Technology in our Lives

Technology in our lives STICKERI made this a few days ago for a friend. She teaches 2nd grade, and need a way to teach an AZ science standard (standard 3 concept 2) about technology in society. This seemed like a good way to start the unit. Each idea on the page is something the students are probably already familiar with. Kids match the picture with the benefit/use of that technology.

Click here for the free printable PDF: Technology in Our Lives

Free DVD for Teachers

The following was submitted by a fellow teacher: “Izzit.org is a website that gives teachers a free DVD once a year.  You do have to log in and set up a free account.  But free is free!”

This piqued my interest (I’m all about free stuff!), so I did some research.They have a free membership and a paid membership. Here’s what you get in the free membership (as quoted from their website):

 

  • A FREE video each year: Receive a FREE video, complete with Table of Contents, Teacher’s Guide, Discussion Questions, Quizzes, and more, each year for as long as you teach! Just provide feedback after using the video in your classroom.
  •  Educational Standards Alignment: See how each video meets your state standards, or search for which of our videos meet a specific standard. Now includes Common Core Standards.
  •  Current Events: Two daily lessons with news articles and stimulating discussion questions.
  •  Student Zone: Allows your students to access Current Events, games, and other resources.

 

I couldn’t find details about exactly what free DVD you get every year, but it’s worth investigating!  There are always resources seeking your money and there are plenty of awesome teacher resources out there for sale. But if you’re like me and don’t have the luxury of extra funds, this might be a cool option. Here’s a link to the FAQ if you want more information.

Have something you’d like to share on Squarehead Teachers! Let me know!

10 Ways to Keep Kids Safe Online

Internet SafetyI recently read the following article on Nanny Websites and thought I’d share it:

“When used in a responsible and safe manner, the Internet can be one of the most powerful research and educational tools at a child’s disposal. It can expose him to a wealth of knowledge that would otherwise be difficult to obtain, help him experience other cultures and ways of life and encourage him to learn about the world around him. When used irresponsibly by children that have not been adequately taught about the potential dangers, however, the Internet can also be one of the most powerful tools at a predator’s disposal. These ten tips can help you keep your kids safe without depriving them of the valuable knowledge available online.

  • Take an Active Role in Monitoring – While you’ll want to provide your child with a certain measure of trust and freedom, it’s also important that you maintain an open policy about Internet and social media use. Make sure that you’re keeping tabs on what he’s doing online, and that you’re doing it in an open, honest manner that doesn’t seem like covert spying to your child.
  • Be Honest About Use of Monitoring Software – Monitoring software can be a very effective method of keeping up with what your kids are doing online, but it can also send a very clear message about your lack of trust if it’s used on the sly. Let your children know that there is monitoring software installed, rather than accosting them with evidence of misbehavior out of the blue.
  • Use Content Filtering Features – Web browsers, anti-virus software and search engines all have some level of filtering capability built in to them, so it’s wise to take advantage of those features to block questionable or mature content. Kids can inadvertently stumble over nudity, pornography or violent content without actively seeking it out, and these features make that a bit less likely.
  • Keep Your Computer Located in High-Traffic Areas – When your child has her own computer, she’s free to do her homework or study without tying up the family computer. She’s also able to access questionable content with some degree of privacy. Keeping your computer in a high-traffic area allows you to see what she’s looking at during her browsing sessions.
  • Limit Social Networking Use – Social networking sites are among the most popular on the Internet, but they’re not always a safe place for kids. Make sure that security settings on your child’s account are locked down, that he understands not to accept friend requests from strangers and that his social networking use is kept to a minimum.
  • “Friend” Your Child – While there are filtering options and lists that will allow a determined child to post and share questionable content without you seeing it, not all kids are that tech savvy. Insisting that your child send you a friend request as a caveat of social networking use can be a major deterrent from unsafe and risky behavior online.
  • Talk About Illegal Downloads – Kids don’t always understand the harsh penalties that can come along with copyright infringement and illegal downloading, which is why it’s important for parents and kids to have conversations about the repercussions of breaking the law, even if the Internet seems like a largely anonymous space.
  • Emphasize Values, Rather Than Tech-Savvy Tips – Kids will almost always have technical knowledge that outstrips that of their parents, which is why it’s important to emphasize a set of values over technical methods of staying safe. Talk about what is and is not okay to post online, how to handle scary situations and how to comport themselves rather than how to work the latest safety feature.
  • Keep Tabs on Gaming Devices – Most parents know that their kids’ cell phones and computers are sources of constant connectivity, but may not realize that their gaming consoles also connect to the Internet and put kids at risk of encountering predators. Make sure your little gamer knows never to share personal information with people he plays games with, and that you understand just how much outrageous “trash talk” is normal in the gaming community.
  • Maintain an Open Dialogue About Online Safety – It’s not enough to have one conversation about online safety and to leave it at that. Instead of having a single conversation about safety, establish an ongoing dialogue about what he sees online, what’s okay and what’s not okay.”

