Yeah. It's, like, not an extra gun for your action figure, it requires upgrading to the action figure with kung-fu grip!
Spike's Bitches 30: Going on Thirteen
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Incorporating technology into instruction needs more than an add-on piece; it requires a full... "
"To effectively incorporate technology into instruction, it needs to be more than an afterthought. The technology needs to be incorporated into the instruction plan from the beginning."
Maybe.
I hope you're feeling better, Emily.
Or something like a full integration of technology into the curriculum, which, itself, requires an understanding of the possibilities and uses of said technology?
Hmmm A full reassessment of the possibilities for computer applications in each aspect and area of the curriculum, maybe?
That's good, except I also want something about how it has to be part of the school setup as well, as opposed to, "So, we've got a computer lab. Use it for something!"
Ha! I done made up some bullshit.
You guys were very helpful, thank you! Now I have to let it sit for a while, and (I regret) actually look it over again before declaring it done. Better go back to the lesson planning. Yay, polynomial functions!
So let me ask folks: would you rather have a 4x4 sheet of gold or 3 2x2 sheets (of the same thickness, let's say)?
Well, then that would require significant education for the teachers and administrators, who need to understand that computers are the equivalent of paper, not the abacus, which then circles around to the idea of full integration.
It requires a wholesale change in attitude for teachers and administrators.
It requires a wholesale change in attitude for teachers and administrators.
Right! Kung-fu grip! Also, training, consideration of how it will fit into the current schedule setup, etc.
58 pages, bay-bee!
4x4
Is this a trick?
Shopping with Perkins = Fun, btw. She's quite the enabler.
Wow, Emily!
Hive-mind flower-getting question: The last three times Daniel's gotten me roses (a single rose twice, then half a dozen) they've died - wilted then dried up - before opening to full bloom. Upon receiving them, I trim the rose's stems at an angle under cool running water, and I follow the directions for mixing the nutrient/preservative pack. What's more, the vases are blue or green glass, which I had heard should contribute to longer lasting flowers. This is three times in a row now, so that makes me wonder if the problem is something in our water, but does anyone else have any ideas on what is going wrong?
58 pages! Yay!
I've never seen that happen, WindSparrow. Do you have hard water? I don't know that that would make any difference, but I'm willing to believe it might.