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Chris Dede

Can Cellphones Be Educational Tools? - NYTimes.com - 5 views

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    Little by little, unique educational uses are popping up for cellphones.
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    Dialogue on whether cellphones can be useful tools in education
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    I think the Oneville team will show that they can!!
Chris Dede

Product-Overview - 0 views

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    Video on new authoring tools for augmented reality on cellphones and handhelds.
Jennifer Jocz

Could Tag Technology Replace Google Search? | InventorSpot - 0 views

  • Many believe AR is the tipping point for mobile phones to supplant desktop searches in the next few years.


  • Tagword search on cellphones, like keyword search on desktops might become the dominant format to search for items in real-time.
  • Things in our real-world tagged with barcodes could provide much more information, which could Internet of Thingsthen be updated without having to change the original tag
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    An article describing how AR apps for cellphones could provide users with location-based data using barcode tagging.
Chris Dede

Cell phones emerge as the newest classroom tool - chicagotribune.com - 2 views

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    schools are starting to concede to allowing cell phones in school -- hopefully grabbing some benefits from them soon...
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    Administrators finally realize cellphones can aid education
Yang Jiang

Growing Up Digital, Wired for Distraction - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Researchers say the lure of these technologies, while it affects adults too, is particularly powerful for young people. The risk, they say, is that developing brains can become more easily habituated than adult brains to constantly switching tasks — and less able to sustain attention.
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    The distraction of technology, especially mobile phone and computer, has always been a concern to us. When I was in middle school, few students owned cellphones or laptops. So we have no chance to be immersed in the virtual world. But apparently we couldn't enjoy the benefits of the latest technology either at that time. If I were able to choose, I would definitely choose the colorful school life which is enriched by the various technologies.
Chris Dede

Which Rules Are Worth Circumventing? | MindShift - 1 views

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    how should teachers respond to bans on cellphones, social media?
Ayelet R

Texting in the Classroom: Not Just a Distraction | Edutopia - 5 views

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    Ideas for using texting at school.
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    great article. relevant to today's discussion about web 2.0 / social media. for those who didn't read it. Here's there article's list of interesting sms based tools for education use: Remind101: Remind101 allows teachers to send text messages (and email) home -- to students and/or to parents -- to offer reminders and updates for class. Remind101 allows teachers to communicate with their classes without either teacher or students having to share their phone numbers. Poll Everywhere: As the name suggests, Poll Everywhere allows teachers to use cellphones for polling in class. Students text their responses, using their cellphones to give feedback, answer questions, take quizzes. Celly: Celly provides SMS-based group messaging. Classrooms can use the service to take quick polls and quizzes, filter messages, get news updates, take notes, and organize and hold study groups. The groups can be public or private, moderated or open. StudyBoost: StudyBoost allows students to study via SMS-based quizzes. The questions can be self- or teacher-created, and can be multiple choice or open-ended.
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    I like Celly for its group messaging and polling applications. Note: The link to "Poll Anywhere" is broken.
Jennifer Jocz

Web-based tool Hotseat taking students' questions - USATODAY.com - 0 views

  • That potential for instant feedback adds a new edge and depth to the class
  • Hotseat probably helps most in large classes, where he says it "can give voice to the silent student body and help stimulate discussion.
  • And because Hotseat allows anonymous posts, says senior Tim Cummings, 21, students are more likely to ask questions they wouldn't if they had to speak out in person.
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    Interesting article about Hotseat, a web-based tool that can be accessed by students through facebook, twitter, or cellphones, which allows them to ask questions and make comments during class.
Katherine Tarulli

NYC Cellphone Ban: 'It's the Policy' - 2 views

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    The New York TImes continues their efforts to get an explanation from the Department of Education of NY on their reasons behind the cell phone ban. It seems that the district is not budging on their policy and is so far unwilling to listen to educators vouching for phones as useful learning tools. 
Daniel Melia

Teachers experimenting with cellphones as learning tool - Schools - MiamiHerald.com - 1 views

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    Miami-Dade county explores BYOD. Looks like, as of last Tuesday, the school system has $1.2 billion coming their way (it's worth clicking on the relevant link within this article), at least some of which is intended for technology upgrades. 
Yang Jiang

Everybody's Business - Cellphone Carriers Are Turning to Wi-Fi, Too - NYTimes.com - 2 views

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    THE definition of a nerd, it has been said, is someone who has more e-mail addresses than pants. Are you a nerd?
Uche Amaechi

Noticed - Cellphones Do the Remembering for Us - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    how technology is changing us: for the better or worse.
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    This is a good article. I used to memorize everyone's phone number. Now I only know about five people's phone number.
Chris Dede

Social Networking Meets Reading -- THE Journal - 2 views

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    social e-reading for cellphones - what leverage does this provide?
Jennifer Hern

Education Week: Cellphones in Schools: Flip 'Em Open - 0 views

  • When he suggested that schools should have open-phone tests, as a measure to combat cellphone cheating, one of the students responded, “Dude, we already have open-phone tests. The teachers just don’t know it.”
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    Allowing open-phone tests may prevent cheating.
Katherine Tarulli

Cellphone Ban Is a Tale of Two City Schools - 3 views

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    Cell phones are banned in NYC public schools, but it is the norm for students who attend schools without metal detectors to bring their phones anyway. If caught teachers are confiscating phones for up to a week, or longer, at their discretion. At schools with metal detectors small businesses have popped up around schools, storing students' phones for the school day for a small fee, similar to a coat check system. Instead of harnessing the power of mobile phones that almost every student already has, they are punishing them and/or causing them to pay money to keep them stored for the school day so that they can have them before and after school. I think this is a missed opportunity for the NYC school system not only because they are missing out on mobile learning opportunities with technology the district doesn't have to buy, but they could also be teaching the students responsible and appropriate use of mobile phones in public spaces.
Tommie Anthony Henderson

Rules to Stop Pupil and Teacher From Getting Too Social Online - 1 views

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    TECHNOLOGY MAKES TEACHERS LESS FREE? Faced with scandals and complaints involving teachers who misuse social media, school districts across the country are imposing strict new guidelines that ban private conversations between teachers and their students on cellphones and online platforms like Facebook and Twitter.
Uche Amaechi

Industry Pitching Cellphones as a Teaching Tool - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Sorry prof, what was that? I was on a call.
Chris Dede

Carnegie Mellon Researchers Test Mobile Phone Games To Teach Children -- THE Journal - 4 views

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    mobile phones for language learning
Jennifer Hern

Education Week: Teachers Using Cellphones for Classroom Lessons - 0 views

  • Much more attention has gone to the ways students might use phones to cheat or take inappropriate pictures. But as the technology becomes cheaper, more advanced, and more ingrained in students' lives that mentality is changing.
  • Teachers who have incorporated cell phones into their classes say that most students abide by the rules. They note that cheating and bullying exist with or without the phones, and that once they are allowed, the inclination to use them for bad behavior dissipates.
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