This link has been bookmarked by 127 people . It was first bookmarked on 27 Apr 2009, by sean williams.
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Lisa Dumicich"Now that you and/or your students are using wikis and blogs, are you curious what could be added to them? From animated slideshows to collaborative documents to interactive review games, many great (and free) tools are available. As a follow up to my previous post “What Teachers Should and Should Not Be Posting on their Classroom Webpages”, I’ve pulled a master list of embedding options that will hopefully spark your imagination. "
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aMap is an excellent tool for social studies projects
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Glogster teachers or students can create interactive posters or digital scrapbook pages that provide links out
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Janice StearnsThis collection of tools to embed is a perfect set for classroom sites.
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Christina DiMicellimaster list of embedding options that will hopefully spark your imagination.
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Lori Lindauadding cool stuff to your wikis blogs vlogs
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Cindy MartinEmbeds for Educational blogs/wikis
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Now that you and/or your students are using wikis and blogs, are you curious what could be added to them? From animated slideshows to collaborative documents to interactive review games, many great (and free) tools are available. As a follow up to my previous pos
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wendy samsonfollow archives for great sources on a plethora of creative and practical applications
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Screenshots
with comments – Skitch is an easy tool that allows you to screen capture,
make annotations, and embed them on your blog. To find the embed code click webpost. -
Animoto –Animoto is a
wonderful tool to make photo music videos that can be easily embedded on a wiki
or blog. Be sure to sign up for the
“Educator” version to take advantage of all the features. This is an example Animoto created by an
Andover High School Social Studies teacher as an introduction to the 1950s. The
embed code is found with the Thumbtack
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Louise Robinson-Layblog with a rundown of great tools
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Jose Antonio da SilvaEmbed for wikis and blogs
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Mark BlairNow that you and/or your students are using wikis and blogs, are you curious what could be added to them? From animated slideshows to collaborative documents to interactive review games, many great (and free) tools are available. As a follow up to my previous post “What Teachers Should and Should Not Be Posting on their Classroom Webpages”, I’ve pulled a master list of embedding options that will hopefully spark your imagination.
As you browse the list consider how you will use these embeds. While some of these work perfectly for classroom blog posts, others tend to be more effective wiki tools. Do you want students to view a video clip and then leave comments below? That’s a perfect blog scenario. Or do you want students to collect data in a form? Yep, that’s a wiki tool. I know your wheels will be turning to come up with great new ways to use the tools.
One note of warning, however. If any of these sites are blocked at your school, the embeds will also be blocked.
Good luck and again if you have any other suggestions please post them in the comments section. The more tools available, the nerdier we all can be. -
Lynley JobeBest embed tools
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Heath SawyerBest embed tools
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Spiro BolosWeb 2.0 apps
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Sheryl A. McCoya master list of embedding options that will hopefully spark your imagination.
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Tom StimsonVery good list from Making Teachers Nerdy blog
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When it is embedded on your site, students can take positions and fill out the map online
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Linda McNeilNow that you and/or your students are using wikis and blogs, are you curious what could be added to them? From animated slideshows to collaborative documents to interactive review games, many great (and free) tools are available. As a follow up to my previous post “What Teachers Should and Should Not Be Posting on their Classroom Webpages”, I’ve pulled a master list of embedding options that will hopefully spark your imagination.
As you browse the list consider how you will use these embeds. While some of these work perfectly for classroom blog posts, others tend to be more effective wiki tools. Do you want students to view a video clip and then leave comments below? That’s a perfect blog scenario. Or do you want students to collect data in a form? Yep, that’s a wiki tool. I know your wheels will be turning to come up with great new ways to use the tools. -
Doug PetersonNow that you and/or your students are using wikis and blogs, are you curious what could be added to them? From animated slideshows to collaborative documents to interactive review games, many great (and free) tools are available. As a follow up to my pr
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Tania ShekoBest embeds for education and blogs
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Erin WallaceEmbedding options for wikis
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Keri-Lee BeasleyGreat list of educational tools for embedding on wikis & blogs
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