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The world has transformed on an epic scale, but education has
barely budged. How can you incorporate all the creativity
technology has to offer into your learning experiences, even if
your technological abilities are limited? How can online tools help
students, especially gifted and twice-exceptional students, connect
with others from around the block or around the world to
collaborate on projects? Ben Curran and Neil Weatherbee of Engaging
Educators give you step-by-step instructions to get you started
using technology in your learning experiences. Discover new online
tools geared toward collaborating and creating. Try out projects
specifically designed with these tools in mind. Create a positive
and interesting online portfolio to share with college recruiters
and potential employers. Regardless of educational choice, Learning
in the 21st Century: How to Connect, Collaborate, and Create will
fill you with ideas and inspiration that will revolutionize how you
approach learning. **As of July 1, 2013, Google has discontinued
Google Reader. In the interest of keeping our readers up-to-date
with the best options, Ben and Neil recommend Bloglines as a
replacement service. Please go to http:
//giftedhomeschoolers.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/Google-Reader-addendum-6-21-2013.pdf
to download instructions on how to transfer your Google Reader
subscriptions to Bloglines.**
When is life like a prize fight, a garden, and a quiz show, all
hurtling down the road on an office chair, wrapped in song? When
you're living in the land of the gifted and twice exceptional. Jen
Merrill, author of the "Laughing at Chaos" blog, brings laughter,
tears, and honesty to her latest book by GHF Press, "If This is a
Gift, Can I Send it Back?: Surviving in the Land of the Gifted and
Twice Exceptional." Join Jen on her journey through discovery,
understanding, and acceptance, as she copes with the challenges
that only the gifted and twice exceptional can create. So, pull up
a chair, pour a glass of wine, and start reading. You'll swear
Jen's written about you
Do you sense things aren't quite right with your child's school
experience? Maybe your child is clearly struggling or, perhaps,
your child is doing all right, but you believe something is
lacking? Instead of trying to force your child to fit into school,
perhaps it is time to consider finding educational options that
fully address your child's academic and emotional needs. In "Making
the Choice," Corin Barsily Goodwin, Executive Director of the
Gifted Homeschoolers Forum (GHF), and Mika Gustavson, MFT, discuss
how giftedness and twice exceptionality (gifted plus learning
differences or "invisible disabilities") might affect the
educational needs of your child. They also consider a variety of
options regarding educational choices and the path to making them.
Finally, they provide some questions (and hopefully answers)
intended to help you make your way along this path.
Traditional schooling may not provide your son or daughter with a
satisfactory or fulfilling education. In "Forging Paths: Beyond
Traditional Schooling," you'll read the stories of nine young
people who took varying, nontraditional educational paths and
succeeded in their chosen endeavors and vocations. Wes Beach,
director of an unusual private high school, speaker, and author,
prompts you to reconsider the idea that any highly successful
career path must involve piling up gold stars in high school to
gain immediate admission to a prestigious university in order to
earn a degree which can cost more than most people earn in a year.
Discover how passion, persistence, creativity and perseverance can
lead to a life of satisfaction and even some traditional
achievements
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