  • Five-Minute Film Festival: Flipped Classrooms, by Amy Erin Borovoy (2012)

    Learn more about the challenges and benefits of flipped classrooms, where lectures are assigned as homework and hands-on learning happens in class, in this playlist of videos from VideoAmy.

  • Connecting Project-Based and Blended Learning, by Brian Greenberg (2011)

    PBL and blended learning prove to be two educational approaches worth combining.

  • Salman Khan on Liberating the Classroom for Creativity (2011)

    The founder of Khan Academy, a free educational video library that features over two thousand titles and an interactive dashboard for formative assessment, discusses how his videos can help create a "flipped classroom" that allows blended learning -- online lectures can happen at home and project-based learning can happen during school.

  • Schools That Work: The Brave New Breakthrough of Online Learning (2010)

    Discover how K-12 students and teachers from across the country are using virtual technology to create enhancements to their learning experiences and new success in their lives.

Back to Top

Teaching with New Media Tools

Back to Top

Video Games in the Classroom

Back to Top

Working with Digital Learners

  • Digital Native vs Digital Citizen? Examining a Dangerous Stereotype, by Mary Beth Hertz (2012)

    Mary Beth Hertz invites us to look at our assumptions that all kids are born tech-savvy, and encourages us to think more globally about how we can teach them to thrive as citizens in a digital world.

  • Five-Minute Film Festival: Teaching Digital Citizenship, by Amy Erin Borovoy (2012)

    VideoAmy explores the topic of digital citizenship with this playlist of videos on the importance of online safety, manners, privacy, and responsibility.

  • Project-Based Learning for Digital Citizens, by Andrew Marcinek (2011)

    Blogger Andrew Marcinek shares the real payoff for his digital literacy students: collaboration, networking and results.

  • Digital Citizenship: Resource Roundup (2011)

    Check out Edutopia's collection of articles, videos, and resources on cyberbullying, netiquette, and internet safety.

  • The Digital Divide: Resource Roundup (2011)

    The "digital divide" is still a critical issue in education and beyond, and is even more complex than it was a decade ago. Here's a roundup of resources and organizations to help educators understand both the history and the new landscape of the digital divide.

Back to Top

This article originally published on 1/23/2012

see more see less

Comments (5)

Comment RSS
English Department Chair @ small rural middle/high school in Northwest CT

Every Day is Our Digital Learning Day

Was this helpful?
0

Today is Digital Learning Day! To mark the occasion, let me take you through a quick walkthrough of the halls of Wamogo Regional Middle/High School and give you a snapshot on how digital learning looks in the English classrooms grades 7-12.
http://wp.me/p1FPEO-1bv

Digital Learning Day: Resource Roundup

Was this helpful?
0

Thanks for this wonderful compilation of DLD resources. I think these resources tough upon all the latest trends and their necessities, benefits and pitfalls. I’d like to commend, here, the role of OERs like CK12 FlexBook and Khan Academy, for the great work they are doing especially for STEM subjects, I think these resources with their interactive, engaging yet rigorous content have shown the way for other to follow. And the OER revolution is the next big thing in education, providing new opportunities of learning to whoever wants them.
http://goo.gl/rMV3V

Online Learning Specialist at Metro Nashville (TN) PS

If the event had not been so fantastic,

Was this helpful?
0

...I would say that this archive of tools for innovators and "re-thinkers" would be enough in and of itself. Thank you so much for archiving the day's resources. From the trenches in Tennessee, I can echo that the main tasks before us include 1) changing established and incredibly entrenched preconceptions of how education looks, 2) establishing new and firmly-fixed-in-best-practices ways to go about education, and 3) working out just how these new ways function effectively within vast, powerful, and authoritative systems not designed to allow them (much less to enable them) to function optimally. Funding, policy, and law are our dragons and only by keeping the essential issue in focus--the well-being and nurturance of our children as they grow through childhood into adulthood--will we succeed in taming those dragons. This was a wonderful event, and it helps me to feel the tide turning toward the good.

Growing Your Textbooks by Thinking Outside The Box

Was this helpful?
0

Karen Cator, the United States Department of Education's (ED) director of technology, had addressed the move beyond the digital textbooks: "I think the trend is towards--I wouldn't call them e-books, I'd call them 'digital learning environments."
As Dan Meyer pointed out in this post: On iBooks 2 And iBooks Author: "No new technology is so novel we can't subject it to the question, "How does it change the relationship between student and teacher, student and discipline, one student to another?"
Textbooks or not, what we need is technology/ constructivist shift in classsrooms.

see more see less