Unconventional technologies deployed successfully in the content areas.

Posts Tagged: instructional technology

The Arrival of the Digital Snob

teachingliteracy:

infoneer-pulse:

Take education, for example. What used to be the most-recognized hallmark of snobbery – an expensive Ivy League education – has been completely overturned by the digital transformation of the world. Universities like Yale, MIT and Stanford – renowned for their exclusivity and their ability to limit entry to a tiny proportion of the college-age population – are throwing open their digital doors to the hoi polloi. Recently, Stanford had over 150,000 people sign up for a single course on artificial intelligence – while MIT and Yale have rolled out new open courseware on topics from the sciences to the liberal arts. Suddenly, prestigious, invite-only events for the intellectual elite like TED are being opened up to licensees all over the world. There are even Floating Universities, offering knowledge and access to Big Thinkers from prestigious universities, all at a fraction of the cost of a liberal arts education.

And that’s not all – technology is transforming what “social status” means as an essential ingredient of snobbery. If, in an analog world, being a snob was all about excluding the undesirables, in a digital world, it’s all about including those undesirables. After all, how else are you going to get to 100,000 Twitter followers? This has led to a disruption of the social pecking order in places like Hollywood, where C-list celebrities like Ashton Kutcher are suddenly the hot new tastemakers, while A-list celebrities are left fiddling with their shabby-looking AOL email accounts in the corner.

» via BigThink

Source: infoneer-pulse

Evernote belongs in the classroom

Why Algebra Matters And How Technology Can Help

So I just want to point out here, to close it up and turn it over to you guys, that print is a medium. Same as digital photos. Same as a teacher’s voice. Same as a YouTube video. Same as a podcast. These are all different media. And as we know, the medium is the message. The medium defines and constrains and sometimes distorts the message. The math that can be conveyed in a YouTube video is not the same math that can be conveyed in a digital photo or a podcast or a print textbook.

We’re so enthusiastic here in the Silicon Valley and in this group about technology that disrupts and scales but I think it’s really important to point out here the fundamental misapprehension of this whole process of technology that we have is that there is one monolithic “mathematics” and we are all just innovating around “mathematics.” But those innovations distort what mathematics is. That’s the ball that I urge us all to keep our eye on today. I’m really excited to be here and tease apart those issues with you and take some questions. Thank you.

Source: azspot

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peterjung:

So, after doing some research, my thesis is taking a somewhat different direction. Instead of focusing directly on digital literacy, I’m looking at best practices for incorporating digital literacy and educational technology into curricula. This includes using technology to augment a curriculum, or teaching digital literacy alongside other content, emphasizing increasing students capability to use the internet as an effective educational resource.

A few interesting findings I found for optimizing educational technology usage were that the best implimentations came from teachers that A: had high levels of confidence and ownership of technology, and B: were learner centered/not test focused. When a teacher is interested in using technology to boost test scores, it’s using the resource ineffectively. There are a million ways to boost test scores, and most of them are low tech. The real promise of using the internet and technology in schools is through inquiry and learner centered, self directed research, all of which hinges on some degree of digital literacy. Teachers aren’t adequately preparing students for the 21st century by teaching them how to test, they have to teach them how to effectively utilize the best informational resource known to mankind, the internet. 

Unfortunately, the US tends to be so ridiculously test based that teachers, in my experience, see educational technology as a tool to prepare kids for tests. In my student teaching experience I saw this quite a bit, as well as a sense that teachers were rather uncomfortable using a lot of this technology. The ones that were used it for test training. Now, it could be argued that a digital literacy curriculum is too advanced for grade school kids, but I have found literature suggesting otherwise. But until schools stop demanding that teachers teach to the test, things won’t change. 

Still, every now and then I find the odd teacher/librarian who owns the technology and is interested in utilizing it effectively to promote real learning. That’s comforting, as at least some teachers are trying. However, from what I’m seeing, these teachers are either younger teachers who are rather gutsy, or older teachers who are so deeply entrenched in their department that, as one teacher told me, “They can’t get rid of me.” Ironically, this teacher, despite not teaching to the test at all, had some of the best test scores, but at the same time conflicted with the administration about test related things.

Finally, a note on virtual academies. In my small amount of experience interviewing people in a virtual academy, I found that the technology used was rather primitive, and there was a definite push for that. Because this particular VA was being used as a dumping ground for students who had failed at traditional schools, their test scores were crappy at best, and that’s even when the students showed up for test days. (Most, not having a steady schedule for their schooling, simply saw no reason to show up for a test that had no real bearing on anything.) Due to this, their curriculum consisted of flash based tutorials and a test engine. It didn’t really focus on any higher order thinking, digital literacy, or the latest and greatest in educational technology. Instead, they were so focused on increasing student test scores to save their budget that they took what could have been an amazing opportunity to increase digital literacy and create self directed learners, and squandered it.

