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Gretchen Dillon

Going Mobile: Debating and Using Cellphones in School - 1 views

  • have students engage in one or both of the following exercises:
  • Ask students: How are cellphones used, and how can they be used, in our society today?
  • Engage students in a discussion about your school’s cellphone rules. Ask: What are the rules? What is the reason or philosophy behind them? How do they see students using cellphones in school? If cellphones are banned, how would they like to use cellphones in school? How are the rules enforced?
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  • Finally, ask: Do you think cellphones will continue to be banned in some schools in a year from now? Five years? Ten? Why or why not?
  • Have students engage in a debate on the pros and cons of using cellphones in school. They should delve into questions of policy, cost, usefulness and innovation along with the potential for mischief, distraction and cheating.
    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      A discussion on including students in conversations on effective use of mobile devices in the classroom.
    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      This article reminds us to give our students an active role in discussing proper mobile device use!
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    In this lesson, students learn about innovative uses of cellphone technology and applications in the developing world, then explore how their phones can be used as learning tools.
Michelle Munoz

How Teachers Make Cell Phones Work in the Classroom | MindShift - 1 views

  • ext blast through Remind101, asking them a challenge question that’s related to the day’s lesson. “First person to tell me the units on K for a second order reaction gets chocolate,” he types and sends off. His students know he does this regularly, so they’re constantly anticipating the question during the day, in and out of class.
  • fun ways to stay motivated in our day,
  • hum gets louder when kids are excited or working together, then quieter again when they’re working out problems on their individual little whiteboards
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  • Students work in groups, and when they have a question, they call him over. He arrives with iPad in hand and records his voice and his writing on the iPad, which he immediately uploads to the class website so other students can benefit from the explanations instantaneously.
  • he incorporates peer-instruction and inquiry-based learning,
  • “I’m using it in the context of peer instruction, which is research based. You get anonymous feedback, which is great, and kids see all that information condensed,” he says. “Sometimes it’s just cute and fun and that wears off. But much more often, it’s more efficient and meaningful, and it makes the classroom feel like a bigger place.”
  • Using Socrative, an app that shows real-time poll results for both multiple-choice and short-answer quizzes, he challenges his students at the end of class to answer specific questions in order to get a broad look at whether they understood the concepts discussed that day.
  • makes the experience more immediate. I want it to be as rich and as visual as possible. I want them to see things, not just know it.”
  • idea of mobile learning touches on just about every subject that any technology addresses: social media, digital citizenship, content-knowledge versus skill-building, Internet filtering and safety laws, teaching techniques, bring-your-own-device policies, school budgets.
  • The data integration wouldn’t be as rich, the experience wouldn’t be as dynamic, the cognitive load is higher,”
  • It’s our responsibility as educators to teach kids how to interact with the world,” Sanders says. “Those interpersonal human conversations are incredibly valuable.”
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    Ideas on how to us the cell phone in class.
Kate Spilseth

Pocket-Based Learning: My Cellphone Classroom | Powerful Learning Practice - 1 views

  • ell phones promote the expression of their thinking and learning.
  • In terms of critical thinking, my students research extensively on the web and it is very convenient for them to pull out their phones to access our wireless network rather than going to a computer lab in the school. They can share the links to various sites via text messaging or Facebook in a timely and efficient manner. Many of my students communicate regularly in these mediums so it allows for the ubiquitous transmission of ideas into and out of the classroom.
  • Cell phones and other devices also help my students to stay organized. T
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  • llowing cell phones in classrooms provides the opportunity to discuss proper cell phone etiquette as well as “netiquette.”
  • We discuss how having a positive online presence is important both for obtaining entrance into schools and receiving jobs. I often have students use their devices to “Google” themselves, and we use the results as a springboard for a discussion into what their online presence or “digital footprint” says about them. It has been a very eye-opening experience for many.
  • I believe the ideals of ethical behavior and digital citizenship are the driving factors for BYOD.
  • Our students are immersed in these wireless mediums, and it’s our responsibility as educators to help them learn how to use them responsibly. BYOD provides these real world authentic learning opportunities to almost all of our students.
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    How cel phones are an asset in school, not a distraction.
Lisa Stewart

