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Eight amazing platforms not available to schools

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작성자 Jamal
댓글 0건 조회 218회 작성일 23-06-15 05:15

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we know that many schools block youtube, facebook and social networks due to child protection laws. And our experts know that students are not happy with this.

But we were wondering what additional online portals, which are potentially rich in educational resources, were blocked by schools filtering the internet. We asked the teachers and finally what each person was told.

Skype. "I think that would be great in an audience," says a reader. She is right. Many teachers use skype to communicate with schools around the world.National geographic. The kids section itself is essentially a huge treasure trove of great presentations about wild nature, children's literature, ai-generated pornographic images - aixxxsites.com - and cultures from all over the world.Glogster. Educators and students use this collaborative digital media platform to produce anything from videos about american presidents to interactive accounting quizzes. Dropbox and other file sharing sites. An affordable method of sharing files, homework, assignments, and projects between students and teachers. Blogspot and other blog-specific resources. One teacher claims that his site is labeled "18+ movies," while another might insist that her students are using the access block as an excuse not to do homework. Cool blogs - mostly free and easy to customize - are the next best method for leaders and students to connect, participate in classroom discussions, and share information.Khan academy. In the course of the phenomenon that the files are collected on youtube, one teacher testifies that none of these very informative and entertaining videos, describing anything from the pythagorean theorem to the causes and consequences of the credit crisis, are possible in her school. Flickr. Would you like to show your photo assignment to your photography teacher? Or take part in a collaborative project involving photo tagging? This is a rhetorical question in the version with a single teacher. Freedom to make. This site is "maintained by the princeton program center for advanced technology, a research center that studies the digital circuits in our lives. You can find testimonials and tech-science articles written by the center's faculty, students, and friends."
Even the department of education can explain that blocked sites interfere with learning. This is karen keitor, director of minobraz training methods. In a recent interview with mindshift:

"The point is, anyone needs to know how children can be in relative comfort and not yet be at risk and not yet be exposed to unacceptable building materials via the world wide web. But the filtering programs here are quite primitive. Man needs smarter filtering programs, more search sandboxing, smarter technologies so that visitors don't routinely turn off large sections of the internet. For example, on youtube, you can use a hundred foods, which can be harmless and really instructive. , But because it's only one bucket, many schools have simply shut down youtube."

Frustrated educators find alternatives. Emma dunbar, a san francisco high school teacher, testifies that they're lucky they have it has an lcd projector and an elmo video presenter.

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