Skip to main content

Home/ Lo mejor de la Blogosfera Educativa/ Group items tagged mobile education

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Luciano Ferrer

Do mobile devices in the classroom really improve learning outcomes? - 0 views

  •  
    Artículo en inglés... "Mobile devices as teaching tools are becoming a more and more common part of the American education experience in classrooms, from preschool through graduate school. A recent Pew Research Center survey found that 58% of U.S. teachers own smartphones - 10 percentage points higher than the national average for adults. Those teachers are building that tech-savviness into their lesson plans, too, by embracing bring-your-own-device policies and leading the push for an iPad for every student. In 2013, an estimated 25% of U.S. schools had BYOD policies in place and it's reasonable to assume those numbers have risen in the past two years. ..."
  •  
    Artículo en inglés... "Mobile devices as teaching tools are becoming a more and more common part of the American education experience in classrooms, from preschool through graduate school. A recent Pew Research Center survey found that 58% of U.S. teachers own smartphones - 10 percentage points higher than the national average for adults. Those teachers are building that tech-savviness into their lesson plans, too, by embracing bring-your-own-device policies and leading the push for an iPad for every student. In 2013, an estimated 25% of U.S. schools had BYOD policies in place and it's reasonable to assume those numbers have risen in the past two years. ..."
Luciano Ferrer

Show What You Know Using Web & Mobile Apps - Version 4 - Learning in Hand - 2 views

  •  
    "Nowadays teachers and students have a variety of ways to show what they know and to express themselves. Take a look at some of the hottest online and mobile tools for showing, explaining, and retelling in my infographic, "Show What You Know Using Web & Mobile Apps." These web and iPad apps can turn students into teachers and teachers into super-teachers! Furthermore, most of the apps listed in the infographic are free of charge. Updated February 2015 with 11 of the 44 apps in "Show What You Know" replaced with even better apps! New additions include Chatterpix Kids, RecorderHQ, Vocaroo (to replace the defunct RecordMP3), Shadow Puppet Edu, Pixlr, TeleStory, Toontastic (now that it's 100% free), and Purpose Games. You can download the infographic as a PDF by clicking the image below. Web links and app names are hyperlinked within the PDF for one-click access to the apps and resources."
anonymous

Educational Technology and Mobile Learning - 3 views

  •  
    A resource of free educational web tools and mobile apps for educators.
anonymous

edshelf | Reviews & recommendations of tools for education - 6 views

  •  
    edshelf is a directory of digital tools for educators Discover new tools See what other educators use Rate and review your favorite tools
  •  
    "A discovery engine of websites, mobile apps, desktop programs, and electronic products for teaching and learning. First time here?"
Luciano Ferrer

16 Great Educational Web Tools and Apps for Inquiry-based Learning ~ Educational Techno... - 4 views

  •  
    "As a learning strategy, inquiry-based learning is all about learners constructing their own understanding and knowledge through asking questions. Unlike traditional learning methods that focus primarily on drills, memorization and rote learning, inquiry-based learning is essentially student-centered. It starts with posing questions and directly involves students in challenging hands-on activities that drive students to ask more questions and explore different learning paths. In today's post, we have assembled a collection of some useful web tools and apps that support the ethos of inquiry-based learning. Using these tools will enable students to engage in a wide range of learning tasks that are all driven by a sense of inquiry and questioning."
  •  
    "As a learning strategy, inquiry-based learning is all about learners constructing their own understanding and knowledge through asking questions. Unlike traditional learning methods that focus primarily on drills, memorization and rote learning, inquiry-based learning is essentially student-centered. It starts with posing questions and directly involves students in challenging hands-on activities that drive students to ask more questions and explore different learning paths. In today's post, we have assembled a collection of some useful web tools and apps that support the ethos of inquiry-based learning. Using these tools will enable students to engage in a wide range of learning tasks that are all driven by a sense of inquiry and questioning."
Luciano Ferrer

How to Use Mobile Apps to Spot the Space Station and Iridium Flares - 1 views

  •  
    Aplicaciones móviles para seguir el paso de la estación espacial internacional ISS y satélites Iridium
  •  
    Aplicaciones móviles para seguir el paso de la estación espacial internacional ISS y satélites Iridium
Luciano Ferrer

