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Bradford Saron

Why I still want MS and HS to have a Laptop | The Thinking Stick - 1 views

  • My Perfect School I’ve been asked on several occasions what my perfect school looks like. Today as it stands in January 2012 this would be my perfect school. PreK - 1st Grade: 1 iPad for every two students: iPads stay at school owned and managed by the school. 2 - 3rd Grade: 1:1 iPad program: Each student has their own iPad and iPads primarily stay at school and can be checked out by the parents to take home if need/wanted. 4th Grade: 1:1 iPad and 1:1 Laptop: The iPads are allowed to be taken home and are tied to a guardians account. The school purchases a set of “standard apps” anything above that is up to the parents. The laptops stay at school and can be checked out by the parents to take home if need/wanted. 5th Grade: 1:1 iPad and 1:1 Laptop: Same as 4th grade however the students at some point during the year gain the responsibility of taking both the iPad and the Laptop home. 5th Grade is a great time to do this because: In 5th grade students still only have one classroom teacher. This sense of classroom community is a great place to talk about responsibility and practice it. A good time to practice taking care of your devices before hitting middle school where students have 4 to 6 different classes in 4 to 6 different classrooms with 4 to 6 different teachers. Allow students to learn to organize their digital lives so they are not trying to figure this out at the same time they are learning a new “schooling” system of lockers, freedom and multiple classes. 6 -12th Grade: 1:1 iPad and 1:1 Laptop: Both devices become the sole responsibility of the student. The school loads a “standard” set of software on all devices and the students/parents are responsible for managing the rest.
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    Utecht with his views on iPads vs laptops in a 1:1 environment. 
Bradford Saron

16 Educational Apps for iPad that offer Video Out | DigMo! - 0 views

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    I know that there are a number of Ipad users out there. Let me know if any of these apps are worthwhile. 
Bradford Saron

The Essential iPad Guide for Principals - Updated « Eduleadership - Justin Ba... - 0 views

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    For all of you IPad users (myself included now!)
Bradford Saron

The Best iPad Apps - 0 views

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    Great resource for Ipad users. 
Bradford Saron

Preparing Your School for an iPad Implementation - iPads in Education - 2 views

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    Thoughtful and pretty complete. Anyone have any additions? 
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    That is a great list. We focused on the infrastructure and app management before we bought our cart of IPads, but didn't think much about the in class use. Our plan was to buy them, get them in the hands of the power users (kids and staff), and then work on the classroom use.
Paul Blanford

Great iPAD Resources - 2 views

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    This is a great resource for people looking for apps and ideas for iPAD use in the classroom.
Bradford Saron

Interesting Ways | edte.ch - 1 views

  • Use the iPad in the Classroom
    • Bradford Saron
       
      Click here. 
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    If you haven't found this website, get ready to spend an hour and a half browsing through this awesome list of "Interesting ways. . ." to use technology in the classroom. My favorite is the "Use the iPad in the classroom.
Guy Leavitt

iPads help Salem County students learn | NJ.com - 1 views

  • Superintendents say they are attracted to the devices for two reasons: It’s user friendly and inexpensive compared to other technology like laptops.
    • Guy Leavitt
       
      high touch, high interest learning
  • apToTalk, a free app, turns the iPad into an augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) device. Kidd said children who have a hard time with speaking can use the application to tap on a picture and the iPad will say the word.
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    Ways I-pads are being used
Robert Slane

Education Week: Rethinking Testing in the Age of the iPad - 0 views

  • But those schools and classrooms that have embraced mobile devices have seen them as a catalyst for change in teaching, learning, and assessment, says Julie Evans, the chief executive officer of the Irvine, Calif.-based Project Tomorrow, a national education nonprofit group that promotes technology use in the classroom. "The access of having a [mobile] device in your hand changes the way that classroom environment feels," she says. "Students are walking around with the devices, doing things to get them out of the structured environment of the traditional school."
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    But those schools and classrooms that have embraced mobile devices have seen them as a catalyst for change in teaching, learning, and assessment, says Julie Evans, the chief executive officer of the Irvine, Calif.-based Project Tomorrow, a national education nonprofit group that promotes technology use in the classroom. "The access of having a [mobile] device in your hand changes the way that classroom environment feels," she says. "Students are walking around with the devices, doing things to get them out of the structured environment of the traditional school."
Bradford Saron

Google Set to Launch E-Book Venture - WSJ.com - 0 views

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    To the cloud with books! Google is going to prompt another revolution, this time with books, which will change how we access and purchase books forever. With Googles' new Google Editions, we will be able to access the digital book from anywhere we have access to the internet, such as a phone, desktop, laptop, Ipad, etc. We may also purchase books from the publisher directly. Interesting read. Education application? Hmmmm.
Bill Van Meer

ASCD Inservice: An iPad for Every Student; Now What? - 0 views

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    one to one
Bradford Saron

Cognitive Interfund Transfer: The iPad: An Administrative Status Symbol - 2 views

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    New post. 
Bradford Saron

The Innovative Educator: Move Over iPad! Google Chrome Notebooks are Going to Be the Ga... - 0 views

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    Correct! This is a game changer, especially for those of us who have already transitioned to Google Apps for Ed. Take a look at the price! Affordable, student owned computers.
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.
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    I love Gary Stager. Not only one of the foremost experts on 1:1, but also a master at sarcasm. 
Bradford Saron

TeacherCast Podcast #11 "AdministratorCast 2.0" | TeacherCast Podcast - 0 views

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    Principal J with a podcast on Teachercast!
Robert Slane

Digital textbooks get a boost with new offerings | eSchool News - 0 views

  • Discovery’s Techbook series is cloud-based, meaning students can access the materials from wherever they have an internet connection; the company says that’s because not all school districts have the funds to give every student his or her own device. The Techbooks are also platform-agnostic to work with whatever hardware a district or student might have—iPads, tablets, mobile devices, laptops, or desktops.
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    Interesting to see that the kind of machine required for these e-textbooks is flexible. Also interesting to see this application at the elementary level. But will it be affordable? 
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.
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    Not a game changer, at all. 
Robert Slane

Caitlin Barry: Defining 'Media Literacy' - 1 views

  • The problem is not with the teachers, but with the very definition of 'media literacy' itself. What is it, really? Can we swap the term out with 'digital learning' or 'ed tech' or 'culturally relevant education'? If so, all these terms are essentially meaningless. A student learning how to use an iPad in the classroom is not the same as a student asking critical questions of the messages in television. One is about using the media; the other is about analyzing it. These skills are as different as reading and writing. Before we can take any steps toward a national media curriculum (like the UK has had for a long time), we need to come to a consensus about the meaning of these words. If the average American can easily articulate the difference between reading and writing, he should also be able to quickly explain why we need media in the classroom. Only then can our students get the forward-thinking education that they deserve.
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    How do we define "media literacy". Without a clear definition, teachers may have a hard time knowing how to best to teach its use. 
Bradford Saron

Editing your Google Docs on the go - Official Google Docs Blog - 2 views

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    This is very important in the 1:1 initiative because with this, any document on the google apps for ed suite can be edited from a phone with a data plan. 
Bradford Saron

Smartphones and Tablets Will Take Over in 2011, Researchers Say - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • “The PC-centric era is over,” the IDC report says. Within 18 months, it forecasts, non-PC devices capable of running software applications will outsell PCs. In tablets, IDC adds, Apple’s iPad will remain the leader, but lower-cost tablets will begin making inroads, especially as demand for tablets really takes off in emerging markets.
    • Bradford Saron
       
      Just posted a video on mobile devices in 2010!
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    1:1, personalized.
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