I've been using Diigo since Sandy introduced it to us and promising myself that I will be okay. The way I used to bookmark was so familiar and easy to rely on...and I'm afraid I will want to find all of my bookmarks for a particular topic and not be able to find them.
I recently stumbled upon some interesting mapping applications that could easily fit with some of our social studies projects, and as the diligent bookmarker, I got to work. Then I started to panic. What if I can't remember the tags???? What if I file it in a weird place? What if I bookmark it and then completely forget I ever found such a great resource?!"
Then I thought I could just post the sites here, label the post, then be drawn back. Maybe I'm making more work for myself.
Anyhow, I found some Google Map applications that were pretty amazing.
Planet In Action has a few 3D programs that are incredibly detailed. This one is a link to "places", which allows you to tour Mount St. Helens or the Grand Canyon as if you were actually zooming over the landscape.
360 Cities allows you to have a panoramic view of many locations worldwide. I thought it would be worthwhile to search the USA map for our purposes and choose from the many locations provided. I thought, if we are brave enough, the students could create blogs on their particular state, National Park, etc. complete with articles and embedded applications like this. However, I might be thinking far above what I can actually teach the children to do. Photostory was hard enough!
You can "see" through the 360 Cities lens on Google Earth as well, which was pretty outstanding. You can search for an area on Google Earth (Eiffel Tower, for example), then Google Earth flies to your location, indicating where the 360 panoramic views are available. It's like a virtual field trip. In fact, the more I get into Google Earth, the more I realize I need training on this! It has SO much. I used the Water Surface view and was able to navigate below the water, but I'm still a little shaky. I would love to be able to find good visuals of trenches, abyssal plains, seamounts, etc. I think it'll take time for me to figure that out.
I was pretty impressed with selecting the BBC Earth layer while touring the oceans. It allowed me to "view" numerous deep sea creatures, hopping from one ocean destination to another. YouTube videos popped up from the BBC as well, making it an exciting tour, to say the very least!
We utilized Google Maps for a project at the end of the year, and though we found a few glitches along the way, it was a great idea! I found that Google Maps is displayed through a variety of mapping programs. Perhaps one of these would be easier to navigate and save for our students.
Scribble Maps and Quick Maps were just two of the mapping applications I found that utilize Google Maps. Scribble Maps was very intuitive, but I still fumbled a bit with including pictures (they covered the map almost entirely). Though I enjoyed the options with Quick Maps, I couldn't consistently drag an icon onto the map, nor could I upload a picture. I'll have to keep exploring.
And just to mix things up a little, here is another take on how we could utilize the National Parks study (if we decide to alter it). It would be very cool if we (as teachers) could figure out how to use this tool from Google Earth as well (it's SO cool!), not only with land features and cities, but with the ocean depths. Look what's coming in a couple of months on PBS, though it is probably not geared toward children.
I'm looking forward to learning more about Google tools and how they work. There's no end to what's out there! Have you tried searching Google through Wonder Wheel? Check it out!
Another Ted Talk
13 years ago