Eleven Ways to Improve Online Classes - 0 views

  •  
    "It has me thinking about what it would mean to improve online classes. A few ideas come to mind: Use multiple platforms. I'm not against using an LMS as a central hub. However, I think it's valuable to experiment with the types of productivity tools you will actually use outside of a classroom. Use Google Docs to share ideas, create surveys, and ask questions. Use Google Hangouts to meet as a group. Go project-based. I haven't figured this out entirely with my first class but my hope is that we can go fully project-based in the same way that my face-to-face class is. In fact, the asynchronous nature of online classes actually means there is a better potential of creating a project-based culture that mirrors the way people actually work on projects. Make something together. I use a collaboration grid with co-creating and communicating on separate spectrums (x-axis) and multimedia and text on another spectrum (y-axis). This has been an effective way to think through collaborative tools that allow students to co-create. Embrace a synchronous/asynchronous blend: I love using Voxer because students can speak back and forth in the moment. However, if they miss it, they can listen to it later. The same is true of using a Google Hangouts On Air. Make it more connective. We tend to treat online instruction as if it is a linear process and we don't do enough to link things back and forth and connect ideas, resources, discussions and content creation in a seamless, back-and-forth nature. Incorporate multimedia. It's a simple idea, but I create a short video at the beginning of each week and I encourage students to create video and audio as well. This has a way of making things more concrete. There's something deeply human about hearing an actual human voice. I know, crazy, right? Go mobile. I don't simply mean use a smart phone. I mean assign some things that allow students to get out in the world and create videos, snap pictures,
  •  
    "It has me thinking about what it would mean to improve online classes. A few ideas come to mind: Use multiple platforms. I'm not against using an LMS as a central hub. However, I think it's valuable to experiment with the types of productivity tools you will actually use outside of a classroom. Use Google Docs to share ideas, create surveys, and ask questions. Use Google Hangouts to meet as a group. Go project-based. I haven't figured this out entirely with my first class but my hope is that we can go fully project-based in the same way that my face-to-face class is. In fact, the asynchronous nature of online classes actually means there is a better potential of creating a project-based culture that mirrors the way people actually work on projects. Make something together. I use a collaboration grid with co-creating and communicating on separate spectrums (x-axis) and multimedia and text on another spectrum (y-axis). This has been an effective way to think through collaborative tools that allow students to co-create. Embrace a synchronous/asynchronous blend: I love using Voxer because students can speak back and forth in the moment. However, if they miss it, they can listen to it later. The same is true of using a Google Hangouts On Air. Make it more connective. We tend to treat online instruction as if it is a linear process and we don't do enough to link things back and forth and connect ideas, resources, discussions and content creation in a seamless, back-and-forth nature. Incorporate multimedia. It's a simple idea, but I create a short video at the beginning of each week and I encourage students to create video and audio as well. This has a way of making things more concrete. There's something deeply human about hearing an actual human voice. I know, crazy, right? Go mobile. I don't simply mean use a smart phone. I mean assign some things that allow students to get out in the world and create videos, snap pictures,
M Jesús García San Martín

¿Tienes Android? Entonces, ya puedes usarlo para aprender inglés - 5 views

  •  
    Hace un rato estaba leyendo esta entrada en el blog Educational Technology and Mobile Learning sobre Apps gratuitas para Android para aprender inglés. Concretamente, ofrece 15 apps gratuitas para que cualquiera que desee aprender inglés pueda usar en su aprendizaje; son muy variadas y se pueden utilizar para diferentes destrezas, como la comprensión y la expresión oral, además de para trabajar contenidos léxicos y gramaticales, como las question tags o los verbos frasales.
Luciano Ferrer

