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Contents contributed and discussions participated by yeuann

yeuann

How I used m-learning to help a P4 boy improve his English - 6 views

mobile Apps iphone m-learning
  • yeuann
     
    (Sorry for this long post, guys, but I thought this real-life experience how m-learning helped transform a P4 boy's reading experience would be very interesting to share!)

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    Last Saturday, I was helping one primary school kid with his English. He HATES reading even though he is a bright boy. So there I was, trying to cajole him into completing just one page of his assigned readings. The way his eyes glazed over at that moment, you'd have thought I had asked him to burn, dissolve and swallow the entire book...

    I was feeling increasingly tired. Suddenly, I remembered about m-learning, so on the spur of the moment, I whipped out my iPhone and tapped a dictionary app (Dictionary.com, if you want to know what it was).

    "Let's look up some words using the dictionary!"

    Oh, he instantly took to it like a fish to water. He chucked his book aside and fingered my iPhone eagerly. At first, I tried to type out the word for him, but he insisted on typing out the words all by himself.

    Seeing an opportunity here, I asked him to spell out the words in FULL without peeking at the auto-listed search results. His spelling is not very good, so this turned out to be a very fun exercise for him.

    Then, I saw that, on his own initiative, he had started exploring all the other related English words that the dictionary suggested. He kept looking at each word, reading out the word and pressing the "Listen" button to see how the word was pronounced as compared to his attempt.

    Lo and behold, we found out that the dictionary app had an interactive speech-to-text feature (complete with animated throbber). So we spoke into the iPhone, and the app returned the word it thought we had spoken.

    My boy was over-the-top with excitement at this point. He grabbed the iPhone and nearly stuffed it into his mouth, blurting out the new word. He was so inspired to improve his spoken English, especially when he saw that I could get the app to recognize my pronunciation accurately, but his pronunciation couldn't make it. So he kept trying and trying, and I heard him modify his pronunciation accordingly till he managed to get the system to recognize his pronunciation correctly.

    Looking at the beaming smile on his face, I could see the sense of achievement and accomplishment on his face, as we exchanged high-fives. Who'd have imagined that a mundane dictionary app could become such an engaging and competitive game?

    For a boy who would dilly-dally for 20 minutes just to look up one word in a paperback dictionary, he learnt 5 or 6 new words entirely on his own with the mobile dictionary app - with childlike enthusiasm.

    M-learning made reading a dictionary become a game for him, causing him to become a highly self-motivated learner.

    ---
    So just want to share some personal reflections with you what I realized about m-learning through this episode:

    1. I think one of the most powerful advantages of m-learning is its sheer accessibility, anytime, anywhere. For children with extremely short attention spans, this is a godsend. You don't need to have to ask the kid to sit still while trying to grab a reference book at the same time.

    2. The types of input and output should, ideally, be _directly_ related to the target area I want my student to improve in. E.g. I saw how the boy modified his pronunciation repeatedly to coax the system to return the desired result.

    An idea of how specific mobile techs can be directly applicable to current cirricula:

    E.g. GPS in Geography lessons could be used to help a student experientially grasp the concept of relative scales on a map. The student walks 1 km and observes that on the Google map, the GPS dot representing his position moves only 1 cm.

    Or in Maths, students could use a theodolite app (they do have an iPhone app for this too) to determine triangulation of structures...

    3. It would be good if the system is able to allow the student to define his own personal goals within a pre-defined set of objectives. This allows for a personal sense of achievement and empowerment, instead of a sense of failure

    It's important to my boy, because I noticed that he is afraid many times to try solving a new problem, telling me that his teacher will scold him if he makes any mistake. As such, he will keep on staring at the same problem for a very long time without trying, even to the point of tears.

    4. While m-learning is very flexible and allows for instant and REAL-time feedback, there is a greater risk of distraction from the intended educational objective at hand. So, I think if we develop m-learning apps for younger kids, they need educators/facilitators to help keep them focused.

    Cheers,
    YA
  • yeuann
     
    Sure, Ashley! Glad you like this... please go ahead and share with your class! :)
yeuann

Lesson Plans - Google Apps for Education - 0 views

  • Easily incorporate Google Apps into your curriculum with these classroom-ready lesson plans.
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    This could be a helpful reference/resource/source of inspiration for IDs and ETs.
yeuann

The Google+ Project - 1 views

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    Fascinating demo of Google+ features...  one of the neatest features I've seen in there is the "Hangouts" feature. Then Google+'s tagline caught my eyes. "It doesn't matter WHAT you do. It matters WHO you do it with." Reminded me about the power and priority of building closer relationships with your students (akin to Socrates and his disciples) to help make them more receptive to what you want to share with them. So just thinking: How can we help teachers tap into the trend of Google+ and other social networks to help their students in their learning and education?
yeuann

