Technology integration not only increases exposure to using technology, it also increases the opportunity to create / record digitally and to allow for more collaboration on projects with peers and other external students. It allows for up-to-date independent research and will support students with an ever increasingly technologically immersed future.
A great place to start
50 exciting ideas for using technology in Geography - includes a Thailand tsunami lesson.
http://juicygeography.co.uk/
http://sitescontent.google.com/google-earth-for-educators/classroom-resources
http://shambles.net/pages/learning/GeogP/
http://sharegeography.co.uk/
http://www.umapper.com/
http://stats.oecd.org/oecdfactbook/
http://kids.nationalgeographic.com/kids/places
http://www.geogreeting.com/main.html
http://www.ushahidi.com/
http://www.esri.com/
http://www.geosense.net/
http://www.gapminder.org/world/
http://greenfieldgeography.wikispaces.com/Homepage
http://www.digitalgeography.co.uk/archives/category/google-earth/
GOOGLE EARTH IN THE CLASSROOM
(see also geography)
http://www.google.com/educators/activities.html
http://sitescontent.google.com/google-earth-for-educators/classroom-resources
Classroom Resources
Google Earth can help you bring a world of information alive for your students. It can be used with all grade levels, and the possibilities are endless with your imagination! Students can use Google Earth to explore topics like the progress of human civilization, the growth of cities, the impact of civilization on the natural environment, and the impact of natural disasters like Hurricane Katrina. Teachers can use Google Earth demos to get their students excited about geography beyond the static map, or use different Google Earth layers to study transportation, demographics, economics, and in specific local or exotic contexts.Below is a list of several other ways students and teachers can use Google Earth.
Students can use Google Earth to:
- Explore the animal kingdom and endangered species with the National Geographic layer and other content. Easy
- Create annotated place markers indicating location of school and points of interest in their town such as the local fire and police stations, the city library, local parks, and museums. Easy
- Study climate change and the effects of global warming.Average
- Create tours of their school or community. Average
- Track earthquakes in real-timeAdvanced
- Set the scene for geography, history, literature, astronomy and other lessons.Easy
- Involve students in pro-active engagement in a wide-range of Google Outreach projects.Easy
- Adapt traditionally abstract lessons to the “real-world” by having students interact with virtual “real-time” data such as weather, earthquakes, elephants migrations, etc.Average
**Features for My Class**
Learn how different Google Earth features can be used in an educational setting
Projects for My Subject
Discover ways Google Earth can be used for your specific subject, including lesson plans!
Lesson Plan Library
Check out lesson plans created by teachers for teachers, and submit your own.
Throughout the sections above lesson plans are labeled according to their difficulty level. Learn more about this site's leveling rubric for Google Earth lesson plans.
Google Earth Education Community
Google Earth Livebinder
This is a fantastic resource from Steven Anderson. It includes tutorials, lesson ideas and just about everything else.
Google Earth 101
This is an interactive "self-paced" wiki site that has videos and other resources to help you become a google earth expert. This site was developed by Quentin DSouza.
Google Earth Primer - from: Google Earth Education Community
Everything to get you started with Google Earth in one place. A great site with resources and screenshots.
Making Enhanced Placemarks-Video Tutorial
Google Earth lessons-From gelessons.com
26 Ways to Use Google Earth in the Classroom
Some great ideas here. Aimed at MS/HS but some ideas that are suitable or easily adaptable to ES
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