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Lisa Stewart

Texting 1, 2, 3: Schools Test 'Bring Your Own Technology' Programs | Techland | TIME.com - 1 views

  • As protesters took to the streets yesterday to protest the inequality of wealth, two computer scientists in Portland, Oregon are protesting the inequality of resources in schools.
  • t Celly, a text-messaging service that teachers and students can use to make classwork more fun and engaging
  • Celly is part of a larger national trend in schools known as “Bring Your Own Technology (BYOT),” in which students are allowed to bring their mobile devices to class. Advocates argue that if young people are already glued to them, then teachers and principals should come up with educational uses for them
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  • “We wanted to make a platform that could be used by all kids, teens, and college students and that cuts across demographics,” Okamoto says. “You don’t just have to have iPads or live in a very wealthy school district.”
  • ach school or class can create a group for themselves called a “cell” that users may access straight from their phone, email, or the Internet. They text to personal screen names, and to prevent cyber-bullying or inappropriate conduct, they cannot see each other’s numbers.
  • “The shy kids don’t like to talk during regular group discussions, but they’re really active on Celly,” he says.
  • Still, thanks to BYOT, high school is not so bad after all,
  • But experts say providing technology is the responsibility of schools, not parents.
  • “BYOT is pushing costs that should be paid by federal, state, or city governments to the families, like asking them to pay for the amount of bandwidth students need to do their work
  • Educational consultant Gary Stager agrees, arguing that BYOT just makes have-nots feel worse.  “The rationale for school uniforms, for putting kids in matching plaid polyester, is so poor kids don’t feel bad and aren’t stigmatized in the classroom.  BYOT is another form of stigmatizing kids,” he says.
    • Lisa Stewart
       
      Interesting article about the BYOT and the Celly network.   I love the idea of the Celly network, and think ASF should look into it.  This article resonates with me because it touched upon one argument against BYOT, which is simply that such a program separates the "haves" from the "have nots". 
veronica occelli

Introducing School-Wide Digital Citizenship Practices with iPads « EdApps.ca - 0 views

  • Introducing School-Wide Digital Citizenship Practices with iPads 8Share An elementary school in our district recently got 30 iPads and asked for some advice implementing them with students and teachers. In addition to suggesting some starter apps, I recommended that we have conversations with kids around the appropriate use of these devices. While almost every child has used an iPad, iPod Touch, or iPhone, the exciting learning opportunities these mobile, Internet-connected, media creation devices create also open the door to new challenges. Cyberbullying or inappropriate web publishing happens more through the camera than regular computer use does; the mobility of the device combined with the reality that multiple users are using the device with no personalized, password-protected, network-tracked accounts makes it more challenging to keep track of who is doing what with the device or that the device itself is safe. R
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    We need to read this before we start taking our own videos and photos of students for the class!
anonymous

Technology-Driven Community Building Activities - Home - 0 views

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    This website has been designed to describe mobile learning and technology-based activities that facilitate a sense of community in a variety of educational and training settings. The links in the menu lead to descriptions of the individual activities.  They rely mostly on texting, emailing, and photo-taking activities.  Free, group sharing internet sites are also used which require access to the Internet via a smartphone or computer.  Sites such as Flickr Photo Sharing, Google Docs, and Web 2.0 tools supplement some of the activities.  
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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  • Students are more engaged and motivated to learn when they use mobile devices, and research shows that academic performances can improve.
  • Our digital natives are counting on us.
    • 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.
Stephanie Cummings

Increase Student Engagement by Getting Rid of Textbooks | Edutopia - 0 views

  • My students learn better when they take the active role in finding and choosing texts, asking their own questions, and creating their own projects. In my 9th grade West Civ class, this means students learn directly from primary sources (see the Internet History Sourcebook, the Perseus Project, the Library of Congress's 'Teaching with Primary Sources' project, and the Internet Archive) without the filter of a textbook middleman.
  • As for "keeping on the same page"... One of the most exciting things to have come out of the textbookless experience among my West Civ social studies colleagues has been the way in which each of us have the opportunity to share what we know and what we really care about with one another in the active creation of our own courses of study --
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    Out with textbooks, in with with mobile devices for learning!
Catherine Short

