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Lucie deLaBruere

One Year or Less: Mobiles « 2011 Horizon Report - 1 views

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    "Time-to-Adoption Horizon: One Year or Less According to a recent report from mobile manufacturer Ericsson, studies show that by 2015, 80% of people accessing the Internet will be doing so from mobile devices. Perhaps more important for education, Internetcapable mobile devices will outnumber computers within the next year. In Japan, over 75% of Internet users already use a mobile as their first choice for access. "
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    This is the web version of the 2011 Horizon report predicting that in One Year or Less, Mobiles will be part of the landscape
Will Bohmann

K-12 Horizon Report - 0 views

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    An exploration of learning using mobile devices would not be complete without reading the most current Horizon Report.  One of my very favorite pull out concepts from the report is something tech integrators say over and over - "Digital literacy is less about tools and more about thinking". The Horizon Reports lays out a good case for mobile tools and personalized learning. A must read.
Lucie deLaBruere

Horizon Report Videos - 0 views

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    Watch the videos on Mobile and Tablets from the Horizon Report 2012 and 2011
Lucie deLaBruere

Horizon Report Wiki - Mobile Apps - 1 views

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    What are Mobile Apps discussion from the Horizon Report Wiki
Frank Barnes

My List: A Collection on "Frank's MAT622 FP Resources" (final,project,mat622,2012,horiz... - 1 views

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    6 Ways Students Can Collaborate With iPads
Ryan Fleming

How Can Teachers Prepare Kids for a Connected World? | MindShift - 0 views

  • In an effort to change how American schools think about teaching, Jenkins’ team developed a strategy called PLAY (Participatory Learning and You) to explain the exploratory and experimental approach to teaching they think students would benefit from. The team worked with teachers in the Los Angeles Unified School District, and recently released a series of studies that describe what they found. “PLAY describes a mode of experimentation, of testing materials, trying out new solutions, exploring new horizons,” Jenkins said. It’s how kids interact with games – throwing themselves in without reading the rules, testing the limits and feeling free to try and fail. But this learning style is hard to achieve in a system ruled by high-stakes testing where there is no room for students to fail. Everything they do goes on their academic record and they have become unaccustomed to experimenting.
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