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  1. Added Oct 22, 2007 by aseldow and 2 others
    Now that we are using the Internet in the classroom to support instruction, it is important the area of assessment be addressed. One usable method for teachers is to provide a rubric for student use and for both formative and summative assessment purposes. Another is to provide some type of graphic organizer. Below you will find a collection of assessment rubrics and graphic organizers that may be helpful to you as you design your own. Let me know if you have one you would like to share! A book dealing with both the theoretical and practical design of rubrics is the ASCD publication, Assessing Student Outcomes: Performance Assessment Using the Dimensions of Learning Model.
  2. Added Mar 13, 2007 by aseldow and 2 others
    I've been creating web sites for 10 years, and I've got much more successful at it over that time. And I've come into contact with lots of very clever and complex software development processes, many of which don't produce very good results. This is the typical process I use today on most of the sites I do (of all sizes). It focuses on getting clear on what you're doing before you start, and staying clear while you work swiftly towards a good solution.
  3. Added Oct 18, 2006 by aseldow and 1 other
    This blog post addresses Google's "heat map" of web page hotspots and takes things a step further with general marketing advice. This is good to know for any web designer and helps answer the question: "Where do I put my content?"
  4. Added Sep 17, 2006 by aseldow and 2 others
    iWeb is a personal web publishing application that makes it easy to create and publish great-looking websites with content ranging from text and photos to blogs and podcasts.
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