Northeast Ohio schools welcome electronic devices to promote learning | cleveland.com - 0 views

  • Students who don't have their own devices can use school computers or borrow one of the 30 iPads the district bought with a grant
    • Catherine Short
       
      It would be great if we had these resources!  At least we have laptops for student use.
  • Roberts sent a text message with one Spanish word to the students asking them to text the translation back to her
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    • Catherine Short
       
      Awesome way to get immediate feedback!
Kate Spilseth

A Lesson at the Zoo: Enhancing Field Trips with iPads « EdApps.ca - 0 views

  • Some of the best experiences we give our students happen during field trips; the zoo, a museum, nature walk, etc. Mobile devices can enhance this experience by allowing for the documentation, review and reworking of the experience long after the field trip is over.
    • Kate Spilseth
       
      This is a great way to use technology on field trips to help children become responsible for learning and reflect on what they have seen and done.
    • Kate Spilseth
       
      This is a great way to enhance student learning with technology.  Also, a wonderful way to reflect on a field trip and get kids to be responsible for their learning.
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    Lesson plans to incorporate technology in field trips.
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.
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.
Mauricio Castaneda

How Teachers Make Cell Phones Work in the Classroom | Spotlight on Digital Media and Le... - 1 views

    • Catherine Short
       
      Math classes almost always start with a "problem of the day." This would be a great way to do it!
  • 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.
    • Catherine Short
       
      Great app!  Awesome for exit questions or closing comments.
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  • As soon as kids walk in, Musallam sends out a text blast through Remind101, asking them a challenge question that’s related to the day’s lesson.
  • The 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.
Cynthia Castro

Apps and Ideas for Literature Circles on iPads -- THE Journal - 0 views

  • One method of getting kids to engage reading in different ways is through a tablet-based literature circle.
  • Don’t understand a word in the text? A single tap on the screen pulls up a dictionary that gives the definition, and another tap returns the reader to the page on which the word appears. If a student is reading about the Great Depression but ha
  • s no understanding of what that is, the tablet can help.
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  • If you make it more memorable and you give them a variety of different systems to use to articulate--drawing, web clips--you’re using more aspects of the mind, which makes it a more memorable experience, and it’s more likely they’ll remember information.”
  • The tablet is used to read an e-book--
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    Great ways to use ipads and tablets when students participate in Literature Circles!
Isabel Fernandez

Post a Tweet on Twitter - 2 views

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    How to evaluate an App
Tania Hinojosa

Education Week: Schools Open Doors to Students' Mobile Devices - 0 views

  • Schools Open Doors to Students' Mobile Devices
  • o connect to the school’s wireless network to do their work.
  • The students do see [a smartphone] as a potential learning tool
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  • Their [message] is that we need to start changing the policy, and using the resources that are already available.”
  • More educators are wising up, they say, to the reality that most students have phones or other mobile devices that could allow them to give real-time feedback to a lecture on a text-message back channel, take pictures during a science field trip, or answer teacher prompts with online polling.
  • what students are learning about technology use when they reshape mobile-device policies, ed-tech experts say.
  • Recent research shows the proportion of students owning cellphones is increasing
  • Educating Parents
  • Dede of the Harvard Graduate School of Education stresses that, while an eventual progression to open mobile-learning environments might be inevitable, that doesn’t mean it will be immediately beneficial. The learning potential of the devices, he says, won’t be realized without continuing professional development, as well as in-class trial and error.
    • Tania Hinojosa
       
      No cabe duda que es inevitable el dar acceso a los dispositivos móviles al salón de clases. Aprovechar la gran accesibilidad que tienen nuestros alumnos a estos aparatos , así como los programas educativos que nos ofrece la red.
    • Tania Hinojosa
       
      Otra ventaja es el poder estar en contacto con nuestros alumnos el mayor tiempo posible. La evaluación o retroalimentación es inmediata y directa.
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