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Digital pedagogy brings technology to the classroom - 2 views

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    As technology continues to improve and spread, it is only natural for it to arrive in the classroom. As computers, tablets and smartphones become more readily available, it is becoming easier and easier for students to use the Internet and to communicate with the world, especially through social media sites such as Facebook, Vine and Twitter.

Digital pedagogy brings technology to the classroom - 1 views

started by marie_lara on 09 Mar 15 no follow-up yet
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BYOT Network - 7 views

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    A Note from Tim: Forsyth County Schools in Georgia is in its fifth year of implementing Bring Your Own Technology (BYOT). The first year was spent on developing the infrastructure, and the last four years have focused on piloting the initiative, developing personal and professional capacity, and eventually spreading the practice of encouraging students to learn with their personal technology tools throughout the district.
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    The paragraph on giving students choice and self-direction really gets to the heart of the matter. By having technology at their fingertips, a task, and saying go to it - even I feel excited to get started to make something or find something out. This feels more like what school is supposed to be about.
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    I like that the students got the ability to use a wikispace to communicate with students from New Mexico. The teacher only offered guidance and monitored her students' actions while they learned to navigate around the website and learn all of its features. Great way to build up a student's ability to learn independently, motivation to continue learning, and learn a new technology.
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    I agree with @tvisco 1000%! I am such a cheerleader for giving students choice with technology, within reason of course, but limiting them can stifle creativity and really limit your learning as an instructor. My first year teaching I had a student who taught me so much because I allowed him to be creative with his work and was open to something new.
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    It is so amazing that for years, the educational system has strictly restricted the use of devices in class. Now, as we begin to embrace it and welcome it, we can use it to our advantage and use it to support our pedagogy!
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Home | JOG THE WEB - 5 views

  • synchronous guide to a series of web sites
  • allowing the author to annotate
  • ask guiding questions for each page
  • ...3 more annotations...
    • Stephen Simon
       
      This is a great way to supplement your discussions but it has one drawback: if your URL changes in your stored Jogs, the link is essentially broken and will not display. This creates overhead for the teacher which most of us don't need.
    • Don Martin
       
      I have seen something similar to this done with a Prezi presentation where the links are embedded in the slides and the presentation is uploaded to a cloud or other website.
    • Stephen Simon
       
      It is nice that one can post annotations (sticky notes) and keep the discussion synchronous. Most paradigms of this nature place the impetus back on the teacher instead of shifting it to the student. Do you agree?
    • Stephen Simon
       
      This try-it feature is nice because you do not have to join anything to take it out for a spin. Does this way of getting you to test drive something make you wary?
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    This is a great tool for displaying specific web pages in Powerpoint-like sequence with annotations. Virtual sharing during a lecture might be another way of describing it.
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How Education Technology Leads to Improved Student Achievement - 3 views

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    How Education Technology Leads to Improved Student Achievement
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Districts Learn Lessons on 1-to-1 From Others' Missteps - Education Week - 8 views

  • "I wanted to observe and study what went wrong [in other districts] and why."
    • Lauren Simpson
       
      This is a first! I find that many of those in power in education often like to jump headfirst into something then try to troubleshoot problems along the way. I applaud Mr. Carvalho.
  • In fall 2013, districts across the country were running into trouble implementing ambitious 1-to-1 computing initiatives:
    • Lauren Simpson
       
      Before reading further, what do you think went wrong in so many districts with the 1-to-1 roll outs?
  • The initiative remains shelved.
    • Lauren Simpson
       
      What else could this money have been used for??
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  • Still, Ms. Diaz acknowledged that the school system didn't get as much teacher participation in workshops as expected, since teachers were being asked to attend on their own time.
    • Lauren Simpson
       
      I find this too be all too common, districts often try to implement new tech or just new resources and want teachers to attend on their own time. This is a systemic problem across education, I know that as a teacher I value my personal time away from school, and when I am asked to attend a training on my own time and money, I get a slight bit perturbed.
  • "It's not about the devices,"
    • Lauren Simpson
       
      This is the hardest thing for new teachers to understand, in my opinion. I feel that they see having or not having a particular device is going to make or break the students' learning. It really isn't about the device, the device just helps enrich and expand an already good lesson base.
  • Districts Learn Lessons on 1-to-1 From Others' Missteps
    • Lauren Simpson
       
      If you were the head/lead of a committee bringing 1-to-1 to your campus/district, what advantages could you provide to motivate/persuade people to get on board?
    • Lauren Simpson
       
