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Bradford Saron

The Future Will Be Personalized - 0 views

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    From their web, to our web, to you web, this chronicles how the internet is becoming a tool for personalization and individualized media streams. 
Bradford Saron

eSchool News » How to practice safe social networking » Print - 0 views

  • tips for safe social networking:• Learn about and use the privacy and security settings on social networks. Consider restricting access to your page to a select group of people—for example, your friends from school, your club, your team, your community groups, or your family.• Think twice before posting pictures you wouldn’t want your parents or future employers to see.• Be cautious about how much personal information you provide on social networking sites. The more information you post, the easier it might be for a hacker, thief, or stalker to commit a crime.• Install a security suite (antivirus, antispyware, and firewall) that is set to update automatically.• Use tools to manage the information you share with friends in different groups. If you’re trying to create a public persona as a blogger or expert, create an open profile or a “fan” page that encourages broad participation and limits personal information. Use your personal profile for trusted friends.• Let a friend know if he or she posts information about you that makes you uncomfortable.• If someone is harassing or threatening you, remove the person from your friends list, block the person, and report the incident to the site administrator.• Make sure that your password is long, complex, and combines, letters, numerals, and symbols. Ideally, you should use a different password for every online account you have.• Be cautious about messages you receive on social networking sites that contain links. Even links that look they come from friends can sometimes contain malware or be part of a phishing attack.• Be aware that people you meet online might be nothing like they describe themselves, and they might not even be the gender they claim.• Flirting with strangers online could have serious consequences. Because some people lie about who they really are, you never really know who you’re dealing with.
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    From Ian Jukes, this includes good dialogue and a collection of tips for individuals. This could be used as an educational tool for high school students. 
Bradford Saron

Community Building- Powerful Learning Indeed « 21st Century Collaborative - 1 views

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    More on how Personal Learning Communities interface with personal learning networks and now powerful learning practice, all of which are interesting concepts. 
Bradford Saron

iPhone and Education - Johnsen's Tech Exploration - 3 views

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    The cost of an Iphone now is very close to the cost of a net book or a solid state computer. I think we should also explore the option of investing in bandwidth and filtering so that students can bring their own computers to school. The cost is not that different from phones now, students can mass personalize their computer, and then there is no issue with personal overlap. It's their computer. With cloud computing, students just have access to their Google accounts through bandwidth, not the network. Food for thought. 
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    You and I see the value in this and many school board members do as well. We have to help our communities understand the value. I worked with a board the other night that totally gets the need for integrating technology into the curriculum. Their concern was the community: "They think paper and pencil is good enough." You cannot ignore this perspective, because if enough people in your community agree with that idea, you will lose the tech supporter board members at election time. This turnover in leadership does not lead to long-term systemic change (which needs to include the integration of technology).
Robert Slane

Recharge Ed - 2 views

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    RECHarge Ed - Unconference connecting ideas that make learning personal
Vince Breunig

7 STEPS TO BECOMING A HAPPY PERSON OTHERS WANT TO BE AROUND - 2 views

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    A reminder of the importance of focusing on being a positive leader.
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    Great article, Vince. This is especially important during these trying times. Our teachers (and the public) need to be around positive people.
Robert Slane

AWSA - Association of Wisconsin School Administrators: Marshall Memo - Article 1 - 2 views

  • Jobs believes this was because sales and profits became the priority. When Jobs returned, he shifted the focus back to innovative products, and profits followed. [Could the analogy in education be focusing on test scores rather than on teaching and learning?]
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    Interesting leadership ideas from a person that always thought out of the box - Steve Jobs
Bradford Saron

Executive Summary | U.S. Department of Education - 1 views

  • 1.1 States should continue to revise, create, and implement standards and learning objectives using technology for all content areas that reflect 21st-century expertise and the power of technology to improve learning.
    • Bradford Saron
       
