I get a lot of questions from readers about what tech ed resources I use in my classroom so I'm going to take a few days this summer to review them with you. Some are edited and/or written by members of the Ask a Tech Teacher crew. Others, by tech teachers who work with the same publisher I do. All of them, I've found well-suited to the task of scaling and differentiating tech skills for age groups, scaffolding learning year-to-year, taking into account the perspectives and norms of all stakeholders, with appropriate metrics to know learning is organic and granular. Today:
Keyboarding Curricula Click for more
Even before COVID burst on the scene and drove many schools into online versions of themselves, remote teaching had been gaining popularity. Driven by reasons like flexibility, personal needs, and accessibility, the positives associated with online schooling were convincing many to take a second look. The
Ask a Tech Teacher team has done that with this article on--
On July 20, 1969, Neil Armstrong was the first man to place foot on the moon. Commemorate that this year with an exciting collection of websites and apps that take your students to the Moon: Click for links
As a working technology teacher, I get hundreds of questions from parents about their home computers, how to do stuff, how to solve problems. I share those with you. They’re always brief and always focused. Enjoy! Q: My taskbar disappeared. What do I
do? A: Push the flying windows key (it's located between Ctrl and Alt on the bottom left of your keyboard). That brings up the start button Need more? For Win 11? Win 10? Older? Click
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Questions? Go ahead and ask! I love tech ed questions. You can either reply to this newsletter or contact me via email.
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