I have started digging around and have come up with three separate categories:
1. Teacher Resources- mostly teacher driven items, such as interactives, resources for the whiteboard, ect.
2. Student Resources- games
3. Student Resources- systems that allow students to learn and grow individually, exploration.
Here is one of the first ones I looked at (that's Melissa White for your incredible wiki!).
First impressions-wow! Very cool interactive activities. I decide to jump right in and invite my kids to use one of the Science labs (I want to concentrate on math, but this was just too appropriate) so I assigned them the Germination Lab. This was an excellent example of a controlled experiment where the kids could choose factors affecting germination (light, water, heat and different types of seeds) and then experiment by themselves or with the pdf document.
The sign in for students was very easy, I sent them an email with the log in link and a code to get to the specific class, they created a log in using their school email and they arrive at the lesson. Here is where it got messy (which admittedly happens a lot with our little net-books which have what we call "problem magnets" on them), only a few of them had the upgrade needed so only a few of them could do the interactive by themselves. I quickly adjusted and we went through the interactive on the active board together, which turned out to be a lot of fun! Immediate thoughts:
- It is not clearly posted how much this would cost, so asking for funding would prove difficult. If you want to find out you contact them, someone contacts you, they give you prices and blah blah blah... A lot of work..... (Update on pricing 2/3- This was the quote we received, it is WAY too expensive for us to get this... bummer, because it is GREAT, the price fits something we would use on a daily or weekly basis but after experimenting with these lessons this would probably be used two or three times monthly... ) The quote: Definitely. The site license covers all teachers and students at the school for a full year for $7 per student, with a minimum total of $2,995 (all prices are US dollars). A department license would cover all teachers in either math or science and their students for $4.25 per student, with a $1,995 minimum total. Our Teacher Plus Students licenses cover one teacher and all of their students for $799 per teacher, but the rate drops to $599 per teacher if you have at least three teacher subscriptions.
Our online training is $75 per teacher and is mostly self paced. We do include a weekly web conference with our trainer to ask specific questions and provide feedback, but the bulk of that is done in the US, so the times aren't what I would call "Warsaw friendly" (nor would the phone bill!). But what we would do is make sure that one of our trainers is available to you to answer any questions that you have. - The tech issues will have to be dealt with, so I will try and have my students do another one...My computer was able to play the interactive day 1, but day 2 I needed another update... This can cause confusion with students, especially elementary students.
- It would be worth it for the school to have access, especially with the Activeboards. I will send an email with a link to the librarian who is in charge of databases, it could be a possible addition.....
Implementation thoughts (Feb 8,2012):
- This week I assigned the students a fractions lab. It consisted of 4 pages that they completed along with the interactive. The interactive was really interesting looking. I reviewed the Gizmo and the sheets with the students on Monday. We logged in and made sure that they could access the Gizmo. All this went exceedingly well. However that night I received a few emails from my kids. All of them were asking "Do I have to use the Gizmo if I can just do the math on paper?". Perhaps this is too easy? Looking for a harder one for next week....
Next... Khan's Academy...

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