Signal poor on m-learning's impact | Education | Guardian Weekly - 0 views

    • Lisa Stewart
       
      This article resonates with me because it serves to remind us that measuring the benefits of using mobile devices with ESL learners, is a difficult thing to measure.  That said, it therefore serves as a double reminder that we must make sure we take the time to design well thought-out lesson plans involving mlearning, or the benefits might not be reaped by those we are teaching. 
  • benefits it will have had on their language development or teaching skills are harder to measure
  • elatively little critical attention paid to how the outcomes of many projects are measured and reported.
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  • common message: this is a medium that can bridge educational and digital divides.
  • the monitoring and evaluation design does not appear to include a control group, but rather focuses on English language competency of only the participants at the beginning of the year compared with the end.
  • The excitement surrounding the variety of m-learning projects is well-deserved, but there is clearly much to learn about how far teaching and learning English using the medium can benefit those in developing countries. As Traxler says, "Brilliant and exemplary work is being done on the ground by people using mobiles to deliver and enhance learning to distant and disadvantaged communities. Our problem is more to do with how badly we try to explain it, think about it, reason about it, learn from it, generalise from it and evaluate it."
Stephanie Cummings

Mobile Learning Technologies for 21st Century Classrooms | Scholastic.com - 0 views

  • "It provides the potential to empower and uplift students in their learning,"
  • To maximize effectiveness, education in the 21st century has to be active, engaging, and customized. Students must have universal access to mobile technologies that will enable critical thinking, differentiation, and problem solving. It is our belief that the technology in Apple's iPad meets these needs and more."
  • cell phones in education involve websites like Poll Everywhere and Text the Mob, which allow a teacher to create a set of questions that the students can respond to with a text message.
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  • Our digital natives are counting on us.
  • Students are more engaged and motivated to learn when they use mobile devices, and research shows that academic performances can improve.
    • Michelle Munoz
       
      Mlearning engages our students in their own learning and investigations. "Our digital natives are counting on us"
  • Mobile learning technologies offer teachers-and students-a more flexible approach to learning.
  • More and more schools are moving toward mobile learning in the classroom as a way to take advantage of a new wave of electronic devices that offer portability and ease of use on a budget.
  • Today's students are no longer the people our educational system was designed to teach
  • They are more engaged in learning when using the latest technological gadgets, because it is what they are most used to interacting with. Our students don't just want mobile learning, they need it.
  • The study found that after children had used the app every every day for two weeks, the vocabulary of Title 1 children between three and seven years old improved by as much as 31 percent.
  • Studies like these help underline the academic potential that mobile learning devices can have to enrich the learning process for students.
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    How the BYOD movement is changing the way students learn.
Carolina Montes

The pros and cons of social media classrooms | ZDNet - 0 views

  • It is a familiar tool.
  • u are making yourself more aware of issues surrounding students today.
  • Resource availability.
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  • Improvement of research skills.
  • rmation online is a skill that is now important in the workplac
  • improvement of communication.
  • or students and teachers to communicate effectively.
  • ocial medi
  • Relevant, real-life learning.
  • The promotion of digital citizenship.
  • tudents have to learn about how to conduct themselves appropriately online.
  • Engaging your students.
  • he ability to share learning material.
  • The potential to appeal to different learning styles.
  • create a Facebook group dedicated to your class, or set a task to research something across these networks?
  • Ease of access.
  • Social networking requires no expensive equipment or modern upgrades
  • Assisting shy students.
  • Distractions.
  • Unless teachers properly supervise their students
  • The risk of cyberbullying.
  • imiting face-to-face communicat
  • The need for schools to research, understand and implement.
  • Continual social media change.
  • There are constant changes to platforms themselves and their security settings — of which schools and teachers must keep up to date with and act accordingly.
  • The need to manage multiple sites and keep updated.
  • he possibility of malware infections or phishing scams.
  • The need to filter and plan.
  • Inappropriate content sharing or exposure.
  • Controlling device use in class.
  • Exposing the ‘haves’ and ‘have nots’.
Maru Gutierrez

Using Google's Online Apps to Enhance a Class and Accommodate Students - Page 2 - Techn... - 0 views

  • Google Docs
  • respond in a variety of ways to questions posed during the course of a lecture or reading. How
  • collaborate and maintain documents online
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  • organize
  • to access their wo
  • view the changes and additions made to any document by a pe
  • add their own changes for their peers to review
  • Google Groups
  • skills will benefit from the linear posting nature
  • an instantaneous method of organization.
  • support
  • audio
  • files
  • xt-to-
  • speech
  • groups
  • freedom that is available when st
  • responding in a variety of different ways (such as through video or audio presentations or essays)
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    The challenge of providing aid in organization for some students with special needs can be ameliorated with just a few available tools.  Google voice could be used to record up to 3 minutes of oral instructions given by the teacher that can be replied when needed.  The possibility of sending assignment or test oral or printed reminders that can be listened to a whole group of students has great potential.  
Gretchen Dillon

