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Phil Taylor

MacBook, Chromebook, iPads: Why Schools Should Think Beyond Platforms | MindShift - 0 views

  • As needs change over time, addressing them might mean switching devices (remaking the choice). As schools progress in their technology implementation, they may find that their needs have changed, and should not hesitate to change devices as their understanding of their students’ needs develops. This seasonal view of devices (rather than “device as school identity”) is essential to helping schools move forward, meet their current students’ needs, and keep the curriculum relevant and timely for the future. A focus on pedagogy and key technology skills will transfer from one device to another, making the shift easier; a focus on being a device expert, or mastering device specific mechanics, will not. Students will graduate into a world that will demand technological fluency, the ability to move and process information across various platforms and devices.
Phil Taylor

The Social You vs The Professional You - 0 views

  • But that blurry part…that’s the tough part. That’s where decisions have to be made. Where students at the age of 13 need to start making decisions that we never had to make. We never had a professional side at 13….we didn’t need one. But if you are going to have a social side on the Internet then you better also start building your professional side.
Phil Taylor

Kids pack in nearly 11 hours of media use daily | Safe and Secure - CNET News - 0 views

  • Just as kids used to hang out in parks, bowling alleys, and malls, they are now hanging out online. Instead of talking, they're often texting or interacting via their social-networking profiles. While these activities can be time-wasting, they can also be productive, helping kids define their identities, reinforce offline social relationships and express themselves in a variety of ways.
Phil Taylor

Beyond Current Horizons : Reworking the web, reworking the world: how web 2.0 is changing our society | Technology, children, schools and families - 0 views

  • Web 2.0 is transforming our society. Online tools that support collaborative communities are redefining how firms do business, how retailers engage customers, how politicians energize voters, how journalists inform readers, how teachers educate students, how friends maintain relationships, and how individuals shape their own identity.
Phil Taylor

Nine Elements - 0 views

  • requires sophisticated searching and processing skills
  • many users have not been taught how to make appropriate decisions
  • we must teach everyone to become responsible digital citizens
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • All people should have fair access to technology no matter who they are.
  • learn about how to be effective consumers in a new digital economy
  • Users need to understand that stealing or causing damage to other people’s work, identity, or property online is a crime.
  • digital rights must be addressed
  • also come responsibilities as well
  • culture where technology users are taught how to protect themselves through education and training
  • In any society, there are individuals who steal, deface, or disrupt other people.
  • Digital citizenship can be defined as the norms of appropriate, responsible behavior with regard to technology use. 
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