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rachel vartanian

Are You Ready for Mobile Learning? Educase - 0 views

  • Clark Quinn, professor, author, and expert in computer-based education, defined mobile learning as the intersection of mobile computing (the application of small, portable, and wireless computing and comm
  • unication devices) and e-learning (learning facilitated and supported through the use of information and communic
  • ations technology).
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  • Instructional Uses. With the iPod, students can download podcasts of relevant instructional material along with audio and video lectures. Although the early devices have rather small screens, future versions probably will have bigger screens so that users can read e-books on them.
  • Pros. With 87 percent of the market share, the iPod has already proven its popularity with students.
  • Instructional Uses. Students can use an MP3 player to download and listen to podcasts and audio lectures.
  • E-book readers are used to download text-based materials. They can store hundreds of e-books, newspapers, and magazines. Magnification and highlighting features facilitate easy reading and marking of texts, and full-text search makes it easy to find specific passages.
  • Instructional Uses. Students can use an e-book reader to download and store text-based instructional materials and electronic textbooks; read resources on demand; and conduct research.
  • Benefits: Great for people on the go. Anytime, anywhere access to content. Can enhance interaction between and among students and instructors. Great for just-in-time training or review of content. Can enhance student-centered learning. Can appeal to tech-savvy students because of the media-rich environment. Support differentiation of student learning needs and personalized learning.7 Reduce cultural and communication barriers between faculty and students by using communication channels that students like.8 Facilitate collaboration through synchronous and asynchronous communication.Challenges: May make it easier to cheat. Could give tech-savvy students an advantage over non-technical students. Can create a feeling of isolation or of being out-of-the-loop for non-techies. May require media to be reformatted or offered in multiple formats. Might render some content outdated because of rapid upgrades—here today, outdated tomorrow. Could require additional learning curve for non-technical students and faculty. May be used as a new high-tech package for the same old dull and boring content.
  • capitalize on the flexibility and freedom afforded by these devices.
  • wherever and whenever they need it.
  • Learning will center on the individual learner's environment rather than the classroom. Learning will involve learners making meaningful connections to resources and other people. The ability to instantly publish their observations and reflections as digital media will empower learners to become investigators of their own environments. The ability to easily capture and record life events will assist learners in recall and collaborative reflection. Distributed collaboration and mobile team opportunities will be greatly enhanced.
  • Behaviorism: Quick feedback or reinforcement can be facilitated through mobile devices. Constructivism: Mobile devices enable immersive experiences such as those provided by simulations or games. Situated learning: Learners can take mobile devices into authentic learning environments or "context-aware" environments, such as specially equipped museums. Collaborative learning: Mobile devices provide a handy additional means of communication and a portable means of electronic information gathering and sharing. Informal/lifelong learning: Mobile devices accompany users in their everyday experiences and become a convenient source of information or means of communication that assists with learning. Support/coordination: Mobile devices provide just-in-time access to learning resources, news, information, planners, address books, calculators, and so forth.
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    This article provides some great information and raises interesting questions regarding the pedagogical reasoning and rationale for using mobile devices in the classroom.  The article lists various types of mobile devices and lays out their instructional uses, pros, and cons.  In addition, I found the section titled "Benefits and Challenges of Mobile Learning" and "Pedagogical Implications" important for our evaluation considerations in the conclusion of our project. 
Ryan B

6 Reasons Why Students Need 21st-Century Skills | edtechdigest.com - 0 views

  • 5. Facebook is a country. With over 500 million users as of July 2010, Facebook, were it a country, would be the 4th largest in the world. If you are an English-speaking American who has lived most of your life in one small town, how would you like to be dropped off on a street corner in China to find your way? You might want to learn the language and know a few of the local customs before you set out to do much of anything.
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    There is a shift in how people get jobs, how companies advertise, how new ventures present themselves, how corporations gain business, how students learn, how everything works. More ways why students need 21st-century skills:
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    SIG 1 Context: K-12 setting
Ryan B

About Skype in the classroom | Skype Education - 0 views

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    This site gives more ideas on how to use Skype in the classroom. Introduce your students to new ways of seeing the world with a cultural exchange. Bring language to life with real-life conversations where students can practice a new language with a class of native speakers. And More!
rachel vartanian

Turning Students into Teachers - 0 views

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    This post provides examples of ways that students can teach concepts sing iPad apps. The author argues that people learn better when they do the teaching themselves. Some of the examples include: creating tutorials with apps like ShowMe and participation with the new VoiceThread app.
Jon Lind

For Teachers | School and Teacher Donations - 1 views

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    This is a very interesting website that connects donors with teachers and students in need of equipment. Teachers post a project asking for donations, donors choose which projects to fund, and then students send feedback about what they accomplished with the devices. Could be an excellent resource for teachers looking for alternative funding for specific projects. Sig1 Context: Funding
D L

Educators Evaluate Learning Benefits of iPad - 2 views

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    This article addresses the piloting of iPads and questions whether they are valuable beyond student engagement and motivation. The article further questions whether the iPad is best as a 1:1 technology or part of a stable of classroom tools. Teachers "frustrated at first" but are finding innovative ways to integrate the iPad into the curriculum. Straightforward information for schools looking at implementing a pilot program. SIG 1 Context: mobile devices, iPad, student engagement,
D L

