Wednesday, April 07, 2010
iPad Running Windows 7 and Word?
Sunday, February 14, 2010
Snow Melt
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Snow! and Stuff
I am very excited that the school I work at will be a total 1:1 laptop school soon. Our 7th graders are in their second year of implementation, and this school year we added 7th and 8th grade. Classroom carts will be rolled out this coming week.
Saturday, August 15, 2009
Back to School
Sunday, March 01, 2009
iWorks Numbers Training

Sunday, February 22, 2009
John Blake has shared a video with you
John has shared a video with you: 1 to 1 Laptop Learning Initiative
His/her message:
This is a video highlighting our Central Middle School Laptop Learning Initiative, Whiteville City Schools, Whiteville, North Carolina-- where we are "empowering learners for a globally interactive future".
Sincerely,
John Blake
Technology Facilitator
http://animoto.com/play/rkIMhsXwvFH79uODoenGSw?from=share
If you like it, why don't you try creating one yourself? It's free and really simple, so head over to our site and give it a try:
We look forward to your visit! Sincerely,
The ANIMOTO Team
Sunday, February 08, 2009
How I Resize Photos on My MacBook Pro
1. Email resizing: In iPhoto, it is easy to select several images and click on the email icon. When Apple Mail launches, a window pops up and asks what size you want to send the images as....using that menu, I select small and compose the message. After that, the images resolve in the message, and I select all the images, then control click and select Save Attachment to the desktop. This is how I do it.
2. Export: You can export photos from an album or your entire iPhoto library to send them to others or import them into other applications.
Read more--; http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1100
If you opt to use this iPhoto Export feature, I here's a clearly written site: http://www.iclarified.com/entry/index.php?enid=294 This is a excellent "steps page".
3. Third Party Apps:
Picasa
The newest photo editing tool I have found that has a great free collage creating tool is Google's Picasa 3.0 Beta for Mac. My students like it too. It has built-in templates to modify the layout and auto scrambling of the images. Picasa has a few other great features like photo effects and photo slideshow movies with basic titles and captions. It is very easy to use. 6th graders just turn it on and go with it.
Resize!
This app is a simple program designed to resize a folder of pictures in one step. It's faster and easier to use than generic graphic programs... and it's free! http://www.macupdate.com/info.php/id/16845/resize!
Comic Life
Bruce Ketcham, middle school history teacher and coach has been using Comic Life to create photo collages and add hip looking titles. His photo collages are mostly from his sports teams. I would love to be able to take these to a commercial photo processor and have posters made for the kids-- need to sell some bottles or aluminum cans I guess to make some extra cash to cover the cost. Comic Life integrates with iPhoto and images are re sized to fit the boxes or panes in the templates in the comic strips when you drag and drop the photos, they pop right in place. Titles can be quickly added with a variety of font styles that can be customized in a snap. Comic Life is not free, but is just a wonderfully flexible tool, I highly recommend it for laptop using classrooms. Students and teachers can invent ways to use Comic Life that are sure to dazzle and amaze the none believers.
Saturday, February 07, 2009
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
Snow Closes School in Columbus County
Enjoy the video.
Monday, January 19, 2009
Fw: MLK Day First Alert Forecast
-----Original Message-----
From: WECT@subs.myweather.net
Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2009 06:55:57
To: Me
Subject: MLK Day First Alert Forecast
John,
It now appears southeast North Carolina could see some light snow late tonight and into early tomorrow! Before we see the chance of wintry weather tonight we have a few weather issues we must deal with this morning. A dense fog advisory is in effect through early morning for the entire area. Use your low beam headlights and don't follow the car in front of you too closely. In addition with the rain we saw yesterday and temperatures hovering near the freezing mark, we could see some black ice on bridges and overpasses so be careful! Later today it will be mostly cloudy and cool with highs in the low 50's. Tonight a fast moving low will move into northwest South Carolina. This storm will race offshore early tomorrow morning. It looks like we will see rain quickly changing to light snow by late evening. Overnight lows will be in the low and mid 30's with some light accumulation possible. Tomorrow morning winter weather advisories go into effect. Light snow will continue through the early morning. By 10 AM light snow will taper off to flurries as the low pulls further away from the area. Arctic air pouring into the area will keep temperatures in the low and mid 30's through the day. Wind chills should run in the 20's with a stiff north wind gusting over 20 miles per hour at times. Bundle up!
