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dpangrazio

Acceptable Use Policies in School Districts: Myth or Reality? - 0 views

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    Acceptable Use Policy (AUP) clearly delineates how students are expected to make use of school-provided Internet access - and how not to. Definitions of acceptable Internet use vary not only from school to school, but from place to place, time to time, or user to user within a single school. Particularly when teachers use the same computers as their students, administrators must take users' varying needs into account when creating an AUP
dpangrazio

An Examination of Internet Filtering and Safety Policy Trends and Issues in South Carol... - 0 views

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    Researchers have suggested that public school Internet use policies are not aligned with the realities of the 21st century, thus contributing to a culture where Internet technology is fully integrated in students' out-of-school experiences, but marginalized within the school walls .
dpangrazio

Social Media Access in K-12 Schools: Intractable Policy Controversies in an Evolving World - 0 views

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    The new cultural developments problematize the previous policy frames that governed educational technology when the CIPA was set in place. The policy argument of expanding youth access to computing via schools becomes weak if young people prefer to use new media away from school. Furthermore, young people appear to engage in far more creative and compelling learning behaviors with new media outside of school, with few opportunities within classroom walls.
mpugs1

Digital literacies in two low socioeconomic classrooms: Snapshots of practice - 1 views

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    ABSTRACT: The teaching of digital literacies is regarded as an important facet of literacy teaching in the 21st century. With many literacy tests continuing to indicate that students' levels of achievement tend to be differentiated along socioeconomic lines, it seems timely to consider the connections between home and school and how these play out in relation to digital literacies. This is particularly important in light of the considerable evidence that has demonstrated how important home-school connections are in ensuring improved traditional literacy outcomes for students from low socioeconomic backgrounds. With these points in mind, this article reports on an investigation into the usage of digital technologies in two middle-years classrooms in low socioeconomic suburbs in a regional Australian city. Using a range of ethnographic techniques, the study explored two teachers' approaches to teaching students how to use digital technologies in one school term. Through snapshots of digital practices in the two classrooms, three issues are considered: teachers' pedagogical approaches; students' access to digital technologies at home and at school; and the teachers' recognition of students' prior knowledge of digital technologies. The article concludes by reflecting on the need for teachers to draw on the digital literacies that students are using in their out-of-school lives, to make bridges to school learning and thus address the challenge of preparing students to be literate in the 21st Century.
scbruno

Medical Schools Embrace Benefits of Tablets, Mobile Devices; Create New Ways of Learning - 1 views

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    By Alicia Gallegos, special to the Reporter During a student demonstration in 2010, instructors at Stanford University School of Medicine loaded a children's wagon with all the learning materials medical students traditionally acquire in their preclinical years. The towering stacks of paper rose 3 feet high.
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    Scott, An interesting article. I know that medical schools (and allied health education, including nursing) have been leaders in adopting new technologies for educational purposes. Medical schools immediately identified a use for using podcasts to teach medical students how to detect abnormal heart sounds! Research quickly followed to prove this to be the most effective form of teaching normal and abnormal cardiac sounds. This learning concept is also used to teach radiology residents how to recognize normal and abnormal blood flow sounds when examining vessels (arteries/veins) using doppler ultrasound. Pharmacy schools (and departments) have utilized iPads/tablets/smartphone to run apps (http://www.appszoom.com/android-apps/pharmacology) that include entire pharmacology drug reference lists, commonly used drugs/medications, standard dosages, etc. for quick, searchable referencing.
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    Scott, I am curious about the level of security placed on the wireless networks used in hospital environments. The more mobile the physicians, nurses and caregivers, the more secure the wireless networks need to be. What measures are being taken to guarantee secure airwaves? Bill
dpangrazio

Seductions of risk and school cyberspace - 0 views

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    Data is drawn from an inductive research project, which examined school Internet risk discourses, institutional attempts to control 'net' use and student responses to such practices, in eight educational establishments in the north of England. over three years. In examining internet regulation policy, Oswell (1998) notes that distinctions are drawn between the 'child-in-danger' and the dangerous child.While exaggerated risk discourses might result in over-blocking, with students being pushed away from using school cyberspace, the Internet simultaneously offers seductive pulls, encouraging teachers and students to be adventurous in their pursuit of knowledge online.
david_jones_2016

ERIC - Exploring the Digital Divide: The Use of Digital Technologies in Ontario Public ... - 0 views

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    Combining data from a school principal survey with student demographics and achievement data, the present study aimed to develop a much needed understanding of ICT usage in Ontario's K-12 public schools. Results indicated equitable first-order access to technology for schools, early integration of ICT from the earliest grades, frequent application of ICT in teaching, and an enabling effect of ICT on additional access to learning resources and distance learning.
Khader Humied

Technology (and How It's Used in Schools) Is Widening the Opportunity Gap | EdSurge News - 0 views

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    "Technology (and How It's Used in Schools) Is Widening the Opportunity Gap" Even though this is not an academic article. I thought it asked very relevant questions that have Ethical and educational impact.
ckichton

