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    Monday by the Numbers

    March 23, 2009

    Number CranesTop 100 Twitter Tools – I’ll be honest. There is a lot of Twitter abuse going on out there. One of the amazing things about Twitter is its ability to customize your experience. There are new tools being built all the time, but few of them are useful for anything other than gaining more followers. Fortunately, The Web Pitch has created a comprehensive list of the Top 100 Twitter Tools, with categories including Information Gathering, Organization & Productivity, and Business & Finance.

    10 Job Listing Sites With Unique Opportunities – Times are uncertain. Therefore, it’s always good to be aware of ways you can access social resources and know how to use them if the economy continues down this slippery slope. Lifehack has a list of 10 job sites that will help you score a job if the need arises. Luckily, Craigslist isn’t on the list.

    15 Simple Changes That Will Quickly Improve Your Health – It’s time to start seriously thinking about your health. You might already have it on your list, but it should really be at the top. There are simple ways you can start thinking more healthily right away. Dumb Little Man presents this list of changes to your eating and drinking regimens, as well as easy ways to exercise in a pinch.

    Teach Creative Writing With These 5 Steps – Creativity is a difficult thing to teach. It is really more about nurturing creativity than instructing it, IMHO. Bloggeron brings us these five steps to help you teach things such as how to generate characters and share ideas. Creative writing can be a lot of fun for students who might be bored by the same old worksheets. -JEREMY S. GRIFFIN

    Photo credit: Wetsun on Flickr

    Monday by the Numbers

    March 9, 2009

    Numbers7 Steps to Emotional Maturity – It’s easy to get wrapped up in your emotions sometimes, and that can lead to ineffective teaching. For students, getting wrapped up in their emotions can be a hindrance to progress. This list shows steps toward gaining emotional maturity, which doesn’t necessarily mean giving up your emotions. It just means taking the time to understand your feelings.

    Top 10 Language Learning Blogs – Learning a new language doesn’t have to be difficult. Especially when you have the entire Internet at your fingertips. You might not even have to do too much research to find the right language to learn with these 10 language learning blogs from The Linguist. For all you foreign language teachers out there, this could be a great list for resources, too.

    101 Interesting Human Body and Health Facts – Normally, I am wary of the word “interesting,” mainly because it is rather subjective, and also because it is one of those adjectives that doesn’t do much for its subject. However, this list from List Lovers encompasses a long list of uncommon medical facts, many of which are quite useful. For instance, did you know that one uses 200 muscles to take a single step?

    Top 100 Novels of All Time – This list, compiled from other top 100 novels lists, including those on The Radcliffe List and Time, is a serious list for a serious reader. I don’t know how many of them I’ve actually read cover to cover, but many of them I read while I was in school. Hopefully, your students can do the same. I can’t say I totally agree with this list, as there’s no Fahrenheit 451 to be found. -JEREMY S. GRIFFIN

    Photo credit: solar ikon on Flickr.

    Health secrets the parachute companies DON’T want you to know about

    November 4, 2008

    Instructor explaining the operation of a parachute to student pilots, Meacham field, Fort Worth, Tex. (LOC) by The Library of Congress.

    Some people discourage you, telling you not to “reinvent the wheel.” Other people will give you too much encouragement, saying “build a better mousetrap and the world will beat a path to your door.” Do not listen to either of these people. Both are trying to distract you with nonsensical feedback while they secretly steal your inventions and race to the patent office. While its clear that I have an obvious mistrust for others concerning my inventions (potato chip clip AND TV remote combined), don’t let my negativity infect your science classroom.

    Originally published few years back, this article by the BMJ (formerly the British Medical Journal) takes a rigorous look at one invention that is assumed to work just fine the way it exists: the parachute. Apparently, we’ve assumed parachutes to be a successful way of preventing death by “gravitational challenge” based purely on anecdotal evidence — there hasn’t been a single study that included controlled, randomized, double-blind parachute placebo groups. Without such a study, can we really know for sure that skydivers wouldn’t fare as well with a placebo instead of a parachute?