A very cold night is coming up tomorrow night with clearing skies and lows in many spots in the teens. A cold Canadian high will be moving into the southeast U.S. With the high near us on Wednesday it will be sunny and still cold with highs in the upper 30's. We expect one more very cold night Wednesday night with lows plunging into the low 20's. As the high slides offshore Thursday it will remain sunny but turn milder with highs in the low 50's. Friday will be even better with mostly sunny skies and highs back in the low 60's. Another cold front approaches the area over the weekend. Ahead of the front Saturday will be mostly cloudy with highs in the mid 60's. We could see a pretty good rain chance late Saturday into early Sunday. After some early showers, Sunday will be mostly cloudy and colder with highs in the low 50's.
Have a nice holiday,
Eric Davis
Click here for a hour by hour forecast for you community.
Meteorologist Eric Davis
Your detailed weather forecast is available. Click here:
http://pmc.myweather.net/PFP2/default.asp?host=wect
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WECT News
WECT is Where News Comes First with the best local coverage of news, weather and sports on Carolina in the Morning beginning at 5 AM, WECT News at Midday, plus WECT News at 5:00, 6:00 and 11:00.
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On this date in 1977 . .
Snowflakes were observed at Homestead and Miami Beach in extreme southern Florida.
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This message was sent to me as part of the WECT Personal Forecast service.
PLEASE DO NOT REPLY TO THIS EMAIL MESSAGE!
Update: We may get 3 inches. OMG! There will not be a loaf of white bread or gallon of milk in Chadbourn tonight...panic time. ha ha Tip: Stay off the roads, this kind of weather brings out the Crazy in people.
Sunday, December 28, 2008
2008/9 Schools Wikipedia Selection : Subject Index : Science
This is an interesting resource for science: 2008/9 Schools Wikipedia Selection : Subject Index
Science is traditional divided in curriculum terms into Chemistry, Physics and Biology. Some of the science articles are long and complicated but "elementary" articles have been included where possible. A good starting point is the "portal" pages for subjects which are listed at the foot of this page together with some general science articles. The Chemistry section is large and includes reference articles on all the elements and common compounds. The Physics section includes Astronomy, the Planets and a lot of technical articles. Biology includes Health and Medicine as well as articles on plants, creatures and lab Biology. There are also several sections on important scientists in the "people" section, divided into "astronomers and physicists" "human scientists" and "chemists".
Monday, December 22, 2008
Fw: Some things to know!!
Sent from my BlackBerry Smartphone provided by Alltel
From: "Frank Q. Blake"
Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2008 08:30:07 -0500
To: (me)
Subject: FW: Some things to know!!
Date: Tue, 2 Dec 2008 13:38:13 -0800
SOME GREAT THINGS TO KNOW (Just print and stick in your kitchen drawer) |
Saturday, September 13, 2008
Laptop Update
Should I delete this blog.
I am considering it. Just not enough time in the day to do everything.
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Tuesday, July 08, 2008
NECC 2008 Through Distance Learning
No, I will not be bummed out by not have the seeming unlimited funds of districts around the our nation. Districts that sent hordes of eager participants to this years bash at San Antonio. I will not get any cheese with my whine. On the positive side, I have been lapping up the scraps and crumbs of leftovers from NECC. I have found streaming video http://www.kzowebcasting.com/necc/ and the best part is that I could fast forward through the presenters crowd warm-ups, self-promos, shout-outs, and even parts without audio. Would I pay for this? No. Would I recommend it to others. Absolutely! The chat feature is wonderful. Send you fellow teachers a link to the site on Twitter or IM or Plurk, or Pownce and have them comment and give feedback while viewing a particular presentation. Now, I have been a fan of David Warlick for many years and always love to listen to his presentations. Here is how I see sharing these videos with my fellow teachers in my school.
