Showing posts with label Websites. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Websites. Show all posts

Thursday, 15 May 2014

EAL/ESL Review

English is known as the hardest language if you are not of English-speaking origin with many complex grammar rules and spellings. So prepare to learn the 3rd most widely spoken language in the world with a selection of useful and helpful websites: http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/-Definitive and essential guide from BBC World Service.
http://www.rong-chang.com/  - Created by a Chinese doctorate Ron-Chang Lee with a PHD in English Language, very useful.
http://a4esl.org - has bilingual translations of languages from across the globe, useful for any ESL student for any country.
Enjoy! Apprécier! Tanoshimu! Disfrutar! Xiǎngshòu! Jeulgyeo! سے لطف اندوز! 

Wednesday, 30 April 2014

SEN Review: What Type Of Learner Are You?

These questionnaires are used to discover the way you learn: visually, auditory (listening) or kinaesthetically (movement). They ask a variety of questions from whether you like reading textbooks to gather information or watching/drawing videos and diagrams or even the way you tackle the building of Lego models by explanation (auditory), simply feeling the structure and shape of the bricks to make it fit together (kinaesthetic) and following the packets' images and diagrams (visual). The websites may also feature a guide on how to effectively use your preferred learning style as with my favourite Brainboxx, they are also differing versions from Edutopia and the Discovery Channel.
Sites-: http://www.brainboxx.co.uk/a3_aspects/pages/vak_quest.htm
http://www.edutopia.org/multiple-intelligences-learning-styles-quiz
http://www.discovery.com/tv-shows/curiosity/topics/what-type-of-learner-are-you-quiz.htm

Monday, 28 April 2014

Revision

I do not have any affiliation with the brands mentioned in this post :D


I, like many other Year 11's, have been revising over the last few months, so I thought I would share some of my revision tips. This is a list, in no particular order, of any techniques or websites I have found useful while revising. this is just what i have found helpful there are hundreds of ways to revise, so find what works for you and stick at it.
  • Mind maps
    • Mind maps are a great way to split up larger topics into bitesize chunks, they're also useful for finding the most important parts of a topic and visualise how topics link together. I've found them useful because I like visualising how everything links together.
    • A useful website for creating mind maps, flash cards, notes and more, you can look at others revision material or show your own to the world; if you and a few friends start to use it you can collaborate on material or easily look at their revision and help keep each other on track.
      https://www.examtime.com/
  • Condensing notes
    • Turning a term of work into two or three pages can be useful for deciding which parts of a topic are important, it also provides a great refresher of things you may have forgotten and will provide concise useful revsion nearer your exams.
    • Try to cover one topic in a session, if it takes you more than 30 mins for 1 topic  you're doing something wrong. It is helpful to write up all these notes into a different lined notepad/excercise book, for easy reference.
  • Past Papers
    • Just DO past papers, get a feel for what the examiner wants, find topics you don't know so well and practice your exam technique. They are a great way of revising but don't waste them, there are only so many with the correct specification(what you've been learning), so save some for nearer the exam, but do ones you've already done twice just a month apart, this will help you focus in on what content you need to revise further, and will help your exam technique.
    • To find past papers search for " past papers"
    • If you can't find any for your tier or that you haven't done do the foundation papers, the questions are asked in the same style and are different from the higher paper from the same year, so will help your exam technique and will also help you find topics you need more revsion on.
  • Music
    • Any revision needs some good music to prevent you becoming bored so find some music you like, turn it up and get down to business.
    • Spotify is a great free way to listen to music, works well and saves time compared to youtube downloader, it's also legal!
  • Food
    • If you're revising you need some snacks to keep you on the go, save some of those easter eggs for your revsion or sign up for something like Graze, they provide nutritious snacks straight to your door for you to dive into.
I hope these tips help you with your revision so,
Good Luck!