    Their intent was to satirize criticisms about health interventions based off observational data by advocates who prefer evidence based findings. You, however, can use it with your students to spark an interest in challenging assumptions and looking at things from a different angle. While the article is tongue-in-cheek, it works on a fundamental level in that it is still an interesting, solid example for students trying to write a scientific research paper to see just how a scientific research paper gets written. Abstract, objective, data sources, citations—they are all in there. -NICK YINGLING

    Parachute use to prevent death and major trauma related to gravitational challenge: systematic review of randomised controlled trials via BMJ

    Related Stuff:

    Instructifeature: Five Tips to Improve Students’ Information Evaluation

    Photo credit: Library of Congress

    Food for thought about food

    October 21, 2008

    I just ate the sticker off my granny smith apple.  Well, to be more precise, I just ate about 3/4 of the sticker, and when I was taking the next bite, I saw the remaining bit.  So I didn’t eat the whole sticker.  But now I am left wondering which is more toxic — the pesticides no doubt used to make sure this delicious apple grew to be ginormous, or the sticker and its adhesive?  I mean, they have to consider that one in 10 dummies will end up eating the sticker, right?

    Michael Pollan wrote a tremendous pieces for the NYT Magazine this weekend: An Open Letter to Our Next Farmer-in-Chief.  In it, he argues that the American food system is deeply broken, and with the price of oil rising, in need of reform. Soon.

    It must be recognized that the current food system — characterized by monocultures of corn and soy in the field and cheap calories of fat, sugar and feedlot meat on the table — is not simply the product of the free market. Rather, it is the product of a specific set of government policies that sponsored a shift from solar (and human) energy on the farm to fossil-fuel energy.

    The piece lays out an agenda that includes not just reform of the government’s approach to agriculture (which should delight free-marketeers), but a prescription for better health (cutting back on plentiful corn and soy could mean limitations on cheap non-food derivatives like high fructose corn syrup) and some re-tooling of the educational system as well (taking a long hard look at agricultural/industrial education and how we promote certain careers).  This is the kind of thoughtful editorial that could spark some real discussion in a classroom — you could use it as-is for high-schoolers or adapt it for middle-schoolers. -ROSS WHITE

    An Open Letter to Our Next Farmer-in-Chief

    Related Stuff:

    Relive the Carnage of American Conflict…With Food

    Force Feed Food Force to Your Students

    Test Your Vocabulary and Feed the Hungry with FreeRice

    Save Money and Your Taste Buds – Bring Your Own Lunch

    Photo credit: Stevie Rocco on flickr

    Tuesday by the numbers

    September 16, 2008

    lotto.jpgIf you were jonesing for a list of lists to better your edification skills yesterday, I apologize. Nonetheless, Instructify is happy to present Tuesday by the Numbers, the day-late version of its sister column, Monday by the Numbers.

    100 Free Online Ivy League Courses You Should Take Just for Fun – I know it says “for fun,” but come on, the real reason to take any class is to get some sort of betterment or education, right? Whatever your motive, Eduk8 delivers this great list of online course offerings from places like Johns Hopkins and MIT. The courses themselves range in subject from Child Development and Psychology to Foreign Culture, and the list is chock full of such unique offerings as The Anthropology of Computing and Hip Hop.

    100 Awesome, Free Web Tools for Elementary Teachers – It can be tough sometimes to filter out the things on the web that are truly valuable, especially when it comes to things that are useful in teaching children. Here’s a list from SmartTeaching.org that will help you be a better researcher and educator to the youngins. With 100 here, you’ll find something you didn’t know for sure.

    101 Ideas for a Great Start – Though the school year has technically already begun, it isn’t too late to start things out right by setting yourself and your students up for success. Iowa State offers these tips in establishing some great methods for students and teachers to start things off on the right foot. The list is set up in categories such as ‘creating a welcoming atmosphere’ and ‘encourage active learning.’

    7 tips to top sleep, 3 tips for staying awake – Though it should just be as easy as ‘get to bed earlier, wake up later,’ sleeping is not always as easy a task as it seems to accomplish. The University Blog gives us these tips to help you zonk out at night, and pep up during the day. Stop yawning and read these now. -JEREMY S. GRIFFIN

    Photo credit:  zen on flickr

    Learning exercise: Promote healthy living this school year

    August 22, 2008

    In recent years, a lot of schools have told their physical education programs to hit the showers. Greater emphasis on testing, budget cuts, and so on. But as school wallets get lighter, the children are getting heavier due to lack of exercise.

    If you’re concerned about your students’ health, you can do something about it by extolling the virtues of healthy exercise. Ask Little Johnny how his little league team did over the summer. Do you have any joggers or climbers in your midst? Take an interest, and maybe they’ll get more active.

    Of course, the best way to generate excitement about exercise is to let students see you do it yourself. If you’re a runner, show up early and run at the track before class starts. Maybe volunteer as a coach.

