Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Blog #4

SP.PK12.DH.2.4a: Produce written communication, including identifying parts of sentences, combining words to make sentences, and combining sentences to make paragraphs with the support of sign and/or voice.
Content Complexity Rating: N/A  |  Date Adopted or Revised: 02/14

http://www.cpalms.org/Public/PreviewResourceStudentTutorial/Preview/126646

In this basketball-themed interactive tutorial, you'll learn what separates clauses from sentences, and you'll learn about four different sentence types: simple, compound, complex, and compound-complex. 

My tool I am using is an Educational Game, I will use this tool to interact with the students and get them involved and interested in sentences. This is also a good tool for deaf students because it is a hands-on activity that you do not need to use hearing for, that hearing kids just like them can use.

In my educational career, I have used the internet and search engines such as Google to do research and other school related projects. Online I've used Prezi and Google Slides to do projects with large groups so we could all work on such projects. For pleasure I use a lot of Google and Siri, most of the time to do with random questions or music. Referring to the podcast, I have seen a lot of Tedtalks in psychology and some of my education classes last semester, they are a good way to show real life examples to students and give them a good grasp on the topic.

From my assignment I learned how many tools I can use to complete lessons and get the children involved in learning, through websites and activities it should be fairly easy. The ELA standards are more than I thought they would be, it surprised me all the little details teachers must pay attention to while teaching so they complete these standards. CPALMS really helped to guide teachers to different ways accomplishing the standards is possible.

3 comments:

  1. In regards to your web hunt questions, for question one, I would offer FSU's online database as a source for research. In relevance to the information, it is probably pretty valid. Compare this to the answer to question two - an online article from a newspaper. This article probably has more bias to it than that of a scholarly article, but it probably has more up-to-date information. Both sources have their pros and cons.

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  2. The basketball themed interactive material you found is really cool!

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