Thursday, April 21, 2011

Weekly Tech Tip: Making and Using Infographics

I am sorry it has been so long since my last Weekly Tech Tip but we have been doing state testing this month. This eats up district bandwidth so most use is prohibited for both students and teachers. Use of the Internet interferes with the ability for Pearson Education to deliver online assessments for both Math and Science and since we can only test a handful of kids at time (due to how much bandwidth it uses) it takes nearly the whole month to get all these students tested. As a result, most of this week's tech tip had to be done without the use of the Internet. I have also been assigned to proctor these tests so I couldn't talk while making this week's tech tip. I apologize for the lack of narration. Anyway, this week's tech tip is on infographics and how they can be used to help students make sense of numbers while analyzing complex problems using data and statistics. Since I have been knee deep in state testing I thought data regarding testing would make for an appropriate data set for this tech tip. Enjoy.

Weekly Tech Tip:


related links:
  • Infographic Generators:
Video Festival:
Link Stew:
Blog Carnival:

Retweetable Tweets:

Where there's smoke, there's fire. Where there are standards, there's standardized testing.less than a minute ago via Twitter for Mac Favorite Retweet Reply



@DianeRavitch Principal of my child's NYC charter school has asked the Board to change her title to Chief Education Officer - yes, CEO.less than a minute ago via Twitter for iPhone Favorite Retweet Reply



Here are some amazing videos related to mathematics. http://bit.ly/gc9muG #edchat #mathchatless than a minute ago via TweetDeck Favorite Retweet Reply



@markgarrison "'tchr wanted to know if they learn schoology today, are they going to have to learn something new in five years.' I hope so"less than a minute ago via Power Twitter Favorite Retweet Reply



Dewey: what the best and wisest parent wants for his child is what we should want for all children...anything less..destroys our democracyless than a minute ago via web Favorite Retweet Reply


On CNN just now, @m_rhee just said that the impact of a great teacher is "immeasurable." She said it herself.less than a minute ago via TweetDeck Favorite Retweet Reply


. @techlearning The "pro-teacher" language of individualism & personlization is code for drill & a steady diet of standardized testing.less than a minute ago via web Favorite Retweet Reply


@garystager it's staggering to think abt the cost of testing in US- supposed to be cheap, efficient- NOT.less than a minute ago via TweetDeck Favorite Retweet Reply


@DianeRavitch Maybe it's time to inform #parents that they can opt their kids out of #standardizedtests -- especially unreasonable onesless than a minute ago via web Favorite Retweet Reply

1 comment:

Essay Writers said...

Thanks for our tip.It will be really helpful.