Putting the iPad to Work in Elementary Classrooms - 2 views

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    This article describes the use of iPads in the elementary school to increase student engagement. Teacher discusses the pilot program which was started in an LD classroom and then expanded. She warns that you have to do your "homework" and analyze apps prior to handing an iPad to a student. SIG 1 context: mobile devices, apps, iPad, pilot programs,
D L

mobile learning and augmented reality - 0 views

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    I am not sure I can access this article. It is about digital inclusion of elementary deaf students using augmented reality on portable devices. This will be a valuable resource down the road for teachers interested in using mobile devices for "digital inclusion" of students with diverse needs. SIG1 context: mobile devices, elementary, differentiated
D L

Elementary School Students get "tech"nical with iPads - 0 views

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    A teacher in AL discusses the use of iPads as learning tools and as a means to keep students on a level playing field. SIG 1 context: mobile devices, iPads, elementary
D L

Ipad Adventure @ Lindale Elementary - 0 views

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    Short video featuring 1st grade students using iPads for learning. This is about a 3 minute video showcasing students using apps for reading, spelling, writing, geography and math. The end of the video lists the app name. This is useful for anyone teaching in the primary grades. SIG 1 Context: mobile devices, iPad, apps, exploration
D L

An iPad in Every Classroom: Teacher Tested Student Approved - 1 views

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    This is a teacher blog about the pro's and con's of iPads and other mobile devices for the classroom. I think this is a great article because it is from an educator in the trenches experience with the iPad. This is valuable to our SIG because it focuses on apps as a solution to any limitation of the iPad. SIG1Context: Rachel and I may want to look at this as introduction to apps in general.
D L

Education 2020 - 3 views

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    This site discussed two integrated augmented reality learning experiences for students in grades 3-5. Included was a description of "School in the Park." This website outlines for educators two different ways to integrate hand held devices into the curriculum and provide a real world experience for students SIG 1 Context: mobile devices, augmented reality, cross-curricular, exploration, divide, Dawn LeComte
D L

iPads for all - 2 views

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    Article describes a 1:1 initiative for all students in a rural Vermont town. Principal observes 67% decrease in disciplinary actions. iPad battles Net book and wins in terms of longer battery life and reduced boot up time. Gives some ideas although not definitively outlined about using iPads in the curriculum. More anectodal evidence supporting the iPad. SIG 1Context: funding, collaboration, pilot programs, connection, cross curricular, classroom, divide
D L

Sending iPads home - 2 views

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    A principal blogs about problems and limitations with sending iPads home as a way to give access to all students. *****Jon: This is a brief blog, I think addressing your Digital Divide concerns.*****
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    Thanks Dawn. This provides good insight from an "on the ground" source.
Jon Lind

Does BYOD Solve or Worsen K-12 Tech Woes? - 0 views

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    This article first summarizes an argument by Gary Stager that byod is a bad idea because it makes teachers tailor instruction to the weakest device, highlights socioeconomic disparities in students, and "contributes to the growing narrative that education is not worthy of investment." The author goes on to acknowledge the problems Stager brings up, while describing the benefits of byod: driving schools to cloud computing rather than native apps, student ownershp of work and initiative to figure out solutions, etc. Thoughtful article that provides maybe raises more questions than it answers. Sig1 Context: byod, digital divide
D L

There's a special app for that... - 1 views

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    This website includes links to apps for students with learning disabilities. Specifically this article discusses mind mapping apps and provides links to apps based on a shared criteria. Apps included are most beneficial to teachers at the middle or high school level. SIG1 Context: apps for exploration, creation, differentiated instruction, Dawn LeComte *** Jon I don't know if this is of interest to you**
D L

Less Than a Class Set by Kristin Redington Bennett - 5 views

This is a useful article for teachers who don't have a class set of iPads to create a 1:1 scenario.

school mobile devices iPads differentiated instruction exploration collaboration connection

Ryan B

Learning and Teaching with iPads: Creating iBooks or eBook Apps - 0 views

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    The iPad is a great tool for students to create and publish their own books. There are now a number of Apps that can be used on the iPad to create your own iBook or eBook App.
rachel vartanian

The Creativity Crisis: Why American Schools Need Design - Laura Seargeant Richardson - ... - 1 views

  • Chinese faculty actually laughed when they found out the U.S. education trends were in "standardized curriculum, rote memorization, and nationalized testing."
  • The creative jobs that drive innovation are now the highest 'value added' jobs in the world—the real creators of wealth. If states are going to stay competitive, they have to ... develop a workforce capable of doing creative work."
  • Ideal job candidates at these companies must now show they can "think with their hands" by having expertise or a second major in a musical instrument, auto repair, or sculpture
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  • The truth is that our biggest innovations come from the combination of art and science, and there are many who agree.
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    This article discusses the creativity crisis in terms of STEM schools failing in this area.  I have highlighted some interesting quotes that will support our argument that creativity is necessary if students are going to be globally competitive.
rachel vartanian

44% of Kids Want an iPad for Christmas - 0 views

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    This is a bit off topic, but I thought these Nielsen statistics are interesting in terms of student engagement. This data can strengthen the argument that iPads can solve the engagement problem.
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