Augmented Reality (AR) in Education « Learning Technologies - 0 views

  • Although AR is not new, it is still in infancy especially applying in education.  As an educator, I think AR has great potentials in teaching and learning. We should examine the impact of AR on society, evaluate the implications of AR for education, and explore the integration of AR applications into teaching and learning environments.  To learn more about AR and its potentials and future in teaching and learning, I recommend the following videos.
yeuann

Kitteh Learns to Fish on the iPad - 1 views

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    If a kitten can learn with an iPad… how much more can we learn?  :D
yeuann

Search Engines Change How Memory Works | Wired Science | Wired.com - 0 views

  • Thanks to search engines, most simple facts don’t need to be remembered. They can be accessed with a few keystrokes, plucked from ubiquitous server-stored external memory — and that may be changing how our own memories are maintained. A study of 46 college students found lower rates of recall on newly-learned facts when students thought those facts were saved on a computer for later recovery.
  • One small but intriguing effect in the new study involved students who were less able to identify subtly manipulated facts, such as a changed name or date, when drawing on memories they thought were saved online.
yeuann

mrbrown: L'infantile terrible of Singapore: the mrbrown show: the iPad army - 1 views

  • Time for BMT for you new generation iPad soldiers of tomorrow! Fall in at mrbrownshow.com!
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    A mrbrown episode to end your day with a laugh... :D
yeuann

gdata-objectivec-client - Google Data APIs Objective-C Client Library - Google Project ... - 1 views

  • The Google Data APIs Objective-C Client Library provides an iPhone static library, a Mac OS X framework, and source code that make it easy to access data through Google Data APIs. To get started with Google data APIs and the Objective-C Client Library, look at the overview slides, read the introduction and study the example applications.
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    This may be useful for those who are planning to write iPhone / iPad apps using Objective-C.
yeuann

Automatic mobile rendering for Google Sites - Docs Blog - 3 views

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    I tried testing this feature for my sample e-portfolio on my iPhone. Looks promising...
yeuann

Beautiful Heat Maps of Flickr Photographs and Twitter Tweets - 0 views

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    Maybe this isn't very relevant to anything we're doing, but it's beautiful! :)
yeuann

Unofficial Google Sites Help / FAQ - 3 views

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    Hi ETs, I came across this unofficial help centre for Google Sites. It has more tips and tricks that more tech-savvy teachers may like to use. What if we included a link to this site in our NIEFolio Help site?
yeuann

Sir Ken Robinson: Bring on the learning revolution! | Video on TED.com - 2 views

  • In this poignant, funny follow-up to his fabled 2006 talk, Sir Ken Robinson makes the case for a radical shift from standardized schools to personalized learning -- creating conditions where kids' natural talents can flourish.
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    A great talk (with subtitles too).
yeuann

Harnessing the Power of Feedback Loops | Magazine - 0 views

  • The signs leverage what’s called a feedback loop, a profoundly effective tool for changing behavior. The basic premise is simple. Provide people with information about their actions in real time (or something close to it), then give them an opportunity to change those actions, pushing them toward better behaviors. Action, information, reaction. It’s the operating principle behind a home thermostat, which fires the furnace to maintain a specific temperature, or the consumption display in a Toyota Prius, which tends to turn drivers into so-called hypermilers trying to wring every last mile from the gas tank. But the simplicity of feedback loops is deceptive. They are in fact powerful tools that can help people change bad behavior patterns, even those that seem intractable. Just as important, they can be used to encourage good habits, turning progress itself into a reward. In other words, feedback loops change human behavior. And thanks to an explosion of new technology, the opportunity to put them into action in nearly every part of our lives is quickly becoming a reality.
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    How can we leverage on feedback loops to enhance learning via technology?
yeuann

Kinect Hackers Are Changing the Future of Robotics | Magazine - 0 views

  • On November 4, a solution was discovered—in a videogame. That’s the day Microsoft released the Kinect for Xbox 360, a $150 add-on that allows players to direct the action in a game simply by moving their bodies. Most of the world focused on the controller-free interface, but roboticists saw something else entirely: an affordable, lightweight camera that could capture 3-D images in real time.
  • When DIYers combine those cheap, powerful tools with the collaborative potential of the Internet, they can come up with the kinds of innovations that once sprang only from big-budget R&D labs. In 2009, a PhD student named Daniel Reetz turned two Canon PowerShot A590s into an improvised high-speed book scanner. He detailed the project on a website, DIYbookscanner.org, where readers have since posted hundreds of tweaks, suggestions, upgrades, and entirely new designs. The open source MPGuino project, which uses an Arduino microcontroller to track gas consumption as you drive, has inspired a small community of fans who help refine and customize the gizmo.
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    An article on how the Kinect could help in education.
yeuann

