It's a simple Powerpoint file, with hyperlinks from the question value placeholders to the slides with questions.
Download the file for your own class (use it as a template for your own subjects/questions).
Powerpoint file.
Learning and Teaching with Technology
I decided to play a "Jeopardy" style game for review of some grade 3 math principles (polygons/2D shapes, patterns, mental math). It's a simple Powerpoint file, with hyperlinks from the question value placeholders to the slides with questions. Download the file for your own class (use it as a template for your own subjects/questions). Powerpoint file.
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Backups are a must. Computer/Hardware failure is a matter of when, not if. There are a few options, like Dropbox, or Mozy which offer 2GB free accounts. There are many other paid options if you need more storage. As a teacher in training - there are a lot of hours put in to lesson preparation and planning, collecting resources, links, graphics, creating powerpoints, Smart Notebook files, etc. Even keeping things on a USB drive is as temporary as putting it through the washing machine, or dropping it in a slushy parking lot. Lesson du jour - always have a backup plan for when technology fails... including power outages.
It would also be nice if quicktime/iMovie would work with more file formats. We made one of our movies using a Canon DSLR camera instead of photobooth, since it was an 'aerial' photo, and we didn't want to hang the Retina MBP over the edge to capture the footage. We used a camera with a neck strap - but it recorded h.264, which Quicktime is incapable of editing - this resulted in us having to create a still image of the clip instead of video clip (which needed some slight trimming). Oh... I wish I had a 3D printer! |
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