The impact of Brazil's "broadband at school program" on student achievement. - 0 views

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    This article takes a look at the "Broadband at School" program that was instituted in Brazil in 2008 and what impact it has made on student achievement over the course of its first eight years of existence. This program aimed at bringing broadband internet to all urban public schools in Brazil, something that was not guaranteed prior to this. After analyzing student achievement prior to 2008 and comparing it to student achievement in 2016, it was determined that having access to broadband internet had a positive effect on student learning and achievement. The article makes sure to examine the results from multiple angles to ensure that the achievement that has been recorded is related to the Broadband at School program and found a positive, provable connection between the program and an increase in student achievement.
isminitheo

Collaborative Learning Technology - 8 views

shared by isminitheo on 29 Jan 16 - No Cached
ambsesc and escjana liked it
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    I thought this was a very good article. A couple of my courses we have talked a lot about collaborative learning and how important it is to work together so I found this really interesting. I really liked the tools that was shared in the article and the ones that I have not used or accessed before I did save the links to explore later.
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    Collaborative learning can be beneficial in so many ways for teachers and learners. My own children (middle school and high school) work on group projects for school while at home using google docs all the time. I have encouraged my own students to use google docs so they can never use the excuse "it's on my computer at home."
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    Love this article, because it applies to the workforce too. My Digital tools class went over a few of these resources that many do know exist for us to use. I will be using this articles to explore other tools to use!
escjana

How Well Are Schools Teaching Cyber Safety and Ethics? - 1 views

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    Cyber safety and ethics in schools.
ckichton

Education technology helps unite school communities, improve academic achievement. - 2 views

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    In this article, Taylor examines what, if any, benefit technology has on achievement in the classroom. This analysis looks not only at the way that students benefit, but also how teachers benefit from additional classroom technology. It was shown that their lesson plans became more engaging, able to reach more students, and are more easily tracked and analyzed when utilizing technology. When technology was used more within a classroom, the achievement of the students went up significantly, helping to close the educational gap between rural or poor schools and wealthier schools.
sophiaavella

5 Steps for Building a Culture of Data Privacy in Schools - Student Privacy Compass - 1 views

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    Methods to improve data privacy culture in schools
Carl Fink

Do intentions and perceptions always meet? A case ...: Check Full-Text Availability Res... - 1 views

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    Turkish study on an appraisal/development program carried out experimentally in one school.
Carl Fink

NeuroLogica Blog " Civic Online Reasoning - 1 views

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    Steven Novella discusses a survey of how younger people reason and evaluate online information sources. This Stanford University study looked at 7,804 student responses across 12 states, divided among middle school, high school, and college students. The goal of the study was to see if these students could distinguish reliable sources of information from fake or unreliable sources.
alberttablante

Mass digitization and copyright - 1 views

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    From Gale: Russell is not alone in opposing the use of an ECL system. David Hansen, a clinical assistant professor and faculty research librarian at University of North Carolina School of Law, also served as the University of California-Berkeley School of Law's Digital Library Fellow for the Digital Library Copyright Project. His research has focused on how libraries and related information intermediaries can overcome copyright and other legal obstacles to provide better access to their collections online. He has written about copyright exceptions for libraries and archives under Section 108 of the Copyright Act, orphan works, mass digitization, copyright protection of metadata, and issues related to expanding copyright protection of traditional knowledge. Hansen is one of the facilitators for a project to create the Statement of Best Practices in Fair Use of Collections Containing Orphan Works for Libraries, Archives, and Other Memory Institutions, which was released in December 2014.
alberttablante

Knowledge Level of Library Deans and Directors in Copyright Law - 1 views

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    INTRODUCTION Copyright law is an increasingly important aspect of managing an academic library. This study investigated the copyright knowledge level of academic library deans and directors and their perceptions of how it affects their abilities to oversee the development and enforcement of copyright-related library policies. The perceived adequacy of the copyright training currently available in library schools was also examined. METHODS A random sample of academic library deans and directors was asked to complete a web-based survey articulating their level of copyright knowledge and perceptions associated with how they are able to apply it toward their work with policies. RESULTS Respondents scored a mean of 77.49% on ten questions of basic copyright law concepts. A majority of deans and directors indicated they believe their knowledge, as well as that of those working under their supervision, is adequate to make informed decisions. However, almost 90% of the respondents were either neutral or disagreed that library school programs are providing adequate training in copyright law to academic librarians
srtaharrington

Teen's Online Threat Was Not Disorderly Conduct.: Online Library OneSearch - 0 views

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    Computer & Internet Lawyer journal article showing some of the complexities in court cases regarding intended audiences and privacy concerns. This case in particular was from a Myspace posting that was reported to police that involved a threat against a school, but was prosecuted using disorderly conduct charges.
david_jones_2016

Maine's Middle School Laptop Program: Creating Better Writers - 0 views

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    Silvernail, D. and Gritter A. (2008). Maine's Middle School Laptop Program: Creating Better Writers. Maine Education Plicy Institute. University of Soutern Maine.
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