Digital Literacy in the Library
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Rescooped by Mary Reilley Clark from Catchy headings
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How to Write Better Headlines [Infographic]

How to Write Better Headlines [Infographic] | Digital Literacy in the Library | Scoop.it

Here are some tips for writing more compelling headlines...

The infographic by Neil Patel from Quick Sprout will give you a simple formula for enticing headlines. Though there's no one-size-fits-all headline trope that guarantees a crazy influx of traffic, the tactics below should help you tweak your headlines to get your posts the attention they deserve.


Via Lauren Moss, Kim Borghouts
Mary Reilley Clark's insight:

There are some great tips here. Our 7th grades write newspaper front pages for an historical fiction project, and last year we talked about good headlines and captions. I'll share this with them this year. 

Smartwords's curator insight, September 4, 2014 12:13 PM

Le titre est le produit d'appel de votre contenu. Rendez-le le plus attractif possible !

Kamian's curator insight, October 1, 2014 12:31 PM

(ENG) Excelente infografía con Tips para redactar titulares efectivos.

GwynethJones's curator insight, October 5, 2014 11:49 AM

Writing kicky headlines are the THING!

Rescooped by Mary Reilley Clark from SMUSD Share
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Creative Commons Infographic | Educational Technology and Mobile Learning

Creative Commons Infographic | Educational Technology and Mobile Learning | Digital Literacy in the Library | Scoop.it

Via Dr. Susan Bainbridge, AdinaSullivan
Mary Reilley Clark's insight:

Easy to understand visual explanation of Creative Commons for students.

Mindi Vandagriff's curator insight, August 5, 2013 9:56 AM

We must teach our students Creative Commons early!

Lorena Swetnam's curator insight, August 12, 2013 4:28 PM

great tool for teaching Creative Commons #tlchat

Monica S Mcfeeters's curator insight, September 24, 2013 4:58 PM

This is a useful tool about the creative commons.

Rescooped by Mary Reilley Clark from Curating Tools and Information
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27 Simple Ways To Check For Understanding ~ TeachThought

27 Simple Ways To Check For Understanding ~ TeachThought | Digital Literacy in the Library | Scoop.it

"Checking for understanding is the foundation of teaching.Whether you’re using formative assessment for data to personalize learning within a unit, or more summative data to refine a curriculum map, the ability to quickly and easily check for understanding is a critical part of what you do. (Which was the idea behind our post last March, “10 Assessments You Can Perform In 90 Seconds Or Less.”)

 

"The following infographic Mia MacMeekin offers up 27 additional ways to check for understanding. Some aren’t necessarily quick–”Test what you learned in a new situation”–but there are a dozen or more other ideas that are worth adding to your teacher toolbox, many of which aren’t content-related, but rather cognitively-related (Locate 3 people who agree with your point of view.)"


Via Margarita Parra, Jim Lerman, Lisa Williams, R.Conrath, Ed.D.
Mary Reilley Clark's insight:

Several of these would be easy to use with library lessons.

jenscomar's curator insight, November 11, 2013 1:09 PM

Ways of demonstrating authentic learning.  Needs a closer read by me though.

Ness Crouch's curator insight, November 12, 2013 2:24 PM

Simple but useful.

Jane Ellis's curator insight, September 20, 2017 10:00 PM
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11 Infographics About Infographics

11 Infographics About Infographics | Digital Literacy in the Library | Scoop.it
People who create infographics do their work partly because they believe infographics are a great way to communicate information. Since the people in this field

Via Gust MEES, Ann Vega