No More Pencils, No More Books? - 0 views

  • The American education system, however, must proceed with great caution that this trend does not lead to a new digital divide and greater inequity among students accessing a good education.
  • South Korea has pledged that all elementary and secondary schools will be completely digital by the year 2015. The ministry of education will ensure that every student has access to a mobile device, a strong connection to the Internet, and a cloud-computing network dedicated to education.
  • School systems around the world are watching Korea, not just for its high-achievement rates, but also to see if it succeeds in being the first country to go entirely digital.
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  • States are getting in the game, too. Last summer, Florida announced its goal to phase out textbooks in favor of digital learning by the year 2015. And Alabama representatives are planning to introduce the "Alabama Ahead Act" which would allow schools to purchase electronic tablets instead of textbooks
  • In a recently released study, only one out of five teachers believe they have the know-how to teach effectively with technology, despite a 91% rate of digital access.
    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      This article resonates with me because of the comparisons between South Korea and the USA.  I wonder where American International Schools will fall within the spectrum?
    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      By 2015, EVERY student will have access to a mobile device! WOW...could it be possible at ASF?
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    A new age of mobile learning is upon us - a comparison of 2 nations.
Michelle Munoz

A Training Proposal for e-Learning Teachers - 0 views

  • able to make appropriate use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) either as a teacher who uses ICT in the classroom, or as an e-teacher or e-moderator of open and distance learning.
  • adapt to new educational changes without compromising the quality of education
  • functions
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  • Mentoring is a one-to-one relationship
  • between an expert and a novice in which the expert guides the novice by behavioural and cognitive modelling, academic and career counselling, emotional and scholarly support, advice, professional networking, and assessment.
  • Coaching is observing learners' performance and providing encouragement, diagnosis, directions, feedback, motivational prompts, monitoring and regulating learner performance, provoking reflection, and perturbing learners' models.
  • Facilitating is providing technical, pedagogical, managerial, and social activities that maintain sustained and authentic communication between and among instructors and students.
  • Technical:
  • Management Function:
  • e-teacher who plays the role of mentor, coach (Volman, 2005) and facilitator, (that is the so called 'e-moderator'
  • Social Function:
  • In order to perform these teaching functions, teacher training should focus on how to develop a series of abilities and strategies
  • Professional:
  • Intellectual Function:
  • Personal:
  • advantage of e-training is that it permits the achievement of really autonomous learning, for its convenience in time and space.
  • The primary function is that of orientator,
  • motivator and guide of the students.
    • Michelle Munoz
       
      All what I need to know about elearning and preparing to be able to teach applying elearning.
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    It explains step by step in very clear way what is e-learning and what should we as teachers know to be able to teach it. 
Lee Ann Seifert

How to Get Started Designing Mobile Games For Your Classroom | Spotlight on Digital Med... - 0 views

  • If you’re interested in using mobile games in the classroom, but feeling intimidated about how to get started, Mathews says you need not be
  • starting small and not being afraid to jump right in and experiment. He’s shared his rules of the road here:
    • Lee Ann Seifert
       
      So much technology... so many new things... where to start? Here are a few tips...
Mariana Perez Galan

http://www.ericsson.com/ericsson/corpinfo/programs/the_role_of_mobile_learning_in_europ... - 0 views

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    Mobile Learning is important all over the world. We need to learn how  other countries are using it, share how we use it.
Mauricio Castaneda

50 resources for iPad use in the classroom | ZDNet - 0 views

  • For teachers, some of which are just beginning to use tablets and mobile devices in class,
  • elow is a collection of tutorials, lesson plans and applications for educators to utilize.
  • examples of these kinds of developments, and in particular, resources for Apple products in education are becoming widely available online.
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  • 50 resources for iPad use in the classroom By Charlie Osborne | May 3, 2012, 6:00am PDT The transition to the more extensive use of technology in classrooms across the West has resulted in the integration of bring your own device (BYOD) schemes, equipping students with netbooks and tablet computers, and lessons that use social media & online services. Gesture-based technology is on the rise; according to the latest NMC Horizon Report, gesture-based technological models will become more readily integrated as a method of learning within the next few years. The iPhone, iPad, Nintendo Wii and Microsoft Xbox 360 Kinect technology are examples of these kinds of developments, and in particular, resources for Apple products in education are becoming widely available online. For teachers, some of which are just beginning to use tablets and mobile devices in class, these resources can be invaluable in promoting more interactive classrooms and understanding how best to use and control such products. Below is a collection of tutorials, lesson plans and applications for educators to utilize.
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    Ideas to use iPads in the classroom
Gretchen Dillon