    Personally, I’m a walker. I’m not going to pretend it’s a huge workout, but almost any activity is better exercise than sitting. If you live close enough, consider walking to school. If you live in a small community, or you have errands within walking distance, try taking a walk down your town’s main street. You’ll be visibly modeling good behavior, and parents will like the fact you’re out and about within the community. You can check out Walk Score to help gauge how walkable your area is, as well as to look for ideas for neat business or attractions you can find within walking distance.

    Teaching kids healthy habits should be a goal of every school. Even if yours doesn’t have a dedicated health or P.E program, you can still teach them a lot about healthful living. -BILL FERRIS

    Walk Score

    Obesity Up, Phys Ed Down

    Photo credit: Thomas Hawk on flickr

    Tuesday by the Numbers

    August 5, 2008

    lockers-numbers.jpgFive Rules for Better PowerPoint Presentations -Michael Hyatt’s blog, Working Smart, has these 5 great tips to spice up your next PowerPoint. The article is written from a business perspective, but that doesn’t mean these tips won’t help you when teaching the Civil War or Beowulf. One of the more important tidbits of advice is #4: Less is More. Amen, Mr. Hyatt.

    40 Places for College Students to Find Free Unabridged Books Online -Your students, whether they are going to college or not, can surely benefit from more reading. In a digital age, why waste all the paper it takes to reprint a book when they are often archived online. These resources are, of course, free and include a list of places you can download audio versions of your favorite classics. Thanks to Education-Portal.com

    Eleven Worst Foods Americans Eat Daily – It might be high time to get back on a health kick for your author, and what better place to start than identifying and limiting or eliminating certain foods from my diet. You can get on the train with me, and start the school year off right. HealthAssist.net presents this list of 11 kinds of food you should think twice before eating. Unfortunately for you, me and the good people at Krispy Kreme, doughnuts lead the list. Bummer, Bear Claw.

    (25) Funny Metaphors Used in High School Essays -Because we aren’t without a sense of humor around here, (hopefully, you have one, too) so here are Help.com‘s 25 examples of ridiculous metaphors used by high school students in various essays. Please note: some of these might be considered similes.  Among my favorite: From the attic came an unearthly howl. The whole scene had an eerie, surreal quality, like when you’re on vacation in another city and Jeopardy comes on at 7:00 p.m. instead of 7:30 and He was as lame as a duck. Not the metaphorical lame duck, either, but a real duck that was actually lame, maybe from stepping on a land mine or something. – JEREMY S. GRIFFIN

    Monday by the Numbers

    May 19, 2008

    Numberz12 Superfoods You Need to be Eating – If there’s anyone who loves to eat, it’s me. Unfortunately, I don’t always pay too much attention to what I am putting in my body. Lucky for me, and everyone else out there who trying to get beach ready, StartCooking.com offers this list of some of the foods you might already be eating, and some that you should start. Thankfully on the list: peanut butter. Nom.

    60 Selected Best Famous Quotes“You miss 100 percent of the shots you never take.”—Wayne Gretzky. For this and other gems of wisdom, point your browser over to Litemind to discover some highly thought provoking quotes just in time for dinner party season. Or, I guess you can dole some out in your classroom to help you students realize how well-read you are. I’m thinking this is where I’ll go when I need something to open my first novel.

    100 Must-Read Books: The Essential Man’s Library – I never thought I would include a blog called The Art of Manliness on a education blog, but here I am. This list isn’t exclusively for men, of course, but it does offer some great reads for those of us who don’t fancy Little Women. Maybe this list can inspire some of your guy students to want to read this summer. Not surprisingly included on the list, A Catcher in the Rye.

    15 Ways to Teach Kids About Money – Most of us are pinching pennies right now, but that doesn’t mean our youngsters know what the words “recession,” “inflation,” or “insufficient funds” mean. Right now might be the best time to teach them though, according to this list from Family Education:

    Help children learn the differences between needs, wants, and wishes. This will prepare them for making good spending decisions in the future.

    Those are words we can probably all benefit from. – JEREMY S. GRIFFIN

    Monday by the Numbers

    May 5, 2008

    Get Smarter: 12 Hacks That Will Amp Up Your Brainpower
    Exercise your mind with these 12 strategies from Wired designed to max out your brainpower. Tips include exercising wisely, putting the right kinds of information in your brain, and even finding out the optimum dosages of caffeine.

    40 Ways to Spice Up Your Spelling Words
    Who doesn’t love memorizing spelling words? Your students, probably. Plenty of adults have trouble with spelling, meaning it’s probably even tougher for kids. Help them out by making your spelling words more interesting with these ideas.

