Heather Sullivan's personal annotations on this page
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Dorie Glynn, who teaches a bilingual 2nd grade class at Kirk Elementary
School in Houston, has been preparing students for conversations of their own on
Twitter. The students have started following other classes at the school, and
across the country, as they get ready to share data on regional cultures,
weather, and to play a virtual I Spy game, in which they will hunt for geometric
shapes in maps and photos sent from Twitter followers in other places.“I see a huge amount of potential for connecting with another classroom,
asking regional questions, comparing and contrasting areas,” Ms. Glynn said.
This link has been bookmarked by 7 people . It was first bookmarked on 04 Nov 2009, by Heather Sullivan.
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Kimberly LaPrairieTwitter Lessons in 140 Characters or Less
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Nearly 10,000 users, for example, follow Georgia teacher Vicki Davis, who uses
the login name @coolcatteacher
to share resources and suggestions about educational technology. (Education
Week and several of the paper’s reporters send out daily tweets under names
like @educationweek, @kmanzo, and @Teacherbeat.)
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Dorie Glynn, who teaches a bilingual 2nd grade class at Kirk Elementary
School in Houston, has been preparing students for conversations of their own on
Twitter. The students have started following other classes at the school, and
across the country, as they get ready to share data on regional cultures,
weather, and to play a virtual I Spy game, in which they will hunt for geometric
shapes in maps and photos sent from Twitter followers in other places.“I see a huge amount of potential for connecting with another classroom,
asking regional questions, comparing and contrasting areas,” Ms. Glynn said.
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