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Home/ Groups/ EDC672 Mobile Devices in the Instructional Program
Tania Hinojosa

12 Steps to Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) Success - 1 views

    • Tania Hinojosa
       
      Interesante ahora que estamos en esto de elegir el mejor divice que cubra nuestras necesidades personales y profesionales
Patty Zamora

A flickr CC search toy - 1 views

    • Patty Zamora
       
      Easy way of finding great photographs we can use legally for presentations!
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    Flickr Creative Commons image search
Vicky Solorzano

Mobile Learning at ACU: Full Presentation - YouTube - 1 views

    • Vicky Solorzano
       
      Very interesting video. Highly recommended. Talks about humanity's  search for means to acquire, share, and transmit information and how this has evolved over different stages in time.  Provides a different perspective on the use of mobile devices for educational purposes. 
Alejandra Salazar

Educational Origami - Global Digital Citizen - the role of the teacher - 1 views

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    "We are global teachers, ethicists and moralist, masters of our subject and students of the world."
Tracey Ugalde

How the Internet is Revolutionizing Education - 1 views

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    This graphic representation of E-Learning helps me to see the big picture.
RODRIGO PRIEGO RAMIREZ

Create a videogame - 1 views

    • RODRIGO PRIEGO RAMIREZ
       
      this is great for building transdisciplinary assignments including Art.
  • ime after testing i
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.
Lee Ann Seifert

Flipped Classroom A New Learning Revolution - 1 views

  • Flipped Classroom is an inverted method of instruction where teaching and learning take place online outside of the class while  homework is done in the classroom.
  • Advocators of this approach believe that this is the ideal method of instruction in our digital age
  • In most Flipped Classrooms, there is an active and intentional transfer of some of the information delivery to outside of the classroom with the goal of freeing up time to make better use of the face-to-face interaction in school.
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    • Lee Ann Seifert
       
      Flipped Classroom?? Definitely a model worth looking into... especially with regards to certain assignments. 
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". 
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.
RODRIGO PRIEGO RAMIREZ

9-year-old's DIY cardboard arcade - 1 views

  • Caine Monroy is a 9-year old boy who spent his summer vacation building an elaborate DIY cardboard arcade in his dad’s used auto parts store
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.
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.
RODRIGO PRIEGO RAMIREZ

Free Technology for Teachers: Shakespeare Animated - 1 views

    • RODRIGO PRIEGO RAMIREZ
       
      Great for introducing Shakespeare at LS/ MS
  • a YouTube channel containing twelve playlists ten of which are animated adaptations of Shakespeare's most famous plays.
  • Because the plays are broken into segment they are well-suited to being used one class meeting at a time.
Catherine Short

Why BYOD, Not Banning Cell Phones, Is the Answer -- THE Journal - 1 views

  • responsible use policies, parent and/or student agreements, and lessons about safety/etiquette.
  • classroom management techniques must be updated
  • Educators who are successful at integrating technology into learning understand this and provide agreed upon times for students to engage in personal affairs on their digital devices--just as we all do in the real world.
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  • it's a teacher's job to help prepare students to be successful in their real world where technology is commonplace. A teacher is not helping a student become successful by creating an artificial environment in school.
  • recognition to a student such as, "Gr8 contributions in 2day's discussion!"
    • Catherine Short
       
      As educators, our job is to prepare students for the future.   Technology IS the future, let's prepare them for that!
Gretchen Dillon

Groups advocate for mobile learning, 21st century education - 1 views

  • The papers are part of UNESCO’s larger Working Paper Series on Mobile Learning, which scans the globe to provide concrete examples of how mobile technologies, thanks largely to their ubiquity and affordability, can respond to unique educational challenges, supplement and enrich formal schooling, and make learning everywhere more accessible, equitable and personalized.
  • “Mobile technology is enabling schools to truly reshape and rethink today’s and tomorrow’s K-12 classrooms. The more leaders and educators embed mobile learning into their districts, the more we’ll see an educational transformation that goes beyond our school walls, helping to maximize the potential of all students in the 21st century,” said CoSN CEO Keith Krueger
    • Gretchen Dillon
       
      I like that researchers are not only discussing the benefits of mobile learning, but now providing us with concrete examples for practical use!
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    New papers focus on professional development, equity, collaboration
veronica occelli

"What's Your Story?" 2012 Winners - 1 views

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    We have to show this video to our students!
Isabel Fernandez

The 5 Keys to Educational Technology -- THE Journal - 1 views

  • Educational technology is the considered implementation of appropriate tools, techniques, or processes that facilitate the application of senses, memory, and cognition to enhance teaching practices and improve learning outcomes.
anonymous

Educational Videos - 1 views

    • anonymous
       
      Check out the science & math videos
Mariana Perez Galan

Apps That Show Off The iPad's Retina Display: iPad/iPhone Apps AppList - 0 views

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    I own an ipad and by learning how to use it and getting the best out of it for my personal use, it makes it easier for me to explore and use it with the children
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