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Aralık, 2020 tarihine ait yayınlar gösteriliyor

Posters

Resim
 There's a saying that suggests "You shouldn't judge a book by its cover." while the morale of this saying has gained attention, we barely apply this in our daily lives. When that is the case, covers are important, they give you a pretty good idea as to what the vibe of the movie/book will be. While a time period might have a certain effect on how a cover would be made, it is up mostly up to the people who run the show in terms of what their cover would show. Not every cover is entirely unique, there certain templates you can use, there are a lot of places that provide you with these templates. I got help from those places while I was trying at my first poster attempt. Here's one I made for a hypothetical movie for the book I reviewed in a previous post of mine, Nights When Nothing Happened. For the high-quality version: poster.pdf

Padlets and Traffic

Today I wanted to look at Padlets and what use they could have in 21st-century education. I found the concept to be interesting and great to organize a lot of assignments on one page as a teacher, but I don't think I will use them as a tool to teach things. I just think there are a lot of tools out there that are more interesting and more attractive. Traffic was the discussed topic on our Padlet. Traffic is often classified by type: heavy motor vehicle (e.g., car, truck), another vehicle (e.g., moped, bicycle), and pedestrian. Different classes may share speed limits and easement or may be segregated. Some jurisdictions may have very detailed and complex rules of the road while others rely more on drivers' common sense and willingness to cooperate. More on traffic and padlet link: padlet.com/ebrozkaan/trafficproblems

Nights When Nothing Happened Review

 Hey folks, I am here with some words that I wanted to say about Simon Han's first book 'Nights When Nothing Happened'. It was time well spent and I learned about wikiing while doing so. I am not going to lie I thought wikiing would be more efficient, efficient in how the site had such bad writing panel. Using Microsoft Word would lower the time spent on everyone's work quite heavily. It seems like a site (I am talking about pbworks.com) has an ancient design and their effectiveness is ancient too, I spent a good 30 minutes trying to fix my writing from looking like Hebrew but the site insisted on it looking ugly and I gave up and left it as it is. The fact that you can see everyone's work and comment on their work, get comments and feedback is awesome on its own, the ancient design from the '90s has left me with a bad taste in my mouth about wikiing.  I grew up with technology and had an unpleasant experience with wikiing and I doubt that I would use it in teac...