Will you be attending the ISTE 2016 Conference next week in Denver, Colorado? Or perhaps, you will be #NOTATISTE this year, following the conference virtually from home.
Either way, I hope you will find the Guide to ISTE 2016 below to be helpful. It is based on a guide originally created by Caren Levine, a long-time ISTE veteran and the creator of the Jewish Educators' Network Birds of a Feather at ISTE. I first used an earlier version of this guide in 2011 when I was a member of the Avi Chai Foundation's ISTE cohort and found it to be indispensable. I have updated this doc together my colleague at The Frisch School who attended the last two ISTE conferences with me, Sabrina Bernath. Please share this Google Doc with others. I have shared it so that others can comment and then I can incorporate these comments into the living document.
In addition to the ISTE guide, for the third year in a row, I will be crowdsourcing notes for ISTE. This will benefit those attending the conference virtually as well as those who will be there in person but cannot possible attend every worthwhile session since many are given simultaneously. You can read about previous crowdsourced notes which I did in collaboration with Sue Waters, from #ISTE2014 here and here and from #ISTE2015 here and here.
Please click on the following link to open the Google spreadsheet with this year's crowdsourced notes: http://tinyurl.com/crowdsourcingiste16. The idea is simple. Anyone in the world can edit this spreadsheet with their name, session title, and a link to their notes or blog post about this session. I welcome your additions to help benefit all through the wonder of crowdsourcing.
Stay tuned for more posts from ISTE next week!
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