Digital Responses to Literature
Digital Responses to Literature
Three Ways to Map Stories
The 101 Hottest EdTech Tools According to Education Experts
. Tutorful
Five Ways to Use Book Creator
TextAdventures: Games based on responding to literature
Text Disrupters Twitter: Challenge portrayals of race, class, and gender
10 Technology Enhanced Alternatives to Book Reports
Studying the Classics with a Little Help from Technology.
EdTech Magazine
Google Lit Trips
Google Lit Trips for High School Students
Fun4Read Twitter Chat: Share responses to book on Twitter
Zamora, M. (2016). Reading as a Social Act. DML Central
Using Google Earth to teach literature
Allen Liu: Digital Toy Chest for the Humanities: Digital tools for analyzing and creating literary texts
Using images in Prezi to analyze poetry
Prism: An online collaborative reading tool for shared annotations
Thinkquest: Student created websites about literary texts
Digital humanities projects for studying literature
Digital Literacy Across the Curriculum Handbook
: free book
Teaching Students to be Multimedia Storytellers
Students in two schools 1,700 miles apart share responses to
The Book Thief
using TodaysMeet and sticky notes
Gretchen Rinnert: Video Book: social networking site for fostering student interactions and video productions
Laura Hammond and her students turn canonical poetry into iMovie masterpieces in this lesson plan
Jaimee Bohning and her students engage social justice movements in the U.S. via VoiceThread
Molly Schned and Jane Dolan explore
Hamlet
via Web2.0 tool enhanced analysis and performance
Literature Alive! Teaching Literature in Second Life
Karena Hunt: Utilizing the wiki environment to create "reader's guides" to Nancy Farmer's novel
The House of the Scorpion