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John Pearce

Growing Up with Social Media - Infographic | Letterbox Blog - 0 views

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    "LETTERBOX has been looking into the effects that the digital age is having on younger minds and has generated the fascinating infographic below that's teeming with interesting details. For example, did you know that there are more than 5 million users below the age of ten on Facebook, despite the minimum age requirement being 13? Of these users, over 200,000 of them are aged six or younger. These statistics and others listed below all point to the incredible fact that the average age for a child to start regularly consuming online media is now only 8-years-old."
John Pearce

Learning with 'e's: Learning theories for the digital age - 0 views

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    "I pointed out recently that many of the older theories of pedagogy were formulated in a pre-digital age. I blogged about some of the new theories that seem appropriate as explanatory frameworks for learning in a digital age. These included heutagogy, which describes a self-determined approach to learning, a new model of peer-peer learning known as paragogy, a post modernist 'rhizomatic' learning explanation, distributed learning and connectivist theory, and also a short essay on the digital natives/immigrants discourse. I questioned whether the old models are anachronistic."
John Pearce

The World Is My School: Welcome to the Era of Personalized Learning | World Future Society - 0 views

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    "The vision of a modern education built around personalized learning is not new, but it is definitely tantalizing. Neal Stephenson's novel The Diamond Age (Spectra, 1995) shares a vision of personalized learning in the future via an interactive book that possesses a conversational interface (CI) and "pseudo-intelligence," a kind of artificial intelligence (AI) that is inferior to human intelligence. It's likely that we'll see decent conversational interfaces within the next decade, and certainly applications like Google Voice are moving us much closer to this reality. AI that is capable of directing the learning needs of a human will take much longer, developing in the next 20-50 years, but we can't wait that long for the technology to catch up with education. The need for personalized learning exists in the here and now. So how does one bridge this vision of the future with the realities of the present?"
Narelle Brooksbank

Schools ponder if an Apple a day keeps ignorance at bay - 2 views

  • iPads rock.
    • John Pearce
       
      Kids like Kinnect and X-Box too should we get them for the class too?
  • Get the net: Ringwood North Primary School students (clockwise from front) Charlotte, Cassie, Kaylah, Gemma, Olivia, Zac and Grant who are taking part in the iPad trial
    • John Pearce
       
      Umm these kids have their school, name and picture on the internet, is that "safe"?
  • The downside, he said, was that they were not compatible with the department's ultranet
    • John Pearce
       
      Is this a real problem?
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • She said the iPad was much more exciting than using a pen and paper.
    • John Pearce
       
      So what happens when everyone has an iPad, will they lose the gloss?
    • Narelle Brooksbank
       
      There will always be a better version to stimulate the senses. I envisage body pads that send graphic messages from your brain to your device. When you switch off you get some volts. Shocking thought isn't it!
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    An article from the Age related to the iPad trial in DEECD schools.
John Pearce

The Three Fs for Using Technology in Education - Flexible, Familiar & Frequen... - 1 views

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    "The idea of students sitting in front of PCs learning how to use Word is as dead as the proverbial dead parrot. It is already an antiquated model of learning - like chalk or fountain pens with ink-wells; it has a whiff of the twentieth century about it, rather than preparing our students for the future. Whilst the DfE dithers about what they should do with technology (Mr Gove clearly wants to reboot the chalk and talk bygone age), schools are left with a rapidly changing world, where budgets are at a premium and ICT often stretches what budgets now allow. All the while, students are learning on their iPads, Android tablets and smart phones, writing more in texts and tweets daily than in their collective writing experience during the school week. We aren't harnessing this expertise, never mind guiding it to a place of higher learning!"
John Pearce

Digital-age Learning - giveitaway.net - 0 views

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    An interesting page that looks at learning in the digital age. It includes a neat slideshare and movies as well as reference to SAMR
John Pearce

Explainer: Creative Commons - 0 views

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    "The digital age has presented many and diverse challenges for copyright law. The rapid uptake of digital, networked technologies led to widespread online distribution of content, as well as the emergence of new practices and technologies that enabled digital content to be shared, reused and remixed on an unprecedented scale. But while technology provided the capacity for sharing and reuse of content to occur on a vast scale, legal restrictions on the use of copyright material hampered its negotiability in the digital environment."
John Pearce

Education Database Online Blog - 0 views

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    "Today's students have grown up in the digital age, and are generally accustomed to having questions answered at the click of a button-but that doesn't mean they all know how to conduct meaningful, thorough research. Studies show that while a majority of students turn to search engines when conducting research, most of them are behind the times when it comes to utilizing keywords or smart search methods to retrieve the best possible results. Three in four college students monitored were deemed incapable of conducting a "reasonably well-executed" Google search, and for many educators, the concern is that while students do have a great deal of data at their disposal, most of them don't know the best way to access it. "
John Pearce

Copyright stuck in horse and buggy era - 1 views

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    "Search engines such as Google and popular cloud computing services may have been "sued out of existence" if they started in Australia, while consumers who make remixes or mash-ups of copyright songs and videos are also breaching the law. These are just some of the glaring issues with the Copyright Act that have been raised today by the Australian Law Reform Commission (ALRC) and copyright experts. The ALRC has released a new issues paper for its inquiry into whether Australia's copyright laws have kept up with the digital age."
John Pearce

The (possible) myth of young teachers being tech-savvy - The Hechinger Report - 0 views

