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Daily PressYork schools launch BYOTDaily PressYork County schools are taking steps to integrate technology into classroom teaching by using students' personal electronic devices. This fall all middle school and high school students ...
Via Leanne Windsor
Over the weekend, educator and journalist Gary Stager penned a fiery blog post calling BYOD (“bring your own device”) the “worst idea of the 21st century.” Stager’s post is a response to the increasing popularity among K-12 schools to allow...
Via Leanne Windsor
If you are going to implement an innovation such as a one to one or bring your own device (BYOD) it must be done on purpose and with purpose. Indeed, some say that if you don't ... One to one programs put the world at our students fingertips.
Via Leanne Windsor
School IT leaders turn to "bring your own technology" programs to elevate learning without busting the budget.
Via Leanne Windsor
This week I have been reading a lot about BYOD (Bring Your Own Device). It offers a solution to the fact that schools have been spending a fortune on hardware for far too long (be afraid, RM, be very afraid) and perhaps it's ...
Via Leanne Windsor
"Bring-your-own-technology" efforts in schools raise questions about what works. For the small but passionate minority of school districts that are opening doors to student-owned mobile devices, there's a lot riding on how effective the policy shift turns out to be in improving teaching and learning."
Via Leanne Windsor
Is it really possible to allow students and staff to be productive in school, using technology they've brought in themselves? Can the school save money buying or replacing hardware, by utilising the devices which have often ...
Via Leanne Windsor
Bring your own device (BYOD) and bring your own technology (BYOT) policies are growing in education and the workplace.
Via Leanne Windsor
Presentation by Dr. Michael M. Grant for strategies for using mobile devices with teaching and learning.
Via Leanne Windsor
The method and resources for students to experience brilliant, real life challenges, using the newest interactive devices needs a kick in the whiteboard backside. These discovery/experiential lessons should use interactive ...
Via Leanne Windsor
Launching an iPad 1-to-1 Program: A PrimerT.H.E. JournalOne additional concern related to cost is "bring your own technology" (BYOT).
Via Leanne Windsor
Technology Director Anthony A. Luscre of Mogadore Local Schools challenges educators to use students' mobile devices to provide technology-rich, highly engaging, and fun learning experiences that reflect real-world skills.
Via Leanne Windsor
Lisa Nielsen, the author of "Teaching Generation Text: Using Cell Phones to Enhance Learning" and "The Innovative Educator" blog, believes it is time to shatter a few myths about students bringing their own devices (BYOD) to school.
Via Leanne Windsor
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In what has become a popular trend, Pennsylvania's Hanover High School just began a Bring Your Own Device pilot program that allows students to use their laptops, cell phones, and other technologies under the direction of ...
Via Leanne Windsor
Cary Harrod shared how the BYOL program motivated teachers and students to create their professional learning communities (PLC) and encourage student-centered learning.
Via Leanne Windsor
The Hanover High School students walked into their environmental science class, sat at the round black tables, and got out their class materials....
Via Leanne Windsor
This morning I read BYOD - Worst idea of the 21st century? by Gary Stager. I was perplexed by some of the arguments against BYOD. Arguing that BYOD enshrines inequity and stifles creativity raised some questions for me.
Via Leanne Windsor
"In your schools, In your classrooms, you will soon allow students to use computing devices they already own. While today 99 percent of schools ban cell phones and other mobile devices from the classroom, there will be a 180-degree turnaround within four years. This coming shift is inevitable."
Via Leanne Windsor
Technology has been used in the classroom for decades now. But with the advent of cloud computing and the proliferation of smaller, more portable computers and Internet-capable devices, it’s now possible to bring the classroom into the technology instead.
Via Leanne Windsor
More and more schools are using mobile learning devices to help boost student engagement and achievement, and a new monograph from the Consortium for School Networking (CoSN) examines some of the best practices in mobile devices from schools across...
Via Leanne Windsor
BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) is something that I embraced as the Technology Director at Addison long ago.
Via Leanne Windsor
Which is why I think the new trend in students bringing their own devices (BYOD) is a fantastic idea. This Christmas, nearly every one of my students came back saying that Santa got them a new iPod Touch/Kindle/Kindle ...
Via Leanne Windsor
"For two years, my school district, Forsyth County Schools, has been officially implementing a Bring Your Own Technology (BYOT) initiative."
Via Leanne Windsor
Dan Haesler looks at the increasing role of technology in classrooms.
Via Leanne Windsor
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