Website data: (Actual information extracted from website) Meta title: Bud the Teacher Meta description: Inquiry and reflection for better teaching. | This listing is not rated yet. Rate it! | Report it! Bud the Teacher http://budtheteacher.typepad.com/bud_the_teacher/ Bud Hunt teaches high school language arts and journalism at Olde Columbine High School in Longmont, Colorado. He is a teacher-consultant with the Colorado State University Writing Project, an affiliate of the National Writing Project. Category: Directory » Reference Blogs » Education Hits: 2 Date added: 2006-03-30 21:51:18 Alexa traffic rank: 2,170,536 Site language: EN Site encoding: US-ASCII |
Bud the Teacher Latest Posts
The Podcast: Here Comes CyberCamp
Today’s podcast is a short description of CyberCamp, a summer technology and learning institute we’ll be doing this summer in my school district. I’d love any feedback you have on our event, as well as links and info about similar events. In addition to the book that I mention... Read more...
Published 11 hours ago
Learning to Change. Changing to Learn
Thanks to John Creighton for the link to this video. It’s well worth the six and a half minutes of your time if you haven’t already seen it. Read more...
Published 2 days ago
K12Online 2008 Call for Proposals
K12Online has announced the call for this year’s conference. It’s reposted below. I strongly encourage all of you who read this blog to consider how you might best participate. I know I’ll be thinking hard about a submission. I hope you will, too. We are pleased to announce the... Read more...
Published 1 week ago
Web Presence. On Purpose.
I’m writing this morning from the National Writing Project’s web presence working retreat, an event I’ve been fortunate enough to have been involved with as a facilitator since its inception last year. This is the second time we’ve run the event, which is an attempt to... Read more...
Published 2 weeks ago
Overarching. For now.
I think it’s very important to be in conversation with people with whom we disagree. That’s one reason why I like the Bridging Differences blog so much. In Deborah Meier’s latest post, she suggests some “overarching agreements.” I can live with these: Meanwhile, lets... Read more...
Published 1 month ago
Staying Up. Looking Up.
Students at Burlington Elementary School slept over at the school last night to watch the sky. For the last time, alas, due to a curriculum change, according to the article. I sure hope there will be other opportunities like this one. Heck, I’ll volunteer to chaperone, if that helps. I love... Read more...
Published 1 month ago
Time for a New Button?
I read banned books Originally uploaded by Bud the Teacher I wonder if there’s a button with the slogan “I surf an unfiltered Internet,” or “I read filtered blogs.” Maybe “I read blocked blogs,” is better - more alliterative. Along another line, perhaps... Read more...
Published 1 month ago
Reading Balance
Clay Burell’s challenged me (or tagged me, or whatever) to engage a meme that he’s passing along. I might. I’m bad about memes. I don’t mean to be. (And I am thinking about a good passion quilt image and will post one. Eventually. Thanks to all who tagged me.) But I did... Read more...
Published 1 month ago
Lies. Statistics. Whatever.
One hundred percent of my family is technologically literate. No, really. I’ve got the numbers to back that up. Here’s how I would report that to the Department of Education: Number of members of my family: 4 Number who are technologicaly literate: 4. If you know me or my family at... Read more...
Published 1 month ago
(Re)Creating Ourselves Online
The Reflective Teacher, one of my favorite reflective practitioners, left his blog behind recently. But now he’s back with another: Anyway, I figured it was time for a reinvention as a teacher. I see in myself a different person than I was when I became a teacher, and therefore have moved... Read more...
Published 1 month ago