      Sounds like a Technology Plan, doesn't it. 
  • 3.2 Leverage social networking technologies and platforms to create communities of practice that provide career-long personal learning opportunities for educators within and across schools, preservice preparation and in-service education institutions, and professional organizations.
    • Bradford Saron
       
      This is exactly what we are doing right now. 
  • 4.1 Ensure students and educators have broadband access to the Internet and adequate wireless connectivity both in and out of school
    • Bradford Saron
       
      Both in school and at home. 
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  • 4.2 Ensure that every student and educator has at least one Internet access device and appropriate software and resources for research, communication, multimedia content creation, and collaboration for use in and out of school
    • Bradford Saron
       
      1:1 just got national endorsement. 
  • 5.2 Rethink basic assumptions in our education system that inhibit leveraging technology to improve learning, starting with our current practice of organizing student and educator learning around seat time instead of the demonstration of competencies
    • Bradford Saron
       
      Leveraging technology to improve learning. 
  • Convening education stakeholders, in person and online, to share content, insights, and expertise and to collaborate on key elements of this plan. Ideas and best practices that emerge from these convenings will be shared throughout our education system
    • Bradford Saron
       
      My hand is digitally raised right now. 
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    iI found this interesting. Wisconsin could benefit from some of this thinking.
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    Great job, Miles!
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    As you know Brad, I am all over this. One thing I have been thinking about: in the past some reformers have tried to bring a more experiential feel to public education. I am thinking of John Dewey, progressive reformers in Waukegan, IL and Gary, IN in the 1930s, open classrooms in the 1960s and earl 1970s. Each time these reforms failed to take hold and scale up. I think it would be smart to look at these efforts and think about what's different today, what's the same, and how do we avoid the same fate.
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.
Bradford Saron

Facebook, Friends, and Online Schooling | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Pr... - 0 views

  • Facebook promises something it cannot deliver just as many promoters promise that online instruction will transform schooling as we know it. Both are over-hyped social media.
  • time invested in a relationship determines its quality, having more than five best friends is impossible when we interact face to face, one person at a time. Put simply …. The emotional and psychological investments that a close relationship requires are considerable, and the emotional capital we have is limited.
  • personal contact sustained over ten months of a K-12 school year in the hands of skilled, knowledgable, and caring teachers, researchers have shown again and again (PDF: Rockoff on Teachers), makes a difference in students’ lives. Even the best online instructional software that create “virtual learning environments” fail to come close to what students do daily as they interact with each other and their teachers.
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    The devil's advocate. 
Bradford Saron

Cognitive Interfund Transfer: Personal Realization - 0 views

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    New blog post.
Bradford Saron

The Dilemma of Leadership: Wanting Approval from Those Who You Must Judge | Larry Cuban... - 0 views

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    Cuban is a master at capturing the ubiquitous complexities of leadership, this time through personal anecdote. Covey and Fullan, however, have spoke about this dilemma too. What matters most is that everyone cares about learning and change for improvement. 
Bradford Saron

The social side of the internet | Pew Internet & American Life Project - 0 views

  • The internet is now deeply embedded in group and organizational life in America.
  • 80% of internet users participate in groups, compared with 56% of non-internet users. And social media users are even more likely to be active: 82% of social network users and 85% of Twitter users are group participants. 
  • 60% of all Americans said the internet has had a major impact on the ability of groups to connect with other groups.
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  • 49% of all Americans said the internet has had a major impact on the ability of groups to impact local communities.
  • 41% of these internet-using active group members say the internet has had a major impact on their ability to organize activities for their groups
  • 24% of these internet-using active group members say the internet has had a major impact on their ability to volunteer their time to groups
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    Covering the extent to which social media is integrated into almost every part of our personal and professional lives. 
Bradford Saron

Becoming a Superintendent: A Personal Odyssey* | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Class... - 5 views

