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Are you a student who has ever wondered which assignments and projects are the most challenging? We've all been there, faced with daunting tasks that seem insurmountable. In this comprehensive guide, we will delve into the myths and truths surrounding the difficulty of student
assignments and projects. By the end, you'll gain a deeper understanding of these academic challenges, along with expert insights and tips to help you excel. Click for details
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Here are popular online royalty-free music resources as well as general music sites, sound effect, make music sites, and more: Click for links
How to keep children safe online is the most popular question parents ask at my school. They want to know about firewalls, filters, kidsafe desktops, nannycams, cyberbullying, internet privacy, and everything in between. Should they keep their children away from computers or just off the internet? Do they
have to sit with them while they work? Is there an age when it's OK to let them on their own? No. No. and No. Parents must teach children to take care of themselves while visiting the vast, anonymous, addictive neighborhood called 'the internet'. Just as they stay at your side in large busy stores, don't talk to strangers, and don't open the door to people they don't know, they will learn to be safe in the digital world. Because it's part of our genome--to do what keeps us
safe. While they're getting to that epiphany, here are ideas you can employ to support them on the way: Click for more
Education is no longer contained within classroom walls or the physical site of a school building. Learning isn't confined to the eight hours between the school bell’s chimes or the struggling budget of an underfunded program. Today, education can be found anywhere, by teaming up with
students in Kenya or Skyping with an author in Sweden or chatting with an astrophysicist on the International Space Station. Students can use Google Earth to take a virtual tour of a zoo or a blog to collaborate on class research. Learning has no temporal or geographic borders, and is available wherever students and teachers find an internet connection. This vast landscape of resources is often free, but this cerebral trek through the online world requires students know how to
do it safely, securely, and responsibly. This used to mean limiting access to the internet, blocking websites, and layering rules upon rules hoping (vainly) students would be discouraged from using an infinite and fascinating resource. It didn’t work. Best practices now suggest that instead of cocooning students, we teach them to be good digital citizens, confident and competent in 17 areas: Click for more
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