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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Bradford Saron

Bradford Saron

Value-added teacher evaluation goes on trial - literally - The Answer Sheet - The Washi... - 0 views

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    Via @mcleod, this gives you a very good understanding of the weaknesses of the forthcoming teacher evaluation tools and principal evaluation tools. 
Bradford Saron

In Some Cash-Strapped Schools, Kids Bring Their Own Tech Devices | MindShift - 1 views

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    Is this the wave of the future? In my judgement, yes-absolutely. 
Bradford Saron

We need to stop arguing over which factory-age solutions we should try | Dangerously Ir... - 1 views

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    After taking a once-over through the slides, any observations? 
Bradford Saron

5 Signs of a Great User Experience - 1 views

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    Love this. What is our optimal UI? What characteristics would describe our UI? 
Bradford Saron

Learning with 'e's: Those who are about to blog... - 3 views

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    Thinking about starting a blog? 
Bradford Saron

Educational Technology and Life » Blog Archive » Personal Learning Networks f... - 2 views

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    Great resource for beginners. 
Bradford Saron

Google and MIT announce open sourcing of the App Inventor code | App Inventor Edu - 1 views

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    via Bob Slane
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

Teaching the fourth 'R': a fireside chat with Cathy Davidson « o p e n m a t t - 2 views

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    More on the fourth "R"
Bradford Saron

Dr. Scott McLeod- Don't Forget The Administrators | Alliance for Excellent Education - 1 views

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    Scott McLeod with his focus on admin development in #edtech. 
Bradford Saron

Wisconsin School Boards - 0 views

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    This is the PPT that Will Richardson used for the WASB Keynote. 
Bradford Saron

Too Many Projects Not Enough Time | The Thinking Stick - 3 views

  • The Google Apps Ninja Program that I started back in September and blogged about here has completely taken me by surprise. There are now over 150 educators who have access to the Google Docs. Seeing that there might be something here that I can support long term I decided to move all the files to their own Google Apps domain. So the Google Apps Ninja Program is now officially found at www.ninjaprogram.com the website isn't finished but after reading this blog post if you are interested in using the files and helping to keep them updated, fill out this form and I'll get you in. I'm excited to focus on this next year as one of my projects.
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    Let's us all in on his schedule and the life of an international educator. 
Bradford Saron

New technologies v. new behaviors | Dangerously Irrelevant - 4 views

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    I love the way he pointed to leaders, and how we need to get it to lead it!
Bradford Saron

Seven spaces of technology & school building design - 1 views

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    Very neat presentation about the next generation of building. 
Bradford Saron

Bring Your Own Technology - And Thinking About Equity « - 0 views

  • The really big question, how do we ensure equity? Have students with their own devices bring them. There are more students who have them than we think, and if the case is made that students are benefiting from the learning, more families will invest in the mobile technology for school and home.  If parents can be assured that an investment in Grade 4 will carry their child through for four-to-six years with their learning, many will make this choice.  I am often stunned by families that buy their child a cell phone, but don’t have a computer.  I am also quite comfortable in saying that if they are investing in a cell phone and not a computer there are better options to support their child’s learning.  We need to help guide families with what technology will have the greatest impact in supporting their child’s learning.  Of course, not all students will supply a computer up front, this could range from a few students to the entire class depending on the school or district.  The second option would be a lease-to-own option for students. There are a number of options available with price points around $20 per month.  This picks up on the cell phone argument, and a more affordable device with more value for student learning.  Families could be assured their child would be getting a device that would be ideal for learning for a number of years, and could be used at school and home.  Finally, there are  students that, for many reasons (financial and otherwise) won’t embrace the first two options.  We need to find ways to supply these students with a comparable technology to use at school.  Many schools have class sets of laptops that could be repurposed for this project; in other cases investments will need to be made.  The challenge is that the investments will be uneven (and this is difficult to do) with some schools requiring a greater percentage of investment than others.
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. 
Bradford Saron

Why We Need a 4th R: Reading, wRiting, aRithmetic, algoRithms | DMLcentral - 0 views

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    Another push for programming to be recognized as a educational discipline like English, math, science, and social studies. 
Bradford Saron

Douglas Rushkoff - Blog - CNN: Why I am learning to code and you should, too - 0 views

  • It's time Americans begin treating computer code the way we do the alphabet or arithmetic.
  • Learning to code means being able to imagine a new way of using the camera in your iPhone, or a new way for people to connect to each other, and then being able to bring that vision to reality.
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    Code, or be coded. 
Bradford Saron

Top 10 Tools for Finding and Moving into a Great New Home - 0 views

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    May need this some day. :-)
Bradford Saron

Chris Hedges: Why the United States Is Destroying Its Education System - Chris Hedges' ... - 0 views

  • A nation that destroys its systems of education, degrades its public information, guts its public libraries and turns its airwaves into vehicles for cheap, mindless amusement becomes deaf, dumb and blind. It prizes test scores above critical thinking and literacy. It celebrates rote vocational training and the singular, amoral skill of making money. It churns out stunted human products, lacking the capacity and vocabulary to challenge the assumptions and structures of the corporate state. It funnels them into a caste system of drones and systems managers. It transforms a democratic state into a feudal system of corporate masters and serfs.
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    Via @mcleod
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