  • Yes, I did learn that problems of low achievement were intricately connected to what families and students brought with them to schools, what teachers did in their classrooms, how principals worked in their schools, and how boards and superintendents finessed (or fouled up) the intersecting political, social, and economic interests of various stakeholders.
  • Most of all, my years as superintendent made me allergic to those who offered me fairy tale solutions—kissing a frog to get a prince–to the problem of low-performing schools.
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    An "Odyssey" indeed. 
Bradford Saron

Weblogg-ed » Personal Learning Networks (An Excerpt) - 0 views

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    More on PLNs from the experts. 
Bradford Saron

Cognitive Interfund Transfer: Creating Personal Learning Networks For District Administ... - 2 views

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    New blog post. 
Bradford Saron

McREL Blog: One-to-one initiatives require a "core vision" - 0 views

  • Calling on and sharing research and best practices will be crucial to district’s messaging. If tablets are the chosen devices, a district must be prepared to provide technologies for students to create, multi-task, store and produce robust results/activities in addition to what they will do on the limited functionality tablets…and they need to honestly share this need and solutions to provide additional device support. There is a much bigger picture and quality impact on education with authentic one-to-one implementations. It has to be about core vision, beliefs and strategies that complement what’s needed for learning and producing in the 21st century. It is not as simple as buying a cool tool. We can all have cool tools and have the same old, same old education system resulting in the same old, same old results.
  •  What do administrators, teachers, parents/guardians, etc., need to know and do differently in this changed state?
  • o transform teaching and learning to a student centered, personalized instructional setting, there are key components—project plan elements—that have to be addressed to be successful.  Leaders need to know, understand and guide the ‘change’ process. A 360 degree professional learning program must be embedded for all stakeholders. Teachers who will need to change their practices from adult-centered, static systems to student driven, experiential operations require time, guidance and learning communities to ensure the shift of practice. And overarching policies must direct the practices.
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    Thoughful overview of 1:1 considerations. 
Bradford Saron

Douglas Rushkoff - Blog - Steven Soderberg Describes His Own Present Shock - 0 views

  • “When there’s no linear time, how is a person supposed to figure out what’s going on? There’s no story, no narrative to explain why things are the way things are. Previously distinct causes and effects collapse into one another. There’s no time between doing something and seeing the result. Instead the results begin accumulating and influencing us before we’ve even completed an action. And there’s so much information coming in at once from so many different sources that there’s simply no way to trace the plot over time”.
Bradford Saron

Why Schools Must Move Beyond One-to-One Computing | November Learning - 4 views

  • Adding a digital device to the classroom without a fundamental change in the culture of teaching and learning will not lead to significant improvement. Unless clear goals across the curriculum—such as the use of math to solve real problems—are articulated at the outset, one-to-one computing becomes “spray and pray.”
  • Let’s drop the phrase “one-to-one” and refer instead to “one-to- world.”
  • The more important questions revolve around the design of the culture of teaching and learning. For example, how much responsibility of learning can we shift to our students (see Who Owns the Learning by Alan November)? How can we build capacity for all of our teachers to share best practices with colleagues in their school and around the world? How can we engage parents in new ways? (See @livefromroom5 on Twitter.) How can we give students authentic work from around the world to prepare each of them to expand their personal boundaries of what they can accomplish?
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  • it’s essential to craft a vision that giving every student a digital device must lead to achievements beyond what we can accomplish with paper.
  • it’s essential to craft a vision that giving every student a digital device must lead to achievements beyond what we can accomplish with paper.
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    A must read for anyone critically thinking about tech integration. 
Bradford Saron

Now You See It // The Blog of Author Cathy N. Davidson » 7 key questions to a... - 0 views

  • Learning is always personal, intimate, specific. Our discussions of the pros and cons of different kinds of learning have to be equally so. To settle for any less — in one direction or the other — is to shortchange one of the most important conversations we can be having right now.
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    Davidson's "threads" of analysis area great way to give us a better vocabulary to talk about #edtech and online learning. 
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