Search results for author:"Alice Christie"
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Recognizing (Almost) Invisible Gender Bias in Technology Use and Teacher-Student Interactions
Alice Christie
Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education International Conference 2005 (2005) pp. 742–749
This paper examines my role as teacher/researcher in perpetuating or trying to eliminate gender bias from my interactions with elementary school students. This descriptive study of a teacher/researcher interacting with students analyzes naturalistic ...
Topics: Teachers, Interaction, Gender, Students
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Can Digital Teaching Portfolios Become Tools for Technology Integration?
Rick Baker; Alice Christie
Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education International Conference 2005 (2005) pp. 15–20
The purpose of this study was to explore a potential relationship between developing digital teaching portfolios and a propensity to integrate technology in the classroom. Graduate students, who were also practicing K-12 teachers and who were...
Topics: Portfolios, Classrooms, Educational Technology, Teachers, Standards
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Site-based Inservice that Works: Using the Internet to Integrate Science and Mathematics Instruction
Keith Wetzel; Jo Cleland; Ray Buss; Peter Rillero; Ron Zambo; Alice Christie
Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education International Conference 2000 (2000) pp. 1851–1854
Project SCOUT provided inservice and preservice teachers opportunities to experience inquiry-based learning, which combined hands-on and Internet investigations in science and mathematics. The goals of the project were: (a) to provide staff...
Topics: Science, Internet, Teachers, Mathematics, Students
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Multimedia: What Do We Teach the Next Generation?
John H. Meyer; Alice Christie
Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education International Conference 1999 (1999) pp. 1080–1081
As the teaching of multimedia has progressed over the past few years, the students who enroll in educational technology classes have changed, too. Early on, all of the hardware and software were new and exciting. Teachers had little in their...
Topics: Teachers, Educational Technology, Software, Hardware, Schools