Sunday, 27 April 2014

Website Review: Pixar Theory.com plus hidden Pixar Easter eggs

Pixar Theory is a website created by Pixar expert Jon Negroni which shows how every character from the popular movies exist in one universe with a in chronological order in the Pixar universe and film production order for our universe. It highlights intellectually bizarre ideas about the movies such as Boo, the innocent little child from Monsters Inc. is time traveller and found out wood was a primary source of energy all along  (The dimension-travelling doors in Monsters Inc. are made of wood, The Wood in A Bugs' Life is the source of Flik's ingenuity and wood helped Carl's house in Up) The Pixar Universe's timeline begin with Brave in the 14th and 15th century to Monsters Inc. in 4500-5000 AD. It is definite, unmissable visit for any Pixar, Disney or film fanatic.
Site-http://www.pixartheory.com
In discovering this website I also discovered some awesome hidden Pixar Easter eggs, some just pure genius and others my favourites:
The iCar from 2008's Cars, a reference to Apple and the late former Pixar CEO and Apple Inc. co-creator Steve Jobs. Complete with iconic Apple logo and 84 number (1984 was the year, the first Apple Mac computer was released)

On Andy's wall in Toy Story 3 pinned up is a postcard by Carl and his wife Ellie from Up

Here in Toy Story 3 is a Totoro plush from Japanese animation My Neighbour Totoro from Studio Ghibli.
Sulley carving in Brave which agrees with a theory on how Boo is/or related to the evil witch in Brave

For more info on Pixar hidden secrets and Easter eggs and theories: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Pixar_film_references

Wednesday, 2 April 2014

Art Review: Major Cities Without Light Pollution

On the website I am going to review, are stunning interpretations by a pioneering French photographer called Thierry Cohen about what major cities would look like without light pollution, so billions of stars and the entrances of galaxies are visible so these first-class cities become even more attractive. The list of cities are: New York, Rio De Janeiro, Los Angeles, Tokyo, Shanghai, Hong Kong, San Francisco, Paris and São Paulo. Unfortunately for Britons, there's no depiction of London, but with the shiny beauties at differing angles and areas of the cities, this website is ensured to leave you "starry-eyed", no matter the circumstances!
An awesome abundance of stars shining stunningly in terrific Tokyo 
Site-http://www.danzigergallery.com/artists/thierry-cohen/



Alas, I will be absent at Digital Leaders this week, so I wish Ms Findlater, the best of luck at her new job :) :) Goodbye :( :( :( :( :( :( :( :( :(

Thursday, 27 March 2014

Sports Review: Sumo Wrestling

Sumo Wrestling is uncommon sport in most countries, but is the national and hugely popular sport in The Land of The Rising Sun aka Japan!. It is most watched programme on Japanese TV according to viewing figures apart from anime. Here's a few websites which detail the basics of Sumo Wrestling: http://www.sumotalk.com/rules.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sumo
http://web-japan.org/kidsweb/virtual/sumo/sumo01.html
http://www.sumo.or.jp/pdf/en/sumo_introduction.pdf
http://www.sumo.or.jp
http://japanese.lingualift.com/blog/what-sumo-eat-wrestlers-diet/
For those more reluctant encyclopaedia/websites learners here's a few videos, both entertaining and humorous:
http://tinyurl.com/SumoNatGeo
http://tinyurl.com/SumoNatGeo2
http://tinyurl.com/SumoTakeshi'sCastle
http://tinyurl.com/SumoSmartBeepAd
http://tinyurl.com/SumoPepsiAd




Plus a hilarious sumo GIF: http://tinyurl.com/FunnySumoGIF !!!!!!!!!!!


Thursday, 20 March 2014

History Review: Japanese history

Here are a frenzy of recommended websites which showcase information on Japanese history of samurai, ninjas and video games and much more!:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samurai
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~malokofs/SCA/Persona/History/samurai.html
http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e2127.html
http://www.history.com/topics/samurai-and-bushido
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ninja
http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e2295.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mario
http://www.themushroomkingdom.net/mario_history.shtml
http://www.mariowiki.com/mario#History
http://mario.ign.com
http://classicgames.about.com/od/consoleandhandheldgames/p/Super-Mario-Bros-The-Game-That-Saved-Video-Games.htm
http://bulbapedia.bulbagarden.net/wiki/History_of_Pokémon
http://mashable.com/2013/10/08/pokemon-history/
http://www.gamesradar.com/history-pokemon-box-art/
http://www.nintendo.co.uk/Corporate/Nintendo-History/Nintendo-History-625945.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_manga
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_anime
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Studio_Ghibli#History
http://www.ghibli-museum.jp/en/
http://doraemon.wikia.com/wiki/Doraemon
http://harumelati.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/doraemon-cartoon-history.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doraemon

A collection of weird and wonderful websites and obscurity to do online now-March 2014

Here's a awesome abundance of obscurity I recommend some of which may be both for entertainment or education or even entertaining education.