What's Wrong With Latin American Early Education - 0 views

  •  
    "Back in the 1980s, a group of social workers in Jamaica visited low-income homes one hour a week for two years, bearing age-appropriate toys for the kids and advice on child rearing for the parents. Researchers tracked the outcomes, and a generation later, the results are in. The children whose homes were visited by social workers became adults who earn wages that are 25 percent higher than those earned by peers who had not been visited. Their I.Q.s are an average seven points higher, and they are less likely to resort to crime or suffer from depression. Other studies, including several recent ones in the United States, have shown similar results, contributing to a consensus on the importance of early childhood development that has led governments around the world to increase spending on the first five years of life. In Latin America and the Caribbean, a region of longstanding social and economic inequality, several countries have been especially ambitious. Brazil and Chile doubled the coverage of day care services over the past decade, while in Ecuador they grew sixfold. These investments build on historic gains in child nutrition and health. But while Latin American children are now healthier and more likely to attend preschool, they still lag far behind in learning, particularly in the areas of language and cognition, when compared with their counterparts in wealthy countries. What are we doing wrong? ..."
  •  
    "Back in the 1980s, a group of social workers in Jamaica visited low-income homes one hour a week for two years, bearing age-appropriate toys for the kids and advice on child rearing for the parents. Researchers tracked the outcomes, and a generation later, the results are in. The children whose homes were visited by social workers became adults who earn wages that are 25 percent higher than those earned by peers who had not been visited. Their I.Q.s are an average seven points higher, and they are less likely to resort to crime or suffer from depression. Other studies, including several recent ones in the United States, have shown similar results, contributing to a consensus on the importance of early childhood development that has led governments around the world to increase spending on the first five years of life. In Latin America and the Caribbean, a region of longstanding social and economic inequality, several countries have been especially ambitious. Brazil and Chile doubled the coverage of day care services over the past decade, while in Ecuador they grew sixfold. These investments build on historic gains in child nutrition and health. But while Latin American children are now healthier and more likely to attend preschool, they still lag far behind in learning, particularly in the areas of language and cognition, when compared with their counterparts in wealthy countries. What are we doing wrong? ..."
Luciano Ferrer

Entrevista a Nicholas Burbules | Webinar 2012 | Aprendizaje Ubicuo - 1 views

  •  
    "Nicholas Burbules es Doctor en Filosofía de la Educación de la Universidad de Stanford y se desempeña como profesor en el departamento de Estudios en Política educativa en la Universidad de Illinois, Urbana/Champaign. Sus proyectos actuales focalizan en cuestiones de ética y política relacionados con las tecnologías en educación, la realidad virtual, el trabajo colaborativo y el diálogo en "terceros espacios". Ha publicado numerosos libros, entre los que se destaca "Tecnologías de la información en educación: riesgos y promesas", de 1999. En 2006 creó el Instituto de Aprendizaje Ubicuo (ULI, su sigla en inglés), dependiente del College of Education de la Universidad de Illinois, con el objetivo de investigar lo que considera un nuevo paradigma educativo posibilitado, en gran parte, por los nuevos medios digitales. Entrevista a Nicholas Burbules realizada en las oficinas de IIPE-UNESCO Buenos Aires en junio de 2011."
Luciano Ferrer

All the World's Immigration Visualized in one interactive Map - 1 views

  •  
    "This map shows the estimated net immigration (inflows minus outflows) by origin and destination country between 2010 and 2015. Blue circles = positive net migration (more inflows). Red circles = negative net migration (more outflows). Each yellow dot represents 1,000 people. Hover over a circle to see that country's total net migration between 2010 and 2015. Click a circle (or tap the circle twice on mobile) to view only the migration flows in and out of that country. Country-to-country net migration (2010-2015)"
Luciano Ferrer

Coal Knew, Too - 0 views

  •  
    "A newly unearthed journal from 1966 shows the coal industry, like the oil industry, was long aware of the threat of climate change. "Exxon knew." Thanks to the work of activists and journalists, those two words have rocked the politics of climate change in recent years, as investigations revealed the extent to which giants like Exxon Mobil and Shell were aware of the danger of rising greenhouse gas emissions even as they undermined the work of scientists. But the coal industry knew, too - as early as 1966, a newly unearthed journal shows."
Luciano Ferrer

A Thread from @manuelabat: "El tema de la privacidad es bastante nuevo en el ... - 0 views

  •  
    "El tema de la privacidad es bastante nuevo en el mundo del automóvil, pero hay algunas preocupaciones sobre la privacidad relacionadas con los coches conectados y automatizados (CAVs). Hoy es sábado sabadete, así que toca hilo sobre #privacidad y #eticadelosdatos. Basado en investigaciones (en curso) de @ricardovinuesa y una servidora. ¿Sabías que TESLA ganó el premio Gran Hermano en Alemania por no tomarse en serio la privacidad? TESLA recibió este premio por la vigilancia de forma extensiva y perpetua que sus coches hacen a sus pasajeros y a los coches que les rodean. https://bigbrotherawards.de/en/2020/mobility-tesla … Tesla es un coche autónomo que tiene muchos sensores y cámaras. Vigila a su entorno y a los conductores de manera permanente."
1 - 20 of 77 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page