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Julie Lindsay

Bloom's Digital Taxonomy Verbs [Infographic] - 7 views

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    You will love this infographic to support Andrew Churches Digital Blooms Taxonomy
Julie Lindsay

Online Collaboration Tools by Robin Good | ZEEF - 5 views

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    Excellent and comprehensive collection of tools for online collaboration.
Julie Lindsay

Upgrade Curriculum Through Globally Connected Learning - 2 views

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    Excellent slideshow by @langwitches sharing new curriculum objectives to support globally connected learning.
John Pearce

Internet of hackable things: wired world wide open to new age of cyber crime - 1 views

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    "It sounds like the stuff of sci-fi nightmares - a stranger hacking your baby cam and shouting abuse at your toddler. Someone controlling your home's lights and power points via a system that should only respond to your smartphone. Criminals watching you and your family from your smart TV without your knowledge. But each of these has already happened, and mark the beginning of a cyber crime wave threatening business, governments and individuals around the world. The number of smart devices being connected online in what's called the "Internet of Things" will rocket from 13 billion to an estimated 50 billion by 2020. The problem, says LA security consultant Marc Goodman, is that they're all hackable."
Lilas Monniot-Kerr

What's Your Story? - YouTube - 5 views

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    " Tyler Joseph for Trend Micro's What's Your Story Contest." What's Your Story is a yearly video contest for young people to highlight creative, impactful, safe and responsible ways to use the Internet. This one is fantastic and would work quite well at my school ... this type of spoken 'poetry' !
John Pearce

How Teen Media Consumption Has Changed Over the Years - 9 views

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    "Being a teenager in 2015 is very different than it was in 1995. While most teenagers spent their free time watching a little TV in the 90s, there were far fewer screens to put in front of their faces. A social network was the group of friends you hung out with at school. Now, things have changed. Technology has opened all kinds of new things to teens, some good and some bad. So just how as being a teenager changed from the 90s? Are things better or worse? Take a look at the infographic below from TeenSafe that presents true facts about teens and media and decide for yourself."
John Pearce

S01E04 - Do Not Track - 0 views

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    Do Not Track is a personalized documentary series about privacy and the web economy. If you share data with us, we'll show you what the web knows about you. This documentary series will explore how information about you is collected and used. Every two weeks, we will release a personalized episode that explores a different aspect of how the modern web is increasingly a space where our movements, our speech and our identities are recorded and tracked.
Emma Kay

Twitter Connects Learning Inside, Outside the Classroom - 2 views

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    probably a well known example for many but new to me so .....
John Pearce

Digital Natives, Yet Strangers to the Web - The Atlantic - 8 views

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    "Today's schools are focusing on boosting kids' technological proficiency and warning them about the perils of the web. But something critical is missing from this education. When Reuben Loewy took up his first teaching gig in 2012, he had a major revelation: The digital revolution has dramatically transformed the way that kids perceive reality."
John Pearce

Does the Internet of Things mean the end for privacy? - Opinion - ABC Technology and Ga... - 4 views

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    "What you're about to lose is your privacy, and the cause is the internet of things (IoT). Actually, you are not just going to lose your privacy, the very concept of privacy may be rewritten under your nose. That's because while the IoT is going to add a lot to our lives, it's probably going to take our privacy in payment, whether you want it to or not."
Helen Stower

New Google Classroom update: Little things that make it a big deal | History Tech - 4 views

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    Google classroom update
Helen Stower

Digital Literacy across the Curriculum handbook | Futurelab at NFER - 6 views

    • Helen Stower
       
      This might be a process for embedding digital literacy into core classrooms if Retech has to go - We could do our own version of the Digital Participation Project with core teachers
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    A handbook for embedding digital literacies into core classrooms.
John Pearce

Digital Natives, Yet Strangers to the Web - The Atlantic - 3 views

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    "Perhaps that makes the 55-year-old teacher sound like a dinosaur. What he discovered is, after all, one of the most obvious realities shaping education policy and parenting guides today. But, as Loewy will clarify, his revelation wasn't simply that technology is overhauling America's classrooms and redefining childhood and adolescence. Rather, he was hit with the epiphany that efforts in schools to embrace these shifts are, by and large, focusing on the wrong objectives: equipping kids with fancy gadgets and then making sure the students use those gadgets appropriately and effectively. Loewy half-jokingly compares the state of digital learning in America's schools to that of sex ed, which, as one NYU education professor describes it, entails "a smattering of information about their reproductive organs and a set of stern warnings about putting them to use.""
John Pearce

Keep Your Kids Safe When They're Using a Smartphone - 4 views

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    "Nowadays, kids want to use smartphones. Of course, most parents aren't willing to actually buy their kids a device, but plenty have no problem letting them play with one. Of course, when a child uses a cell phone they can potentially be exposed to all kinds of dangerous things that aren't meant for young eyes. But the risks aren't just for the children, but they can affect you, the parents, too. Kids could make unwanted in-app purchases, make calls to people you don't want to talk to, they could even share photos you don't want the world to see, and they can do plenty of other bad things. So what can you do? Check out the infographic below for the answers."
John Pearce

Export Google Search History - 2 views

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    "I've mentioned last year that Google tested a download feature for search history. It looks like this feature is available for everyone. Just go to Google Web History, click the gear button and select "Download". "You can download all of your saved search history to see a list of the terms you've searched for. This gives you access to your data when and where you want," informs Google. "When you download your past searches, a copy of your history will be saved securely to the Takeout folder in Google Drive. You can download the files to your computer if you want a copy on your computer.""
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