Advertisement

Hot Stuff: Media for Educators

Two sites for your politically media-savvy students, kid-friendly (and kid-proof) stereo headphones, and a new service -- and possible muse -- for your brilliant brainstorms.

by Edutopia Staff

Print Forward Share Comments(0) Comment RSS
Illustration of a girl peaking out over a pile of open books.
Credit: William Duke

FactCheckEd.org

Annenberg Public Policy Center
free

This offshoot of FactCheck.org helps students become savvy media consumers. The nonpartisan site turns a critical eye toward political statements of all stripes, scrutinizes misleading advertising claims, and gives kids pointers on evaluating information found online. It also provides a dictionary. For educators, the site offers lesson plans and guides for teaching critical thinking, the proper use of sources, and how to recognize deceptive arguments.


Illustration of head phones with tigers on the ear pieces.
Credit: William Duke

Listening First Stereo Headphone

$15 ($47 for Sound Alert Monaural)

Designed for young children, the Listening First Stereo Headphone sports tigers, bears, or pandas on the earpieces. It offers volume control, ambient-noise reduction for hearing clarity, and a comfortable fit. Made with ABS plastic to withstand classroom wear and tear, it comes with a one-year school-use warranty. To prevent damage to a student's hearing, Califone also offers the equally durable (and animal-free) Sound Alert Monaural Headphone, which has a red warning light to notify the user and teacher when the noise volume from the headphone exceeds the safe 85 decibels.


Illustration of a man talking into his cell phone.
Credit: William Duke

Jott

Service free, standard phone-usage/texting charges apply

Don't let those great ideas slip away. The next time inspiration strikes but you can't stop what you're doing to write it down, give Jott a call on your cell phone. Subscribers to the service can dial (866) 568-8123 and leave a thirty-second voice message. Voilà: The voice message is translated into text and emailed and/or text-messaged to you or anyone (even a group) on your list of contacts. The message can also be posted on Web sites such as Amazon, Blogger, Google Calendar, or Twitter.


PBL logo.
Credit: William Duke

Access, Analyze, Act: A Blueprint for 21st Century Civic Engagement

Free

PBS gives teachers access to online tools that will inform their students about the presidential election, as well as why it's important, and how to take action. The multimedia Web site offers lesson plans for digging deeper so that students can increase their media-literacy skills and analysis. Not-so-media-savvy students -- and teachers -- can use the site to get updated on terms and social-media tools.


This article was also published in the October 2008 issue of Edutopia magazine.


Post new comment

Share your thoughts with others. Please increase the credibility of your post by including your name, school, grade level, and city, and by demonstrating respect for others' opinions. Comments will not appear immediately; all comments are moderated and will be posted in order of submission.

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options