    50 Handy Tricks
    File this under “Grab Bag.” Instructables presents this list of 50 Handy Tricks encompassing nothing in particular. You’ll learn how to do everything from taking blink-free photos to making a bow-and-arrow out of skis. Not necessarily teaching-related, but a creative soul like you can certainly figure out a way to build a lesson plan around reupholstering your couch with duct tape, can’t you?

    10 virtually instant ways to improve your life
    Want to add some quality to your quality of life? The folks at Stepcase Lifehack have some ideas, most of which can be summarized by the word, “relax.” Avoiding drama, not being a perfectionist, and not taking things personally will all help you make a fitter, happier and more productive life for yourself. -BILL FERRIS

    Photo credit: Kaptain Kobold on flickr

    Monday by the Numbers

    March 24, 2008

    More Numbers!8 Firefox Extensions Towards Safer Browsing – Personally, I HATE pop-up ads, (and most banner ads) so I do whatever I can to avoid them. Firefox already does a nice job of keeping pop-ups from occurring, but there is a lot of things that slip by Firefox by itself. Luckily, ts/sci Security (a nice, clean, ad-free blog) presents this list of some helpful add-ons that can help give you some peace-of-mind when it comes to web browsing.

    30 Tips to Rejuvenate Your CreativityLifehack does it again with this list of 30 ways to chop your creative block right in twain. As it turns out “start somewhere” isn’t really as hard as you might think. Also one of my favorites, “Don’t judge your ideas until you have plenty to judge.”

    10 Extraordinarily Different Uses for Potatoes – Sorry folks, those delicious tubers aren’t just for mashing and au gratin-ing anymore. Gomestic offers this list of some unorthodox ways of using potatoes other than just eating them. I don’t know if any of the tips could be qualified as being “extraordinarily different” per-se, but they sure are neat. Surprisingly not on the list: make a battery.

    100 Most Often Mispronounced Words and Phrases in English – I’m expecially critical when it comes to people misusing grammar. Whether I’m enjoying an expresso or just reading in the libary, there is always an abundance of people mispronouncing words, mispellling them, excetera. Here’s a list from YourDictionary.com of words people all-too-often mispronounce. I’d love to see a list of phrases people misuse in context, but that would be a whole nother post.

    When Wikipedia Won’t Cut It: 25 Online Sources for Reliable, Researched Facts – I blogged about some other alternative-to-Wikipedia resources not too long ago, but here are some more. Students are going to use the internet to do their research, so they might as well have an abundance of reliable places to find information, right? Check out this list of 25 from CollegeDegree.com. -JEREMY S. GRIFFIN

    (photo credit: jaycoxfilm on Flickr.)

    Crack The BioDaVersity Code

    March 14, 2008

    BioDaVersity CodeI never read The DaVinci Code or saw the movie version, but I have a pretty good indication of what it’s all about. If you are a fan of either, then you’ll probably enjoy this Flash cartoon parody that employs talking animals in the roles of their human counterparts.

    The BioDaVersity Code is a fun, educational cartoon presented by Harvard Medical School’s Center for Health and Global Environment. It uses the structure and basic storyline of The DaVinci Code to explore and explain the effects of the human impact on “The Web of Life.” The animation is wonderful, and the information is presented in such a way that allows any age of student to grasp it, all the while being thoroughly entertained. The film feels unfinished, though, as there is no plot resolution, only a call to viewers to take action into their own hands.

    This is easily done with the click on a button titled “Learn More”– taking users to a Flash activity which lets them explore what may be done to alter human impact on the “web of life.” The cartoon itself was produced by Free Range Studios, who also have created such fun and educational films as The Meatrix, and Grocery Store Wars. Those and others can be found here. -JEREMY S. GRIFFIN

    The BioDaVersity Code 

    Force Feed Food Force to Your Students

    March 12, 2008

    From the comfort of our living rooms, we can build make-believe cities, play lead guitar in a rock and roll band, and dance like John Travolta in Saturday Night Fever. As computer games continue to dominate our students’ leisure time, educators are asking how to incorporate this popular technology in the classroom.

    As educators, one hurdle we face is how to keep students’ attention while teaching important lessons. Now, thanks to the folks at the United Nations World Food Programme, we have an opportunity to enlighten students to the problems and concerns of world hunger by integrating the fun of computer games into a learning environment.

    Food Force is a downloadable computer action game aimed at 8-13 year olds. The game consists of six missions that allow students to see and make a situational assessment of a hunger crisis in a fictional country. Each subsequent mission builds on skills learned and allows students to make valuable decisions about food distribution and logistics. And teachers, don’t miss the links page where you can find numerous sites providing research and background on the global hunger crisis.

