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Bradford Saron

What Digital Native children can teach the rest of us about tech - 1 views

  • “Children’s starting point is one step ahead of ours,” Sakaria says. “They are beginning their lives in a world where the Internet is integrated into their everyday experiences – not only through mobile technologies – but soon through the mainstreaming of RFID, NFC and other ‘Internet of things‘ based developments. As a result, digital natives allow us to see unrestrained possibilities for Web-based developments.”
  • The more you give, the more you get. The more you share, the more you are shared.” Today’s children understand that intuitively. They’re also comfortable with shifting between multiple virtual identities via online games and virtual worlds. Meanwhile, ‘mixed reality’ environments like those you experience while playing with a Nintendo Wii or Xbox Kinect, are no novelty to today’s children – they’re just an obvious way to interact with technology.
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    What can we learn from digital natives? 
Bradford Saron

Resistance is Futile - 2 views

  • You can click on the document to the right to read a more detailed examination of each of these qualities of the ‘Native’ information
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    Here David Warlick reflects on his presentation at a Virtual Conference. One of the most interesting parts of the blog post is the detailed examination of the digital "Native," a document into which you may click. See highlight. 
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    Warlick's blog hooked me. Got me fired up cause of the misspellings and understatements. So I read the document on "Native" information. Yeah, I get it, like figuring the Rubik's Cube without directions. Make up your own directions or map already. So, kudos to Warlick. However, "Responsive" seems limiting. How about a venn diagram with an additional word: vigilant? And learning includes more than experience. Otherwise foresight counts for nothing. Enjoy.
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    Go Murphy!
Guy Leavitt

Are We Ready to Stop Labeling Ourselves Digital Immigrants? | A Space for Learning - 1 views

    • Guy Leavitt
       
      It isn't as much about whether or not we consider ourselves digital immigrants.  It's merely a capacity issue.  We can do what "digital natives" can do.  We are simply less sure as it is not a natural part of our learning environment
  • I’ve stopped buying the argument of digital natives versus digital immigrants as a rationale for why we boomers can’t learn to use new technologies. I have, as many baby boomers do, one of those millennial children who can walk through the door and solve a tech glitch in minutes that I’ve been struggling to address. However, eventually, I also. as can a number of boomer peers, use a combination of skills to figure those problems out, too.
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    I'm ready. Are you? 
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    Technology Integration
Bradford Saron

MediaShift . Learning in a Digital Age: Teaching a Different Kind of Literacy | PBS - 0 views

  • Our global environmental, economic and social challenges require non-standardized skills such as creativity, problem-solving and collaboration. Accordingly, these are becoming indispensable skills for learners and workers who hope to stay at the innovative edge of today and tomorrow. While these 21st century skills are essential, they aren't enough. There is a growing expectation for these abilities to be leveraged and expressed using digital tools.
  • As media scholar Henry Jenkins has said: "Traditionally we wouldn't consider someone literate if they could read but not write. And today we shouldn't consider someone literate if they can consume but not produce media."
  • The literacy of the future rests on the ability to decode and construct meaning from one's constantly evolving environment -- whether it's coded orally, in text, images, simulations, or the biosphere itself. Therefore we must be adaptive to our social, economic and political landscape. Those of us living in this digital age are required to learn, unlearn and learn again and again.
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  • "The dogmas of the quiet past are inadequate to the stormy present. The occasion is piled high with difficulty, and we must rise with the occasion. As our case is new, so we must think anew and act anew."
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    What does literacy mean for students in the digital age? 
Bradford Saron

Needed: A New Model of Pedagogy : : Don Tapscott - 1 views

  • We need to move to a customized and collaborative model that embraces 21st century learning technology and techniques.  This is not about technology per se – it’s about a change in the relationship between the student and teacher in the learning process.
  • So Portugal launched the biggest program in the world to equip every child in the country with a laptop and access to the web and the world of collaborative learning. To pay for it, Portugal tapped into both government funds and money from mobile operators who were granted 3G licenses. That subsidized the sale of one million ultra-cheap laptops to teachers, school children, and adult learners. Here’s how it works: If you’re a teacher or a student, you can buy a laptop for 150 Euros (U.S. $207). You also get a discounted rate for broadband Internet access, wired or wireless. Low income students get an even bigger discount, and connected laptops are free or virtually free for the poorest kids. For the youngest students in Grades 1 to 4, the laptop/Internet access deal is even cheaper — 50 Euros for those who can pay; free for those who can’t. That’s only the start: Portugal has invested 400 million Euros to makes sure each classroom has access to the Internet. Just about every classroom in the public system now has an interactive smart board, instead of the old fashioned blackboard.
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    Don Tapscott is the author of a number of books on understanding the digital native. 
Bradford Saron

Cognitive Interfund Transfer: Personal Realization - 0 views

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    New blog post.
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