Skip to main content

Diigo Home
Home/ 1001teachers/ Group items tagged 1:1

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Christopher Watson

kis21learning wiki / Must-Have Accounts for Read-Write Web - 0 views

  • Hint: use the same username and password you use for everything else (except your bank account).


    First, create a bookmark folder labeled HS Accounts in your bookmarks toolbar on Firefox:


    Firefox >


    Bookmarks >


    Bookmark this page >


    Click Expand Triangle (Right of "Create In")


    Bookmarks Toolbar >


    New Folder >


    Web 2.0 >


    Add


     



    Here we go. A Baker's Dozen Bookmarks:

    • Clay Burell
       
      If I could be any kind of artist or performer, my fantasy would be to become a __________________ (ex., writer, photographer, painter, filmmaker, musician, talk-show host, comedian, journalist, etc.).
    • Join the KIS 1:1 laptop Diigo group so we can play with the million life-sa ving ways you can use this for yourself or your classes.
    •  Install the Firefox Diigo toolbar.
    • Restart Firefox.
    • Click "install"
    • On Diigo Toolbar, click dropdown triangle > SHOW ANNOTATIONS > GROUPS > 1:1 Laptop
    • See anything different?  Hover over it
    • Click "install"
    • On Diigo Toolbar, click dropdown triangle > SHOW ANNOTATIONS > GROUPS > 1:1 Laptop
    • See anything different?  Hover over it
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • Subscribe to it with Bloglines!
    • Christopher Watson
       
      I noticed Bloglines is the reader of choice here. Specific reasons? Is it back to beating Google Reader? Thanks.
Clay Burell

1-to-1 Computing :: A Measure of Success : February 2007 : THE Journal - 0 views

  • WHEN TEXAS' TECHNOLOGY
    IMMERSION PROJECT (TIP)
    began in the spring of 2004, a grant
    from the US Department of Education
    allowed a parallel project to launch—
    eTxTIP—to evaluate and measure the
    success of the program, which equips
    middle school students in high-risk,
    high-need areas with laptops.
    • Clay Burell
       
      "High-risk students" shouldn't throw us off to the wider application of this research.  Seen in a non-economic (class) sense, "high-risk" can apply also to students of sub-standard literacy scores on external, norm-referenced tests like the SAT and so forth.  So this applies, I would argue, to any students whose academic literacy scores fall below the norm--which makes this especially relevant to international schools and schools with high numbers of non-native English speakers.
  • According to Givens, "The first-year report showed an
    increase in technical proficiency, engagement between the students
    and the teachers, a spike in parental involvement, and
    greater communication between the school and the home."
    She says the second-year report is close to completion.
    • Clay Burell
       
      This is definitely true in my case regarding the "increase in. . . engagemennt between the students and the teachers," though less so with parent involvement.  I just sent a parent letter home with students explaining our web-logging "Writing Across the Curriculum, Writing Across the Years" program, and hope this will increase parent involvement.
  • Data is beginning to come in on several of the first 1-to-1
    initiatives that were launched three or more years ago, an adequate
    time frame for obtaining measurable results. Just as
    expected, formal analysis shows that students are learning
    more through this new, collaborative instruction that opens the
    doors of communication and takes education beyond the classroom
    and into the community at large. Anecdotal success—
    accounts of positive transformations in the classroom from
    students, teachers, administrators, and parents—only serves to
    bolster the formal evaluations of these programs, which for
    most, were mandated when the programs were implemented.
    • Clay Burell
       
      Again, personal experience in our classroom collaboration with students in Denver and Honolulu bears out the claim that "students are learning more through this new, collaborative instruction that opens the doors of communication and takes education beyond the classroom and into the community at large."  While there are still improvements to be made in our method of collaboration--only natural, since this is our first attempt, and we're learning as we go--the learning that is taking place is clearly richer, more authentic, and more multi-faceted than traditional, "walled classoom" writiing workshops of the past.  It will only improve as we teachers continue working out the bugs.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • The Maine Learning Technology Initiative (MLTI), which
    began five years
    ago and provides
    each seventh-grade
    student in the state
    with a laptop, has
    also been undergoing
    evaluation, with two groups working in tandem to measure
    its success, says Bette Manchester, director of special projects
    for the Maine Department of Education. The first group, the
    Center for Education Policy, Applied Research, and Evaluation
    at the University of Southern Maine, looks at how the
    technology is being used, viewed, and accepted at the state's
    middle schools. Among the findings, which can be found
    here, the CEPARE report states:


    "There is a growing body of evidence that Maine's Learning
    Technology Initiative is impacting teachers, students, and
    learning in many positive ways:


    • Teachers are more effectively helping children achieve
      Maine's state learning standards.
    • Students are more motivated to learn, are learning more,
      and learning it more deeply.
    • Students are acquiring 21st-century skills.
    • The 1-to-1 laptop program is bringing about positive
      change in the acquisition of knowledge."

    Machester says the state continues to work with CEPARE
    to measure results at particular schools, noting that the center
    evaluates schools individually rather than the program as
    a whole. "We chose not to just look at statewide student
    achievement," she says, "because that doesn't tell the whole
    story. Plus, doing those types of assessments is very, very
    expensive."

    • Clay Burell
       
      The biggest limitations to our own initiative are these:
      1. students don't have their own laptops, which limits intstruction to availability of laptop carts on any given day.
      2. the laptops the school provides do not contain the software required for optimal student production of digital work (frankly, the iLife audio, video, teleconferencing, and multimedia suiite)
      3. classroom time management is negatively affected by set-up and breakdown time to remove and return laptops to the carts every  class.
      I include the rest of the article in case it has relevance for anyone else.


1 - 2 of 2
Showing 20 items per page