    Given the persistent problem of world hunger, Food Force is an entertaining way to teach younger students of this treatable epidemic. With this exciting and inventive site, we have the chance to allow students to turn virtual problems into real solutions that can alter our reality for the better. —DAVID BARGER

    Food Force

    Related Stuff:
    Test Your Vocabulary and Feed the Hungry with FreeRice

    It’s Whats Inside That Counts – BBC Science Interactive Body

    March 5, 2008

    BodyBBC presents the Science Interactive Body – a great learning device for students studying the human body and its systems. Not quite as creepy as the Bodies exhibit, this game tests users in correctly identifying and placing the pieces of the human body in the right places. Choose from Organs, Muscles, Skeleton or Nervous System, and then pick your favorite gender. A wire frame dummy acts as your Frankenstein’s monster as you rotate and drag and drop organs, tissues, and bones into their respective places. The game is a stickler for accuracy, though, and if your rotation or placement is slightly off, it won’t let you proceed until you get it right.

    There are a slew of facts to accompany each organ or system, as well as hints to guide your placement. If your students are squeamish about seeing or interacting with actual guts, or if your school is too cheap to shell out for some real cadavers, then check out this interactive game to keep you informed. -JEREMY S. GRIFFIN

    BBC Science – Interactive Body

    Monday by the Numbers

    January 7, 2008

    Number8Top Ten Obscure Google Search TricksLifehacker provides us with this list of 10 ways you didn’t know you could use Google just in time for the new year (Has it been 2008 for a week ALREADY?). Included in this list are useful, and definitely obscure tips like “Get the local time anywhere” and “ID people, objects and foreign language words and phrases with image search.”

    10 Ways to Make Your iPod a Better Learning Gadget – If you haven’t already broken it, use that new iPod you got from Santa for something other than listening to Kanye 24/7. Openculture presents this list to help you remember that gadgets can be used for something other than just a distraction or entertainment. My favorites on the list: “Create eBooks,” and “Put Wikipedia on your iPod.”

    Cool Ways to Use Your Digital Camera or Camera Phone – For those of use who didn’t find an iPod under the tree this year, but a digital camera instead, 1 Heck of a Guy brings us this list of ways to use your new point n’ shoot to your advantage. Think outside the frame and use your 7.1 megapixels for something useful like creating an electronic whiteboard or take pictures of landmarks to help you get where you’re going. Or better yet, get back to where you’ve been (i.e. where you parked).

    15 Ways to Restart the Exercise Habit (And How to Keep It)Lifehack unfailingly brings us a list to help us improve our lives, and this time, they are promoting something most of us can benefit from in order to extend the life we are trying so diligently to make more productive. This list provides tips to help you get your big butt in the gym, and how to keep it there. So if you’re as unsatisfied with the ways the holidays have treated your midsection as I am, then you’ll surely jump on this list with gusto. – JEREMY S. GRIFFIN

    (photo by Triotex )

    Monday by the Numbers (Tuesday Edition)

    December 11, 2007

    NumbersBetter late than never, right folks? Sorry for the late post, but I had too much eggnog this weekend… Anywho, onward to the numbers!

    2000 Uses for WD-40 – I know it isn’t necessarily a teaching tool, but chances are likely that you can find something useful here. This list goes from the very useful (Removes water spots from mirrors, Cleans silver jewelry) to the completely banal and borderline absurd (Removes rollerblade marks from kitchen floor [?]). I’m sure you’ll find some new way to use WD-40 here, even though 1000 of the uses include “Lubricate.”

    25 Ways to Fit in 10 Minutes of Exercise - RevolutionHealth brings us this list right in time for planning those New Year’s resolutions. We are all undeniably busy, but who can get anything done if they don’t feel good in the first place? Follow the ideas on this list and you will no longer be able to use the excuse “I don’t have the time” when it comes to exercising.

    The Eight Irresistible Principles of Fun – This simple flash film reinforces a great idea, and one that we may or may not take for granted. Fun can mean much more than just watching a sitcom on TV, in fact, it’s really much more than that. This list of eight mantras to help boost your fun-level includes things like “Get Focused – Start Being Intensely Selfish”. Visit the site, click on a number, and enjoy.

    11 Websites Every Student Should Know – Thanks to TechDo.com, students have this comprehensive list of the first places to turn when it comes to looking for help on the web. There are some real gems here, and Wikipedia doesn’t even look anywhere near the finish line. Some notables: Math.com, NovelGuide.com, and one our favorites- HowStuffWorks.

    -JEREMY S. GRIFFIN

    (photo credit: L. Marie)