tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-363958880966439535.post4974229109787393902..comments2023-06-19T04:39:51.807-05:00Comments on The Book Butcher: Smart Board ResourcesAnonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03174328948552714376noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-363958880966439535.post-63719973668752263862011-04-25T08:56:02.112-05:002011-04-25T08:56:02.112-05:00Nice! I will for sure pass this along to teachers....Nice! I will for sure pass this along to teachers. My goodness...I LOVE the smart board. Not a teacher, but I was doing a workshop and the teacher used it to quickly look up Pete Seeger and Abiyoyo and show him performing it...Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-363958880966439535.post-13075203297432811402011-04-19T18:18:05.969-05:002011-04-19T18:18:05.969-05:00Last school year was the first time I'd worked...Last school year was the first time I'd worked with a smart board. While I was finishing library school, I was working as a paraeducator in between five different first grade classrooms. One of them was the first to pilot a smart board at that level. The kids were amazingly patient with me when I led activities using the board. It was challenging and a lot of fun. This fall, when I student taught for library school, it was then easier to learn how to make tools using SMART NOTEBOOK and the Promethean equivalent at my schools.<br /><br />I've used interactive whiteboards to teach about website evaluation (I love annotating on top of websites). I've also used them to have kids teach each other how to search for information.<br /><br />I've seen some Promethean charts that do a quiz show review for book care and seen things that are good for putting books in order, etc.<br /><br />It'd be pretty great to run Teachingbooks.net on a smart board as well.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com