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Dianne Rees

QR Codes And NFC Side By Side - 5 views

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    The article isn't about education, but NFC is emerging tech to watch which has educational apps
Dianne Rees

QR Code Curbside Haiku - 7 views

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    ew York City Department of Transport have launched a safety education campaign with twelve QR Code signs. In the style of traditional street safety signs each is embedded with a QR Code that decodes as a haiku poem safety message (images below). 144 of the signs will be placed citywide in high-crash locations near cultural institutions and schools.
Dianne Rees

How could Pharma use QR codes? | Articles - 1 views

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    Using QR codes for patient education
Dianne Rees

QR Code Generator - best places to create QR Codes - 3 views

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    Not education related, but very useful
Nicole Zumpano

Decoding QR Codes - 14 views

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    My presentation on understanding QR codes, ideas for use in education, and using QR codes to track data
Dianne Rees

QR code fails: How marketers are ruining potential patient engagement tool - FierceMobi... - 6 views

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    Better practices for using QR codes in a health care/patient education setting
Al Tucker

Mobile learning #9: A Dummies Guide to QR codes - e-moderation station - 0 views

  • 5 How can you use QR codes in education? Here are some ideas for using QR codes in education that I have found and especially like. These are all from my recent reading on the web. The sources of all of these ideas are in the ‘Read more…’ section at the bottom of this post. Add a QR code url to extra reading/resources on the final slide of a PowerPoint presentation in a talk. Participants with QR code readers can scan it before they leave. (Of course it’s also a good idea to include the url in full on your slide for those without a QR reader! The idea is that for those who have readers, it saves copying down an url letter by letter.) Include QR codes in published books, journals, or on paper handouts, which link to further resources. Especially for academic text books and course books, this has great potential, imho. Create a series of QR codes and attach them to physical objects in or outside the classroom, as part of a treasure hunt. Each code can supply a clue and a link to further information, which students need to collect to complete the treasure hunt. Students research a topic and present their findings in posters which are stuck on the classroom walls. The students create and include QR codes in the poster presentations, which link to online multimedia resources connected to the project topic. An excellent way to create low-tech multimedia poster presentations!
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    Great blog post by Nicky Hockly. Simple explanation of QR codes with some practical classroom uses.
Dianne Rees

QR Code Sliding Puzzle - 1 views

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    An interesting idea but use for good (i.e., education) versus less good purposes (i.e., marketing). Turn a QR code into a sliding puzzle.
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