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This chapter shares ideas for where to get started as a global educator and how to extend your global activities if you have already started.
Question 2
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Younger students
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cannot collaborate globally.
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can collaborate globally.
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are incapable of collaborating globally
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collaborating globally is impossible.
Question 3
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Aurasma and trigger images allow families to view students' school work from anywhere in the world.
Question 4
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According to Eric Walters (USA) regarding the inaugural 2015 Student Technology Conference, what propelled a small potential collaboration between six schools into a global phenomenon?
Question 5
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[blank_start]Katie[blank_end] Grubby (Australia) designed a [blank_start]marine debris education kit[blank_end] for Australian students to use all around Australia that involved beach cleaning, source reduction and students putting their [blank_start]data into a live database[blank_end].
Question 6
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Sophie de la Paz's favorite global project was a water neutrality project conducted in 2015.
Question 7
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Adam, [blank_start]a USA[blank_end] educator currently in [blank_start]Egypt[blank_end], provides numerous global learning experiences for his students.
Question 8
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Stephanie Wujcik (USA) worked with what students from what grade to fund a microfinance loan as part of a unit on hunger and malnutrition?
Question 9
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[blank_start]Sonya van Schaijik[blank_end] (New Zealand) met other global educators face to face when she visited 13 countries in 11 weeks and met over 20 educators.
Question 10
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Brian Mannix (USA) says his favorite global adventure is an [blank_start]Alternate Reality Game[blank_end] that he created where teachers, learners, businesses and local and national media around the globe are working together in the name of deep, [blank_start]experiential[blank_end] education, not just for his students, but for every member of the global community.
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Alternate Reality Game
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experiential
Question 11
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Marianne's (USA) students created an original game for the Minecraft Platform.
Question 12
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Judy (Australia) says joining and becoming involved in the International Association of School Librarianship gave her the most humbling of experiences.
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Wayne (Australia) loves the notion of sharing professional development with an international cohort.
Question 14
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Holly, Qatar, shares that "Reading is more than [blank_start]print[blank_end], [blank_start]Writing[blank_end] is more than ink."
Question 15
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Holly's students are all expert English learners.
Question 16
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Holly credits what that afforded an authentic audience to easily share with and receive real feedback from?
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use of internet
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use of technology
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use of writing skills
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use of classrooms