      If you were the head/lead of a committee bringing 1-to-1 to your campus/district, what advantages could you provide to motivate/persuade people to get on board?
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    My questions are a little out of order, not sure what happened with the annotator. Just read thru my comments/annotations and answer in one reply. Thanks! -Lauren
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    Sticky #1: I think the best way to get someone on board is to show results. I would do research into how other districts that have implemented a similar program have improved their students learning. Also look at the steps taken by districts that had a successful implementation, and how far or close our district is to being able to do the same. Sticky #3: They probably didn't have an effective implementation plan. It's easier said than done. It could be teacher training on the how to use devices or how to incorporate them into their curriculum. I think that's something that districts need to focus on, is the education of teachers on the technology and continual monitoring and assistance. Sticky #4: They probably should have invested in ensuring that wireless coverage would be good enough to carry out online lessons before moving on to actually implementing the technology. More research could have gone into lessons that were aligned into the state standards. Sticky #5: I think that teacher training is very important to the survival of technology programs. School districts need to realize this and invest in providing professional development for its teachers. My school district is very good at providing professional development opportunities, unless it's very outrageous, our requests for professional developments get approved. Sticky #6: I wouldn't say that this thinking is exclusive to new teachers. I think in general some teachers will hear of a new technology that is all the rage and must have it because without it they will never catch up to other districts. I agree with you its not about the device, its about how its going to be used to enhance the lesson.
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    This article was a perfect read for me right now. We are in the beginning phases of a 1 to 1 program in our school using iPads. I keep trying to tell the other teachers and admins that getting apps and devices are the easy parts of design model, but what are we going to do with apps and devices, is the hard part? I like how the article says to focus on one subject and give teachers trainings that are organized and well focused. As the instructional technology coach for our campus I have my work cut out for me and getting teachers trained. I can't wait to help these teachers understand how use the iPads to facilitate problem solving and higher level thinking skills.
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    Mr. Carvalho gets a thumbs up! Usually those in power just jump right in! It is great that he wanted to check out what went wrong in other districts first.
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    1 to 1 needs to be more grade/need specific. We cannot use a PENCIL for all activities at all grade levels in all schools. We need to keep this concept in mind as we move to implement innovations. AND we need a plan that is shared with all stakeholders BEFORE we even decide on which device(s) to purchase! Then we need a training and implementation plan to assist teachers, students and administrators!!! Hmmmm.
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    Candace you are so right! Finding what you will use is easy, but the challenging portion is using it effectively to transform learning. Mrs. Evans I agree plans need to be shared with everyone, because often times when the plans aren't shared there is less buy in to the program.
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    Would a committee work in these cases? Perhaps having a sampling of everyone involved would help in this situation! Then professional development is essential!
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    A committee would work, but only if the committee truly represented the population accurately (sorry I so sounded like a math teacher there). I think it is an idea worth exploring, maybe on a smaller scale first.
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Using Digital Storytelling for Creative and Innovative e-Learning - 3 views

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    This article discusses how creativity and innovation can be enhanced with e-learning systems based on digital storytelling. A story creation model called movement-oriented design (MOD) is introduced for systematically developing effective digital stories, in conjunction with story creation principles articulated by Robert McKee, a Hollywood guru of script writing. "E-learning systems can play a key role in providing creative and innovative pedagogical solutions by using digital storytelling as the underlying model." Other than creating personal autobiographies into digital storytelling format, how can we encourage teachers to diversify different ways to use digital storytelling across various subjects and disciplines? Have you ever done this with your students? What were their reactions? Did they engage more? For example, would Digital Storytelling help students visualize math problem solving scenarios better because it resembles a real-life application?
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    I love digital storytelling! I think that it is a creative way to have students collaborate and have students and teachers diversify their learning/teaching styles. My students are completely engaged when they create. It becomes a personal task that is a part of them. When students own their learning, they internalize it. Digital storytelling is a great way to accomplish this!
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    I think digital storytelling is great and it gets kids highly motivated to develop a voice and promote writing and reading skills. One of my favorite digital storytelling tools is to have the kids create comics. Here is an example of a website you can use for comics. http://www.readwritethink.org/files/resources/interactives/comic/.
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    I am going to incorporate digital story telling into my classroom. Excellent opportunity to use digital literacy in my classroom and this is a great way to get students highly motivated and engaged. Candace thanks for sharing the website. Awesome that it helps both in reading and writing!
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    This is an excellent article. Digital Storytelling is very engaging for all grade levels. Students love the opportunities to be creative in an online environment. Sharing and engaging!
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How Not to Use Computers to Teach Kids : Stager-to-Go - 0 views

