As I mentioned before timetoast is an interactive timeline for students. During work today I thought about some of the educational uses for timetoast and came to an important realization.
Since I teach in Baltimore County our students only receive username and passwords and are never given email accounts or access to any type of email. You may be asking yourself why this is a problem, well the real problem lies when you sign up for a timetoast account. When you sign up they require you to make up a username and password and you must also give an email address to get the activation code. Therefore if you teach at a school which does not allow or provide students with email accounts here are some alternatives to still using timetoast.
If you create a timeline you would like to share with the class to have them discuss you can actually embed the code into a wiki or any other site that allows you to share or embed html or javascript.You can also create a timeline as a class or let groups use your account to create the timeline and then embed them to the wiki.
Embedding a timeline into a wiki is pretty simple.
First: Choose the timeline you would like to embed, at the bottom it says embed/share.
Second: Copy the embed code.
Third: Make sure you are in the edit section of your wiki and click on the Insert Plugin.
Fourth: Under the HTML and Gadget section, choose HTML/Javascript.
Fifth: Where it says enter code here, paste the embed code.
Sixth: Click Next, then Insert Plugin, then Save. When you go back to View your wiki you should see the timeline.
Education Ideas:- History Projects (chapter topics or the life of specific historical figures)
- Science (to keep track of how different plants grow or the evolution of different species/theories)
- Personal (have them do a personal timeline about things they have done)
- Math (have them do a timeline on their allowance and see how their money grows or decreasing depending on if they spend their money)
- Reading (Discuss how a character changes over a period of time in a specific book or reading)
- Music (Have the students log their practice hours to reflect on how they have gotten better by practicing more or the evolution of different instruments)
These were just some ideas of how you might be able to use these timelines to increase the discussion and to help students become more reflective learners, when they look back over what they have accomplished or learned. Here is a useful timeline for Math teachers as an example of how to use timetoast in their classrooms.
What are some other ways you could incorporate timelines into your instruction?