FREE PowerPoint Twitter Tools | SAP Web 2.0 - 0 views

  • Ever wanted to make presentations a more interactive, Web 2.0 experience? The PowerPoint Twitter Tools prototypes are now available. Created using SAP BusinessObjects Xcelsius (but requiring only PowerPoint for Windows and Adobe Flash to run), the twitter tools allow presenters to see and react to tweets in real-time, embedded directly within their presentations, either as a ticker or refreshable comment page.
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    Embed real-time tweets and even real-time voting via Twitter in your Powerpoint presentations...
yeuann

How to use TeamViewer to remote-control your desktop from outside the NIE network - 9 views

cel remote-desktop
  • yeuann
     
    TeamViewer makes use of normal HTTP traffic (standard port 80), so you don't need to configure proxy servers or have to write in to request opening of any ports.

    Of course the catch is slightly lower performance, but if you ever need to remote-login to your work desktop from home or even your iPhone, this is how you can do it:

    Install TeamViewer on your work computer and your home computer / iPhone / iPad (http://www.teamviewer.com/en/download/index.aspx).
    To quickly set up a connection, just read http://www.teamviewer.com/en/help/firststeps.aspx

    That's it. I've tested TeamViewer via my 3G connection from outside the NIE network, and I'm able to easily remote-in to the work computer, which allows me to access the internal NIE network.

    Hope this helps!
  • yeuann
     
    Welcome, Choo! I do find it slower too, but the connection is more reliable. You can try reducing the colour depth / increase compression / decrease the screen resolution. :)
yeuann

Contemplative Computing - 0 views

  • So can computers actually help improve our concentration and contemplation, instead of leading us into distraction? The problem, as Pang puts it, is that "Technologies that were supposed to help us think better, work more efficiently, and connect more meaningfully with others now interrupt us, divide our attention, and stretch us thin."
  • In the paper he outlines give principles of contemplative computing; Build awareness through DIY and self-experimentation Recognize that we are cyborgs, and humans Create rewarding challenges Support mind-wandering Treat flow as a means, not an end
  • Pang suggests that we don't have to choose between information technology and contemplation, and suggests contemplative computing as a new way forward. He describes contemplative computing as something you do, not a product. But the principles of contemplative computing could be extending to application design. "The problem is that today's information technologies are often poorly-designed and thoughtlessly used: they're like unreliable prosthetics that we have to depend on, but can't quite control or trust," Pang says.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • You might be surprised to see "support mind wandering" on the list. But Pang makes a distinction between mind wandering and distraction, and points out the value creative value of mind wandering and day dreaming (for more on this subject, check out this article by Jonah Lehrer, though Lehrer doesn't really make the distinction between distraction and mind wandering).
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    A fascinating post on "contemplative computing", where computing can be used to facilitate and even enhance creative education/workflow process... where the software would allow you to try out multiple versions of a music composition / essay / video seamlessly... while enabling you to wander around exploring on relevant topics on Wikipedia without getting distracted off-topic! :)
yeuann

MIT OpenCourseWare - 0 views

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    MIT OpenCourseWare is a free publication of MIT course materials that reflects almost all the undergraduate and graduate subjects taught at MIT.
yeuann

dig.ccmixter "You already have permission…" - 1 views

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    Open-source muzak! :)
yeuann

Flipboard for iPad - 0 views

  • Named Apple's iPad App of the Year and one of TIME's top 50 innovations of 2010, Flipboard is a fast, beautiful way to flip through the news, photos, videos, and updates your friends are sharing on Facebook, Twitter, Google Reader, Flickr, and Instagram. See your social media in a magazine layout that is easy to scan and fun to read.
  • Share articles and photos, comment on posts, and like or favorite anything. Customize your Flipboard with sections created from your favorite news, people, blogs, and topics.
  • Reviews:- "Flipboard is a fantastic iPad app that makes everything you read on the Web better than it is by itself. I can't recommend it highly enough." Macworld- "Flipboard offers iPad users an entirely original alternative to browsing the Web for news; its magazine-style layouts and breathtaking use of photos and white space show the way forward for digital media." PCMag.com- "Flipping for Flipboard: The brilliant iPad app that has changed the way I read the news." SLATE- "Flipboard begins to imagine an entirely new way of accessing the social Web." New York Times- "Stop. Put down this computer, go pick up your iPad and come back here. Now go get this app: Flipboard. Why? It's pretty awesome." Wired.com- "I am thoroughly impressed from our first run with Flipboard. It is simply gorgeous and a pleasure to browse." Mashable - "Flipboard turns Facebook updates, tweets into digital magazine" USA Today
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    What if I could link my e-portfolio to Flipboard? And even view others' e-portfolios for a given topic on my Flipboard - all automagically arranged to look like a glossy magazine? How would that inspire our teachers to update their e-portfolios accordingly?
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