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    This presentation is VERY biased and VERY flawed and VERY laden with personal (irrelevant) commentary on the part of the presenter (Dr. Harvey). That said, his points on the lesson plan, and the electronic tools used, and the lack of communication between the teacher and the tech lab manager are spot-on.
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Sugata Mitra shows how kids teach themselves | Video on TED.com - 0 views

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    Video detailing the results of a 5-year 'hole in the wall' experiment whereby a single computer was placed inside a wall, within a rural town where there was zero computer literacy. Documents results of the experiment, and how children taught each other NOT ONLY how to use computers, but how to speak (some) English, as well.
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Dan Meyer: Math class needs a makeover | Video on TED.com - 1 views

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    Great video on how to decompose a 'traditional' math problem and get the students to have buy-in and take their time in formulating a solution.
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The Missing Link in School Reform (August 16, 2011) | Stanford Social Innovation Review - 0 views

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    Study asserting that: 1) relationships between teachers, 2) relationships between principal and parents/community, 3) length of time a teacher has been teaching the same class, and 4) tenure of teacher at the same school are the most reliable predictors of how much students will improve on standardized testing from year-to-year. Was not able to find stats in the article. Was not able to determine if the study was peer-reviewed.
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    Study asserting that: 1) relationships between teachers, 2) relationships between principal and parents/community, 3) length of time a teacher has been teaching the same class, and 4) tenure of teacher at the same school are the most reliable predictors of how much students will improve on standardized testing from year-to-year. Was not able to find stats in the article. Was not able to determine if the study was peer-reviewed.
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Students discuss pros and cons of BYOD initiative at high school | www.lincolnjournalon... - 0 views

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    Students discuss pros and cons of BYOD initiative at high school The Lincoln County "Bring Your Own Device (BYOD)" initiative has been in full swing this year at all three schools in the system. The goal of the program is to teach students how to integrate technology (cell phones, iPhones, iPads, laptops, mobile web cams, digital cameras, Netbooks, Kindles, flip cameras, etc.)
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    I keep hearing of districts adopting this policy. I like that the article asks kids what they think. It certainly requires a lot of latitude and trust amongst teachers, students, admin...etc. At workplaces, things have changed over the last 5 years - I remember when you wouldn't dare send a personal email or take a break and check Facebook but now nobody cares much as long as you aren't doing it all day long. They seem to understand that it's a quick break like getting up for coffee or chatting with a coworker. I think the same "humane" treatment should be afforded kids. Then they also learn self-control. If they abuse the privilege they get in trouble but sending a text or two or checking something personal every once in awhile should not be the end of the world.
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Matthew Stoltzfus TED Talk - 6 views

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    How to bring the lecture hall into the 21st century by using technology wisely. If you're short on time, jump to 7:30 in the video just to see the graphs of student brainwaves flatlining during classroom lecture! He discusses how to use a tool called learning catalytics that helps students get talking and thinking about what they're doing.
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    Students' brainwaves are the same in class as when they're asleep.... No wonder students have difficulty retaining instruction, let alone transferring skills to performance contexts.
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    Just letting everyone know I posted this because it was interesting. It's not part of our week 4 work but feel free to comment if you like!
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Why I Ban Laptops in My Classroom | Britannica Blog - 1 views

  • Could you repeat the question
  • most common
  • response
  • ...21 more annotations...
  • while the student glances up from the laptop screen
  • wired its classrooms with Internet hookups
  • schools around the country
  • way of the future
  • no longer processes information in a way that is conducive to the give-and-take of classroom discussion
  • ban laptops for two reasons
  • takes the student out of the classroom
  • Laptops
  • discussion
  • which itself has collective costs for the learning environment as a whole
  • without laptops to distract
  • students
  • students are
  • more engaged
  • are more engaged in class discussion
  • in some settings and for some subjects
  • laptops and the Internet can be useful
  • pedagogical tools
  • too many classroom settings,
  • are little more than an attractive
  • nuisance
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    Does having technology at your fingertips in the classroom lower your performance or is it more of an attractive nuisance?
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    What are your thoughts?
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    I think, like any technology, it's how it's used. There are certainly times when I think the technology just makes what we do seem "prettier." I think even for an activity which could be done old school such as getting into groups and having a discussion, or done "new school" - having students discuss online in a forum, teaching students how to do this both ways is helpful since they're going to need to be skilled in both ways.
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