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Michelle Munoz

5 ways to develop critical thinking in ICT - Articles - Educational Technolog... - 0 views

  • teacher needs to encourage a critical approach by walking the talk.
  • always ask "Why?".
  • They will start to ask themselves the “Why?” question and the “How do you know?” question
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  • website called Digital Disruption.
Carolina Montes

C. M. Rubin: The Global Search for Education: In Search of Innovation - 0 views

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    Innovation requires educators to think about incorporating  creative thinking and critical, making it possible to include disruptive innovation. In this case the new technology. 
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.
Carolina Montes

Jose Popoff: 10 reasons why I believe students should blog - 0 views

  • my ten reasons why I believe your students should be blogging:
  • 1. It helps students think global.
  • It indirectly improves students' grammar and spelling.
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  • Being aware of how exposed they are to the world through their writing, drives them to take special interest in their grammar and spelling
  • 3. A view of visitors to one's blog is pretty stimulating.
  • 4. Responsible digital and world citizenship.
  • Students feel compelled into posting valuable and sensitive content.
  • hey will feel the pressure of being responsible with what they express and how they express it.
  • 5. Stimulates critical thinking.
  • . Enhances web-creating skills.
  • Fosters creativity and artistry
  • Positive digital footprint
  • Blogging develops collaboration skills.
  • A blog could represent a nice cover letter when applying for a job.
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.
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."
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