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in title, tags, annotations or urlBoise State Mixes Emerging Tech into Education - 0 views
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“What we’re talking about is a completely different shift in that paradigm where you as a learner have some choice," Haskell said. “You can choose your own way through the curriculum. You can choose the activities that you want to participate in and eliminate those that don’t fit into your comfort zone or interest.”
Education Week Teacher: High-Tech Teaching in a Low-Tech Classroom - 0 views
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How can we best use limited resources to support learning and familiarize students with technology?
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get creative with lesson structure
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Take advantage of any time that your students have access to a computer lab with multiple computers.
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YouTube - Ed Tech Nut - 0 views
Google Tutorials - YouTube - 0 views
11 ed-tech buzzwords and phrases to think about | eSchool News - 1 views
Trusting Your Digital Champions | Student Affairs and Technology | Inside Higher Ed - 2 views
A technology 'evangelist' believes colleges can teach their digital natives a thing or two - 2 views
All kids should have a computer science education - Baltimore Sun - 0 views
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"Like most students at the time, I did not have access to computer science classes when I attended Wilde Lake High School in Columbia during the 1980s. I only stumbled upon the field when my high school math teacher recommended that I take a FORTRAN programming course at Howard Community College. I quickly learned that programming was like nothing I had experienced in school before. Whenever I finally solved a problem, there was a deeply satisfying "aha!" moment. As a result, I studied computer science at Harvard and received my Ph.D. in the field from the University of California, Berkeley. Nearly four decades after I took that first FORTRAN class, I'm a professor of computer science and associate dean at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. I was fortunate to have found my passion, even though computer science was not taught at my school. The unfortunate fact is that most K-12 schools still do not teach computer science, and most of today's high school and college students - particularly women - have still had little or no exposure to computational thinking, coding or computer science. There are certainly many students who would make great computer scientists, or who could leverage computing skills to achieve success in any number of other fields, who never take a single related class. Even in Maryland, one of the most technologically advanced states in the nation, only 14 percent of students take a computer science class in high school, and nearly half of the public high schools do not offer any AP computer science classes."
Top 25 EdTech Influencers to Follow on Twitter in 2018 - DisruptorDaily - 2 views
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