Skip to main content

Home/ Cognitive Interfund Transfer/ Group items tagged iBooks

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Bradford Saron

dy/dan On iBooks 2 And iBooks Author - 0 views

  • No new technology is so novel we can't subject it to the question, "How does it change the relationship between student and teacher, student and discipline, one student to another?"
  • What I'm saying, basically, is that I'd have to modify, adapt, and extend the McGraw-Hill iBook in all the same ways that I modified, adapted, and extended the McGraw-Hill print textbook. We'd pull out the iBook just as infrequently as its printed sibling.
  •  
    Not a game changer, at all. 
Bradford Saron

For the Love of Laptops | Scholastic.com - 0 views

  • The iPad is a consumption device. Sure, you can use it for Web browsing, video-watching, or note-taking, but the laptop affords a much greater range of expressive possibilities. Apple’s embrace of digital textbooks reinforces a quaint view of education that transfers agency from learners to publishers. The tools for creating e-books, such as iBooks Author, require Macs, but the laptop cannot read the books it creates, forcing schools to choose between textbooks and computing. Apple has made it clear that education is about content delivery and testing, no longer about the power to be your best.
  • Tablets could have all the functionality of a laptop, but they don’t. Until they do, I recommend that schools invest in laptops for student use.
  •  
    I love Gary Stager. Not only one of the foremost experts on 1:1, but also a master at sarcasm. 
1 - 2 of 2
Showing 20 items per page