Tuesday, May 31, 2011

June 1 - History

1) Visit these sites first - Revolutionary War
Revolutionary War Site 2

2) Visit these primary documents:


3) Listen and watch the video with an American Folk Song

4) Your turn to surf the net - find details on one of the following Founding Fathers:

George Washington Ben Franklin Thomas Jefferson James Madison John Adams

5) Write a short essay or record an oral presentation on Photo Booth about everything you have researched and read.


1 - 2 days to research 1 - 2 days to write essay

June 1 - Health

Research your topic!

Monday, May 30, 2011

Healthy Living Prezi

Visit this presentation - TAKE NOTES for discussion. Leave one comment concerning issues/concepts presented.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Definitions & sites to visit

Blog: a web page where you can write journal entries, reviews, articles, and more. Blog authors can allow readers to post their own comments. No web design knowledge is needed to create a blog.

RSS: a way for subscribers to automatically receive information from blogs, newspapers, and podcasts.

Blogs to visit:






Your Blog

College Admissions Officers Read Blogs and MySpace

Teens here is another good reason to be careful what you blog about and what kinds of photographs and comments you make in MySpace or similar social networks. An article from PittsburghLive.com says not only are employers watching blogs and social networks but college admissions officers are paying attention as well.

Employers, bankers, insurance brokers, and college admissions officers are becoming wise by using social networking and blogging sites as an addition to traditional background checks, such as credit and criminal history.

The more than 70 million people using these sites make it easy for anyone who wants to learn about them.

"Unfortunately, I think most of the people who are posting those are only thinking about their intended readers," said Steven Rothberg, president and founder of CollegeRecruiter.com, the highest traffic career site used by students, recent graduates, and employers.

"If you're a 20-year-old college student and you like to get drunk on the weekends, you're probably going to put that on your profile because you want to hook up with other people that do the same."

If you do want to get in to college you should refrain from posting anything you think a college admissions officer would find objectionable. You should also scrub your blog or profile free of any current objectionable content. Colleges don't have to wait to receive your application -- they can look now and make notes of what they find. Police are also using these sources. They are reading the comments and looking through the public photos in social networks. The article provides this example:

Pennsylvania State University police used Facebook to identify 50 students who stormed the field after the football game against Ohio State this past season.

Naively, the students formed a Facebook group that university police said was titled something like "I stormed the field after Ohio State game."

Police officers were searching for another student who was accused of online harassment when they stumbled upon the group, complete with university e-mails and pictures that clearly incriminated the students.

Punishments for the students ranged from warnings to suspensions.

Getting into college and finding a job are hard enough without having to explain some nonsense you posted on a blog or a MySpace profile. Be careful what you post kids.

http://www.bloggersblog.com/teens/