50 QR code resources for the classroom - 1 views

  • In the classroom, QR codes can be used in a variety of ways — from conducting treasure hunts to creating modern CVs. Below is a number of articles, tutorials and lesson plans designed to help educators.
  • Quick response codes, also known as ‘QR’ codes, are simple, scannable images that are a form of barcode. By scanning a QR code image through a mobile device, information can be accessed including text, links, bookmarks and email addresses.
    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      This article resonates with me because of its resourcefulness.  There is less written about "why" to use them and more written about "how" to implement them.
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    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      I am curious as to how many teachers at ASF are already using QR codes in their classrooms?
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    As mobile learning and technology is more readily integrated within classroom settings, QR codes can be used as an interesting method to capture a student's attention and make lesson material more interactive.
Gretchen Dillon

Welcoming Mobile: More Districts Are Rewriting Acceptable Use Policies, Embracing Smart... - 1 views

  • “The advantages of digital media now greatly outweigh the disadvantages and require that schools update their thinking and policies to provide guidance on the use of these tools to improve student learning and achievement,” the paper says.
  • “Digital responsibility is big.” Rankin said. “We’re teaching students how to operate in this new world. We wanted to change the wording in our guidelines because we don’t want students to accept them; we want students to be responsible for them.”
  • “The depth of thought and level of discourse gets much deeper when you add an online environment,” Wells said. The teacher can present information in class, and then the students are free to explore it online – they can look at other students’ work, or check out videos on YouTube. Time constraints are no longer a factor, the process becomes more individualized, and school becomes more relevant, Wells said.
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    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      Great discussion of mobile learning policies in schools.
    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      I find it interesting that some schools are now lessening internet filters.
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    No longer afraid of giving kids access to the internet and using mobile technologies for learning, a growing number of school districts across the country are developing digital media policies that emphasize responsibility over fear.
Jenna Kubricht

Taking Advantage of "Disruptive Technology" in the Classroom | Online Universities - 0 views

  • While you will never prevent all interruptions, a second, more subtle solution is to embrace this disruptive technology and incorporate it into your teaching. Here’s how.
  •  
    How to integrate technology into classroom activities without it feeling disruptive!
Anamaria Recio

How to use mobile devices in the classroom | Teacher Network Blog | Guardian Professional - 1 views

  •  
    this article gives you ideas on how to use mobile devices in the classroom
Kate Spilseth

Changing culture of learning: Mobility, Informality, and connectivity - mLearning re-fr... - 0 views

  • How can we use technologies to make learning more connected, more mobile? In Knowledge building students work in a community, investigate a topic, ask questions, conduct research, and self-assess progress. They also engage in face-to-face and online discussions to share, critique, build on, and synthesise ideas that are new to the community. It is a way of advancing personal and community knowledge.
    • Kate Spilseth
       
      This article shows the need to use technology in the classroom and recognize the skills that students develop using social networking.
  • Many teachers do not see informal learning as they domain. But there is a semiotic relationship between formal and informal learning "The emphasis is on sharing, working together, and using a wide range of cultural references and knowledge..."
  • Knowledge is not fixed, not transmitted by authority, and we are constantly creating knowledge. There is a shift in control via ubiquitous access to learning resources, and in turn, the learners produce knowledge. This person is a mobile learner...and the whole world is mobile...the whole world is our curriculum.
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    Recognizing technology and "soft skills" in the classroom will lead to more learning.
Jenna Kubricht

10 ways to change the minds of tech-reluctant staff | eSchool News - 3 views

  • [professional development] myself. I make the training mandatory
  • “How do you get tech-reluctant teachers and administrators to use technology effectively?”
  • “To get educational staff on board with tech, encourage and support them using tech for their non-work purposes.
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  • make time to offer and teach
  • go into classrooms and model lessons using technology. I try to make a point to emphasize to the teachers that time on task increases learning for students. Engagement = student success.
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    Imp profess dv. one size does not fl all #EDC672 
RODRIGO PRIEGO RAMIREZ

Arts Programs Foster More Than Creativity - 0 views

  • She argues that for children to become successful adults, they need to know more than just how to read, write and multiply. They need to learn fundamental social skills, such as the ability to “persist in goal-oriented activity, to seek help when needed, and to participate in and benefit from relationships.” The arts are an invaluable teaching tool in this regard, in that they “naturally and frequently involve group tasks,” she notes. “Activities such as dramatic play or dancing in unison provide a venue for learning collaboration and cooperation.”
    • RODRIGO PRIEGO RAMIREZ
       
      Arts are an efficient way of engaging students in collaborative assignments, learning different skills through the exploration of their emotions.
  • “If all teacher certification programs at the elementary level were to equip teacher candidates with arts-based techniques for supporting the social-emotional development of children,” she writes, “this would not only benefit students but also create a broader base of support for the ar
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