I just bought a new computer with Adobe Premiere Elements hopping to edit video clips from DVD s and put them on my PowerPoint presentations. I am having problems with the quality of Windows Media Player clips. They are extremely blurry. If anyone is doing the same I could sure use some pointers on getting started.
We're in the final fine-tuning stages of our development and are looking for teachers and parent leaders to please give us a try and share feedback.
Some ways teachers and parents are using VolunteerSpot: parent-teacher conference scheduling, cafeteria helper scheduling (6 people a day over two shifts), library and literacy assistants, class parties & field trips, table-time helpers, teacher workroom assistants, baseball and football concessions stands, Sports Day, Carnival and book fair volunteers, band competitions and more...
We have the opportunity to get LCD projectors for our classroom. Could you please share some ideas on how it might be used daily in a primary classroom. Thank you!!
Brainpop United Streaming Online books USA Today for headlines Local TV for weather Teacher Tube for lessons Water Cycle Internet4Classrooms.com (games and skills for all grades) Writing stories instead of the overhead and transparencies and the list goes on...
Good luck!
On 3/28/09, Cindy Dunlap wrote: > We have the opportunity to get LCD projectors for our > classroom. Could you please share some ideas on how it > might be used daily in a primary classroom. > Thank you!!
I am especially looking for programs that will not simply be review, but actually help guide students as they learn new skills. They need the most help in reading and math, but good, fun educational games in any subject would help, even art!!
If you have just ONE good link to share, please pass it along...they will be thankful! :-)
Even better, try to get software in the Reader Rabbit series. These are excellent at providing positive feedback in reading and math skills, entertaining, award-winning, and calibrate difficulty level using student responses. Ask parents through your PTA for any Reader Rabbit CDs their kids may have outgrown. I donated several titles to teachers at our school a few years ago. If your school serves a mostly underprivileged group of students, don't hesitate to contact the PTA at a neighboring school serving a higher income group of students.