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    "Older teachers, who tend to have more experience in the classroom, are more likely to say they feel ready to make use of the reams of data available through digital learning tools, according to a new survey. Younger teachers rate themselves as less ready. More broadly, teachers of all ages report feeling inadequately prepared to use technology to enhance teaching and learning, according to a survey from the Software and Information Industry Association that was released Tuesday at the conference."
John Pearce

Graduating with Technology | LearnStuff - 0 views

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    "At the start of the 21st century only half of all school classrooms had Internet access, compared to 98% today. The proliferation and sheer breadth of accessibility that the Internet offers has in many ways redefined the process of "growing up" - this graphic explores this redefinition and provides insight into not just how we learn stuff, but also what we learn from a young age now that we have computers."
John Pearce

#MysterySkype - Skype in the classroom - 1 views

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    "Mystery Skype is an educational game, invented by teachers, played by two classrooms on Skype. The aim of the game is to guess the location of the other classroom by asking each other questions. It's suitable for all age groups and can be used to teach subjects like geography, history, languages, mathematics and science."
John Pearce

Google launches YouTube curriculum to educate students on digital citizenship (video) -... - 0 views

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    Google has developed an interactive curriculum on YouTube to support teachers in educating students on how to be safe, engaged and confident model netizens. The initiative is aimed at students aged 13 to 17 and will help them to develop digital literacy skills on YouTube that would be applicable across the web. A list of 10 lessons has been devised, in which students can learn about YouTube's policies, how to report content, how to protect their own privacy, and how to be responsible YouTube community members and, in the broader picture, digital citizens. Each lesson comes with guidelines for teachers and ready-made slides for presentation. There's also a YouTube Curriculum channel where videos related to the project will be posted.
John Pearce

Digital Citizenship Resources - 0 views

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    This binder is an attempt to collect and organize Digital Citizenship resources by age (grade level). Often when we think of Digital Citizenship, we only think about the safety aspects of it but being a digital citizen is much more than just being safe. The nine elements of Digital Citizenship as outlined in the book Digital Citizenship in Schools by Mike Ribble and Gerald Bailey are: Digital Etiquette Digital Communication Digital Literacy Digital Access Digital Commerce Digital Law Digital Rights & Responsibilities Digital Health & Wellness Digital Security (self-protection) Source: http://www.digitalcitizenship.net/Nine_Elements.html If you would like to collaborate on this binder, please send the email address that you used when signing up with Live Binders to stmcomputers@gmail.com.
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    This Livebinder is a really comprehensive and up to date, (August 2011) collection of links to Digital Citizenship Resources
John Pearce

5 Ways to Give Your Students More Voice and Choice | Edutopia - 0 views

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    "The idea of co-constructing knowledge with students can be a scary thing for many of us teachers. The age-old role of teacher as orator, director, sage has been handed down for centuries and most of us grew up as students looking to teachers in this way. It's hard to shake. Co-constructing knowledge means giving up the myself and them role of teacher and students and fully embracing the wonder and journey of us."
John Pearce

Blogging With Students | Edublogs Teacher Challenges - 1 views

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    "This series guides you step by step through the process of class and student blogging. Each step includes links to class blogs being used by educators so you can check out how other educators use their blogs.  Many of the examples are from primary grades but the same principles apply regardless of student age including adult learner. The activities can be completed at your own pace and in any order!"
John Pearce

Schools ponder if an Apple a day keeps ignorance at bay - 0 views

  • Professor Chambers said the iPad had at least one standout feature - its very quick start-up time.
    • John Pearce
       
      The thing I like best is that the battery last pretty well all day
  • iPads rock.
    • John Pearce
       
      Yeah but so does a Wii or Kinnect does that mean every kid in class should have one of those too?
  • Education Minister Martin Dixon said the trial had been ''very positive''
    • John Pearce
       
      You can find out more about the trial at http://www.ipadsforeducation.vic.edu.au/
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  • The downside, he said, was that they were not compatible with the department's ultranet (internal internet)
    • John Pearce
       
      Some people think this is not such a bad thing :) What do you think?
  • Get the net: Ringwood North Primary School students (clockwise from front) Charlotte, Cassie, Kaylah, Gemma, Olivia, Zac and Grant who are taking part in the iPad trial. Photo: Craig Sillitoe
    • John Pearce
       
      OK so how did they get the pics of the kids in the iPad?
John Pearce

Infographic: Growing Up With Technology - Getting Smart by Jaclyn Norton - blended lear... - 0 views

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    "Technology is transforming today's educational landscape, reaching children's fingers before they reach their shoes. According to the infographic below from LearnStuff.com, 70 percent of children between the ages of 2-5 can use a computer mouse, while only 11 percent can tie their own shoes. Today's generation is growing up with technology, proving to reject traditional beliefs about how people learn. 90 percent of students think tablets help them study more efficiently, and cause them to read 1.5 more books annually. Read the infographic below to see how students interact with technology along their scholastic path, from grade school to graduation."
John Pearce

Storyful - 0 views

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    "Storyful is the first news agency of the social media age. We help our clients discover, verify and distribute the most valuable content on social media platforms."
John Pearce

Six Reasons Why Kids Should Know How to Blog | MindShift - 0 views

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    "In the digital age, kids need to have an understanding of what it means to be a responsible digital citizen. They need to learn the technical how-to's, as well as a more global comprehension of how to navigate the online world. To that end, Melbourne educator Jenny Luca made a commitment to help her students start blogging and to create ePortfolios. Here are five reasons why, at her school, these skills are now a high priority."
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