Set up a Professional Development schedule. Maybe call it NECC via Distance Learning, or Converge, Connect, and Transform Learning. Then, using our email server, set up a group of teachers interested in earning credits in technology. From this group of names, have them create a Pownce account. The reason for using Pownce, is that users can setup Events. When the time for the training comes, send the group a link to one of the NECC webcasts and ask the participants to post their comments and questions in the chat room. I have been impressed with backdoor chat. Our teachers would be using MacBooks, so we could launch iChat with Bonjour to connect the laptops. Now, will our wifi handle the streaming or will we encounter buffering issues? That may be the "$24,000 Question".
Other cool "take-aways" that I have picked up include Edtags.org. Edtags.org is a social bookmarking site for educators. Diigo and Del.icio.us are great bookmarking site that I use all the time, but they are blocked by our content filter at school. Edtags.org is unblocked and is now high on my personal list of sites to use. I lacks lots of the numbers of users that the other great social bookmarking sites have, and that is fine. I have been busy adding my bookmarks in Edtags.org and marking them for use by my friends only. This way, I can add teachers in my school as users and add them as my friend so they can access my educational bookmarks and add another tool to our learning community.
Mogulus.com is really exciting. However, it does not make the cut of the content filter in our district. It is also flagged for inappropriate content.
I will not be so bold as to consider this to be a master list of tools for the classroom. Hopefully, I will be able to find time to post additional resources.
Saturday, June 07, 2008
Schoooooool's--- Out For Summer!!!!
Well, first of all, I have no real excuse. But looking back at the school year, many factors contributed to not using blogs. One key difference this past year was Twitter. Instead of spending time thinking and writing, I constantly found myself glued to mini blog posts. I have never enjoyed writing. I am a horrible craftsman of language. My writing teachers always told me I wrote like I talk. This was nice way of telling me that in their opinion, anyone from eastern North Carolina is dumb. I feel confident that all my formal writing teachers are either dead, or tucked away in a nursing home by now.
I have also spend considerable time with my students learning to use Google Sites. I set up an account for my classroom which required students over the age of 13 to use their school email account. I had several students over 18 years old and they used their personal accounts from Yahoo or AOL. I did not use it at all with my under 13 y.o. students.
I liked using Google Sites for one major reason- Google Docs. The Google Site Google Docs feature is really nice with high school students. I was able to post PowerPoint, Word Docs, and spreadsheets. If we were studying cell processes, and I found a document I wanted them to read, I uploaded it the the Google Doc site and "shared" them with the students. They could work in teams or individually on projects.
When it came time for students to write their term paper, I had a hard time convincing my students to use Google Docs. They did not like having to log in to Google and uploading and then when they needed their doc, logging in downloading their document and remembering to upload it again. My students did not like the way Google Doc reformatted their documents. So, I will not try that again for term papers. The best tip I learned from this experience- tell the students to buy a cheap thumb drive and story their term paper on it. I loaned two of my thumb drives and the students never returned them. I should have gotten them to leave their cell phone with me until they returned my thumb drives. Oh well, maybe it was worth it.
It is summer time, time to recharge my batteries. Time to turn off the computer and take some walks outside. Gas is too high to ride around...have a good summer!
Here is a video created by one of my students in our Photography in Science class.
Friday, May 30, 2008
Monday, May 12, 2008
Plant Growth and Skills

Students in my middle school classroom are participating in an activity were they are growing Wisconsin Fast plants. During the seed germination part of this activity, students made daily sketches of the seeds. They labeled the radicle and cotyledons. They also labeled the seed coat and hypocotyl. Students used magnifying lens to enlarge the small cabbage seeds.