Major WordPress Ah-Ha Moment: Menus

I’m fairly new to WordPress, so I’ve been spending some serious tome learning about the website building capabilities of WordPress. So far, I’ve been able to figure out most of the things that were new to me. But I couldn’t quite nail down everything about menus (don’t judge me)… until I watched this video that pretty much explains it all. Menus are those nifty little drop down menus at the top of my blog (I know, I know, the word MENU should have been obvious) that can link to specific categories, posts, URLs, etc. Man, I wish I had found this video months ago!

Squarehead Teachers is Now On Pinterest!

It’s about time I set up Squarehead Teachers on Pinterest! Need a more visual way to browse the free stuff on Squarehead Teachers? Join the pinning fun and follow me on Pinterest!

Announcing Squarehead Teachers Ad Swap

I’m starting a new ad swapping program. Swapping ads with me means that we all win – traffic to your site via traffic to (and from) mine. I’m starting small meaning we’ll swap ads for a few months or so and see where things go. If you’re interested, click here.

Also, I’ve been trying to research Passionfruit Ads for blog advertising. Any thoughts?

Installing This Blog Button Almost Killed Me!

Wow. Glad that’s over. I’ve been trying to install my blog button with the grab box (which you should grab from my side bar, by the way). I’ve spent about 2 hours designing the button on Photoshop, researching tutorials, trying tutorials (and having them all FAIL), researching another one… you get the picture. Well, I finally got it! Hooray! I know there are different codes out there you can use, but here’s the WordPress tutorial I used. Hope this helps someone out there! Good luck!

How To Download Awesome Fonts… For Free!

Technology can be intimidating sometimes. Most of the time, all you need to figure it out is for someone to give you simple, step by step directions. One of my teacher friends requested that I write up how to get free fonts for your computer, so I thought I’d share it with you. There are lots of places/ways to get free fonts to download, but here’s one way.

Lil’ Squarehead’s way:

  1. Make a temporary folder on your desktop called “fonts”. You can delete is when you’re done with this project.
  2. Go to www.dafont.com
  3. Browse fonts and find one you like (or 2000 that you like). There are categories at the top that sort the different styles of fonts. I don’t know if the ones labeled “demo” work as well, I haven’t gotten all the kinks worked out with this yet…
  4. Once you’ve found the font you like, click the red “download” button to the right of the font you’ve chosen.
  5. Another window will probably pop up, asking you where you’d like your computer to save the font file. Choose your temporary font file on your desktop.
  6. Once it’s saved, it will be in a compressed zip folder. You’ll need to unzip it before you can install it
    1. Right click the file, click “extract all”
    2. Another window will pop up asking where you want to save it. Don’t change anything. Just click ok.
    3. This will create a duplicate file, but the new one will be unzipped so you can access the stuff inside.
    4. Delete the old compressed file (the one with the zipper on it).
  7. Now you have the new font downloaded in an unzipped, regular folder. Open the folder and you’ll see between 1-3 files. The one you want is a “Open True Type Font” file or a “True Type Font” file. Right click on this and click “install”. (Depending on your computer user profile settings, you might need to enter an administrator password).
  8. Now your file is installed in the computer in the place where all the fonts are stored (more technical than I’m gonna worry about).
  9. Once you’ve installed all the fonts you want, delete the files (remember they’re on the computer’s font list) and the temporary fonts folder on your desktop.
  10. Smile and enjoy your fonts!