1. Typing Games. First up is Sesame Street Fighter, which is a fighting/typing game crossover of Sesame Street and Street Fighter, created from a inspiring image on devianART which improves your typing while playing a fighting game with modified loveable Sesame Street characters copying the appearance of Street Fighter fighters. It has simple topics such as animals to insane topics such as Russian cities. While being educational in typing and spelling is great for gamers of all ages, although is partially incompatible on iOS devices. Next up is Flappy Bird Typing Tutor in which the short-lived Vietnamese phenomenon is converted to assist your typing and spelling skills by typing as quickly as possible to travel the flappy, little bird through the pipes, which is alas also not compatible on iOS devices.

2. Brick Brilliance. With the recent release of The Lego Movie, everything Lego in March/February 2014 is awesome! First up is videos, firstly here's the lyric video of infuriatingly catchy Everything is Awesome by Tegan and Saga feat. The Lonely Island which is a humorously great song, which you'll have heard many times already if you seen the movie. Next up is a fantastic Simpsons Lego Movie crossover Couch Gag by French-Canadian stop-motion animator MonsieurCaron. Finally is Build With Chrome, in which on a collaboration with Google Chrome and Lego in which people build Lego online, which once submitted can viewed all across the world, there was been insanely huge models created ranging the USA to Malaysia.

3. 2048. 2048 is a Italian number game in which you slide tiles of numbers and the same numbers add and merge into one another and you try to create the number 2048. It is highly addictive but mathematically fun.

Friday, 14 March 2014

Happy π (Pi) Day!

Happy π Day everybody! It is the 14th of March (3.14 = Pi to 2 decimal places, 3rd month, 14th day!)  . So I'll recommend some awesome delicious as π websites. First up is http://digitsofpi.com in which on its home page explains the basics of Pi and then you type and ask to calculate π to up to 100,000 decimal places. Second is http://www.joyofpi.com which celebrates everything joyous π which has humorous and interesting facts about π. Finally here's http://www.piday.org/ which celebrates Pi Day and has a interesting sections on Pi's history and how people around the world celebrate Pi Day. Now here's π to 12.1 trillion digits condensed in a computation since it was discovered by Japanese mathematician Shigeru Kondo on 28th of December 2013!!: 
3.

Geography Review: CIA World Factbook

The CIA World Factbook is a reference website created by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). It features world maps and regional maps in both political and physical format to view for free. It also has detailed information and statistics on every country from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe. It includes information and statistics from the country's history to transactional issues (and of course its geography!)

 It includes flag descriptions of every flag, and has downloadable photos of every country with lengthy, intricate captions. There is also a printed book version available updated every year and a iOS app.


Site- https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/
2014 Edition book: http://ow.ly/uBeV9
iOS app: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/app/the-cia-world-factbook/id412637620?mt=8&uo=4


Thursday, 27 February 2014

A Great Collection of Science Websites

Despite the absence of Digital Leaders this week I feel obliged to write a blog post to sustain popularity and do what was meant to written today. So without further delays here is multiple scientific websites. For Periodic Table obsessives: I recommend webelements.com which shows the entire Periodic Table (including Actinoids and Lanthanoids) in which you discover extensive and key information about any element. For those of you want to learn and master the lyrics to Tom Lehrer's magnificent 'Elements' song to impress your friends here's a YouTube video (and it's accompanying lyrics). For space fanatics here's NASA's official site:  http://www.nasa.gov, which includes a educational and children's section for learning more about space and The Solar System.

For those who want science featuring famous intellectual masterminds I recommend, the previously recommended TED, which includes talks by Professor Stephen Hawking and Professor Brian Cox. For those who enjoy unconventional and oddly interesting science I recommend the also previously recommended awesome Vsauce (more details in my review here).

Hope you enjoyed this review! Look out for more science website recommendations by my fellow Digital Leaders.