Now, part of this was due to their student population- most of the students were not highly motivated in any way shape or form, but there were a number of students who were there by choice, and it seems unfortunate that the habit of dumping the ‘last chance’ kids there ruined the curriculum. So, thanks to this, there was no ability for teachers to implement any of the best practices for online schooling, and the virtual academy was considered to be failing.

The bottom line is that, for effective educational technology usage, teachers need to both be confident in the technology, and be interested in student learning, not test scores. Only then can students have the best, most authentic experiences learning with technology, a skill that is essential for life in the 21st century.

What are the observable features of a teacher who, in terms above, owns the technology? What achievements or distinguishing characteristic mark the teacher in this privileged position? To what degree does an administrator, colleague, or student need to be technology saavy herself to be able to value a teacher as a one who has ownership?

Source: peterjung

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‘Dyslexia in the Digital Age should prove an invaluable tool  for anyone working with children and adults with dyslexia. It provides a  wealth of information on what is available to facilitate expert  performance. I particularly liked the author’s recommendations!’
Professor Angela Fawcett, Director, Centre for Child Research, Swansea University, UK 
This  book takes a bold step into the Digital Age of Dyslexia and considers  both the advantages that the use of new technologies will bring to  support people with dyslexia and also the challenges they face in  accessing learning resources. Contrary to the naïve view that the use of  ICT is a solution to dyslexia, the book makes plain that this is a  complex field but one that is worth exploring for its potential  advantages. Written in a clear and accessible style, the book (and the  accompanying web-based resources) will be an important resource for  students with dyslexia and dyslexia specialists in all inclusive  education settings. (Professor Maggie Snowling )

Dyslexia in the Digital Age should prove an invaluable tool for anyone working with children and adults with dyslexia. It provides a wealth of information on what is available to facilitate expert performance. I particularly liked the author’s recommendations!’

Professor Angela Fawcett, Director, Centre for Child Research, Swansea University, UK

This book takes a bold step into the Digital Age of Dyslexia and considers both the advantages that the use of new technologies will bring to support people with dyslexia and also the challenges they face in accessing learning resources. Contrary to the naïve view that the use of ICT is a solution to dyslexia, the book makes plain that this is a complex field but one that is worth exploring for its potential advantages. Written in a clear and accessible style, the book (and the accompanying web-based resources) will be an important resource for students with dyslexia and dyslexia specialists in all inclusive education settings. (Professor Maggie Snowling )

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On Monday, all but one student came into first period with a tablet. For students with or without executive function challenges, effective notetaking seems to be an epic struggle. New tools, tablets and smart phones, can’t immediately become powerful assets in this struggle if students still struggle differentiating main ideas from support, identifying types of support - reasoning vs. concrete details, etc.

—Unless there’s something inherent in the structure of the tool that is novel and exercises these skills.

That’s what I’d like to learn about Evernote, available for Android and iOS devices, as well as Macs and PCs. Evernote users can take notes on their devices in a variety of formats, with or without attachments, and sync them to cloud storage. The notes can then be recalled and reviewed on any system on which the client has been installed and internet access is available.

As I was teaching the students with Android tablets this strategy for using their tools productively, it caught on. The remaining student installed Evernote on a laptop running Ubuntu Linux using Wine. That was a positive sign, and the results by the end of class were encouraging: pithy, economically efficient notes were taken by all.

What surprised me is that word clearly got to other students, because by 4th students had their smart phones out and Evernote already installed. Their thumbs poked and prodded at the material as we discovered and constructed an understanding of it.

I’ll sum up my observations at the end of two weeks. In the meantime I intend to introduce some strategies to use with Evernote: Make PDFs of handouts with cam/scanner and attaching them to Evernote entries; scanning QR codes to make data entry quicker, etc.

A new range of possibilities for young IT students facing budget-strapped courses:

The Raspberry Pi is a credit-card sized computer that plugs into your TV  and a keyboard. It’s a capable little PC which can be used for many of  the things your desktop PC does, like spreadsheets, word-processing and  games. It also plays high-definition video. We want to see it being used  by kids all over the world to learn programming.

$25-$35. They’ll have to cunningly fashion their own cases. When? Before you’re back from break, if not sooner.

A new range of possibilities for young IT students facing budget-strapped courses:

The Raspberry Pi is a credit-card sized computer that plugs into your TV and a keyboard. It’s a capable little PC which can be used for many of the things your desktop PC does, like spreadsheets, word-processing and games. It also plays high-definition video. We want to see it being used by kids all over the world to learn programming.

$25-$35. They’ll have to cunningly fashion their own cases. When? Before you’re back from break, if not sooner.