Sue R.

, Female

United States

Profile Information:

School / Work Affiliation
K-2 Multiage Classroom Lead teacher, former Information Media Teacher K-8
Blog
http://bookwyrmish.edublogs.org/
Twitter / Plurk / Other Account
bookwyrmish
About Me
I wear quite a few hats, including accidental techie (I really identified with Jared, from the "Pretender" series). I'm fond of dragons, calligraphy, sci-fi, lobster, and home-made sushi when my family and I vacation in Maine, our favorite place to be.

Comment Wall:

  • Lynne Wolters

    Sue thank you for leaving your comment on my page. I love your suggestion of offering suggestions about each of us keeps up with all the information that comes our way. I looked at your blog and appreciate the quality of the information you include in each of your posts. I have added your blog to my newsreader so I won't miss any of this richness.
    "L"
  • Hans Feldmeier

    Yes I will. Maybe during the following week. I´ll try to join you. Cheers
  • Kelly Christopherson

    Hi Sue,
    Sorry about the bubbletrouble! I found it to be a bit addicting especially when my 13 year old is wiping me out! I like the article about "blogging" you did. It looks like a great exercise and would really help students to understand how things work. Also, it would demonstrate to them the need to civil to others when they get on the web as they would be able to see how comments affect other people. Good luck with the BT!
  • tcoffey

    Sue,
    I checked out your blog and was intrigued by the paper blogging entries and pictures. I want to know more!! How did you start it and promote it? I'd love to borrow the idea (with credit to you, of course)!
    Tina
  • tcoffey

    Sue...yes please send me a copy of what you write up! I want to hear more about your project! :) Thanks!
  • Sue R.

    OK, I've put up the paper blogging lesson plan on classroom 2dot0 and linked to it from the "success stories" discussion here at this site. Here's a direct link: http://www.classroom20.net/Blogging+Lesson+Plans
  • Scott Beiter

    Thanks for the comment! I'm glad to hear there is some great stuff going on between Universities and k-12 schools. I just wish it was more universal. I was only stating the general feeling that I get about a perceived divide.
  • Tina Bulleigh

    Thanks for the feedback you offered on my article. I love brainstorming this way. Thanks again!
  • Angeles Berman

    Congratulations on your excellent work
    Thanks for sharing
  • Linda

    Your blog is amazing. I have added it to my favorites to read regularly. Happy vacationing and keep sharing your good ideas.
    Linda
  • Scott Walker

    Sue, thanks for the add. It gave me a chance to check out your blog. I gave it a quick gander and enjoyed what I saw, especially the powerpoint\blog article! Keep up the great work. Oh and let's get this guide rolling. Something like this could have a huge impact not only on the teachers wanting to use it, but on the school boards that are fearing the transition.
  • Nancy Bosch

    Sue, we have tons of stuff going besides the blogging. We are working on our fifth student wiki and using Moodle for online book discussions, Let me know if you would like links to all our stuff. N
  • Alyshia Olsen

    Hi Sue,

    I'm sending out messages to everyone I know right now, and this classroom20 network is no exception. (I've also sent this out on other Ning networks you may be a part of.) My name is Alyshia Olsen; I am a 20 year old college student from Olin College of Engineering. I am a part of a group of 6 Olin College students (we're in Needham, MA, and engineering students) who has taken a year off to work on an education related project. Since you are in the 'connecting content and technology' group, I thought you might be interested! Our project is called AlightLearning, and this is our "short" project description:

    Under the assumption that within ten years, the landscape of modern education will have fully integrated what we now define as new classroom media: video, online collaboration, open source curriculum and other web tools, we hope to pioneer a web software tool that acts as a platform for this new media, bringing the power of the web and its tools to students, teachers and parents in a secure, comfortable and innovative environment. Our goal is to have our free software at a pilot middle school by April 15th, 2009, continuing to develop and coordinate with our users to create a product that other schools want to pilot and use at their schools, while allowing individual teachers to implement this tool in their own classroom.

    Our project, titled Alight Learning, is currently trying to win an idea competition on Ideablob.com You can find us at http://ideablob.com/3975 . We would love your support in the form of a vote within the next couple days, but more importantly we'd love your feedback and comments. Our description on Ideablob is short, and even the one above hardly gets at many of the issues we would like to take a stab at solving, but at least it's a start.

    Feel free to email me back, check out alightlearning.com, anything you like!

    Thanks,

    Alyshia Olsen
    anotherdayaway42@gmail.com
  • Lorraine Stinson

    Thanks, Sue. My Twitter is stinsol. It sounds like your job is similar to mine. Were you ever a classroom teacher? My neice lives in Bloomsburg. Her husband works in IT at the college. In some ways we miss PA but not in the winter. Lorraine
  • Jack

    Hi Sue. I was wondering if you have students or educator friends who would be interested in participating in a nationwide SAT Vocab Video Contest @ MIT university. You can view contest details at BrainyFlix.com Please let me know. Thanks!