Tuesday, 18 February 2014

Recommended for education: TED Talks

TED is a variety of educational talks about 'Ideas Worth Spreading" as it's slogan says, from Can Video Games Make Kids Smarter? to a North Korean refugee, now living in the USA who lost his family during the country's famine. The topics range from entertainment to global issues. TED Talks have been hosted by ordinary people to YouTubers. From Microsoft co-founder and billionaire Bill Gates to world-renowned Professor Stephen Hawking to Michael Stevens (Vsauce). The channel is great since it features a range of interesting topics, allowing you to gain detailed insights into today's world society's interests and issues, in a manner which is attractive to adults and knowledgable students.
YouTube channel: http://ow.ly/tKTfH
Other good TED talks:

Thursday, 6 February 2014

Reccomended for English lessons: Wordement

Wordement is available of window 8 stores.
The Game gives you a grid as shown below and you have to try and find as many words in it as possible.
So say for this you would be able to get:
Man
Me

Game Background
Say if the Word started with M you can only have the 8 letters around.

This game if Fun as well as educational


Thursday, 30 January 2014

My Favourite Website

My Favorite web site is PicMonkey.com it is awesom

It is a picture editor which you ca use to change pictures to make them look awesome and professional.

Here is 2 of my creations using this website



By Sam Shackleton

Tuesday, 28 January 2014

FutureLearn



FutureLearn is a online website that was founded in December 2012 (so about 1 year and 2 months now) It is majority owned by UK's Open University's, it contains vast online courses which are very interesting.



Some of these courses include:
  • The Secret Power Of Brands
  • Inside Cancer
  • Good Brain Bad Brain
  • Shakespeare
  • Begin programming: build your first mobile game
  • Causes of War

These are only a few of the courses that I can remember of the top of my head.

I have high hopes for Programming a mobile app, as I am doing that course myself. many of the courses have already been tested, and more are to come.





Thursday, 23 January 2014

YouTube Review: Vsauce

Hey Bloggers, Calum here!

Today I'll be reviewing the YouTube channel Vsauce, which asks and answers ludicrously ridiculous questions such as Is Anything Real? or What Does Human Taste Like? in great detail considering the science behind the questions. It was created by Michael Stevens, A American guy who now lives in London, who has a degree in Psychology from University of Chicago. I think the channel is scientifically and humorously awesome, and would be great to use more often in science lessons. He always begins the video with 'Hey Vsauce, Michael here", just like I begin this blog. There is also a Vsauce2 and Vsauce3, Which shows internet memes and Vsauce3 answers gaming-related questions such as How Much Are Mario's Coins Worth? or The Science Behind Sonic The Hedgehog?
 Hope you enjoyed my review! :)

Michael Stevens from Vsauce



Pros:
+Educational
+Scientific
+Fun
+Detailed
98%-GOLD AWARD
YouTube:
Vsauce
Google+
+Vsauce
Twitter:
@tweetsauce 



Thursday, 9 January 2014

Website Review - Geoguessr

My favourite website is Geoguessr because I like geography. Geoguessr puts you in a random place in the world and you have to try to guess where you are. It would be great to use in geography if we had finished all of the work because it can teach people what other places look like or where those places are in the world.


By Jacob

Website Review - World Wide Maze

Chromes World Wide Maze lets you take any website into a online maze , Although you do have to be on the Chrome internet for it to work.So it would work at school as it doesn't have the correct software, but is still great fun to try at home. Complete Challenges on the internet to see who is the best at that website in the world.

Use Your tablet or phone to control your in game character.
The website can have some problems with picking up your tablet or phone, as the internet connection might be slow so it won't properly work.


Advert - http://youtu.be/7AvTl9aU5D8                                   
Site -  http://chrome.com/maze/pc/not-supported/                 

By Heidi

 
 

My review of Watch Cartoon Online

This website allows the user simply to watch 100s of popular cartoons such as The Simpsons and Adventure Time, the day after they’re aired in the country of origin, so you watch brand-new episodes on your sofa. It can used with any device (I preferably use my iPad) it is thankfully legal but is sometimes categorized as Copyright Infringement, so may have worrying illegalities and has irritating advertisements, although the broadcasting corporations such as FOX and Cartoon Network have not shut it down.  

Site - http://www.watchcartoononline.com





Good Points

  • Watch instantly and day after broadcast
  • Thousands of popular cartoons
  • Legal
Bad Points
  • Irritating ads
  • Categorized as Copyright Infringement
  • People uncertain on legality.

89%/100%
By Calum