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Helen Rowling's curator insight,
May 9, 12:14 AM
Try using this set up on an interactive whiteboard with set text.... Delete the scoop?
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Digital Directions's curator insight,
May 17, 11:50 AM
This thesis explores the use of tablets in education with more depth than most. Do you agree with it's conclusion that "almost all objectives, teaching tasks and concepts of the curriculum can be promoted with the aid of tablet computers"? Delete the scoop?
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Brandi Good's curator insight,
May 16, 12:45 PM
I probably don't qualify as young, but I also prefer to read on a screen. I used to be all about that 'new book smell' and the feel of the pages between my fingers until it dawned on me that I could read hands free easier with my phone and tablet.
Mike McNamara's comment,
May 16, 3:24 PM
However the same report also cautions that Children who read on an iPad or Kindle maybe falling behind in the classroom.
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online4ed's curator insight,
May 17, 8:51 AM
I'm often asked about how to use Wikipedia in the classroom!
Digital Directions's curator insight,
May 17, 12:53 PM
Many schools don't allow students to use Wikipedia for projects, but could they be teaching their students how to use Wikipedia effectively instead?
Ken Morrison's comment,
May 17, 6:44 PM
Ugh. I hate it when I do this. I accidentally scooped this article instead of rescooping yours. Thanks for sharing. Sometimes opening too many tabs causes bad habits for me.
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Silvia Gallardo-Martin's curator insight,
May 16, 6:08 AM
A good tool to make us aware of our digital presence in the W3
Martin King's curator insight,
May 16, 8:55 AM
This would be much more appealling - to me and all those natives - if it was repurposed as an interactive quiz. If time and Google Drive allows I may well get busy - and share alike. Delete the scoop?
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Jerry Johnson's curator insight,
May 16, 8:16 AM
I really enjoyed this post and it certainly holds true. Delete the scoop?
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Rebecca Ferlazzo's curator insight,
May 12, 5:38 AM
Jusst like some of my earlier scoops this model "flips" the classroom. But this classroom is "flipped" with a twist. Technology is integrated at every step. So does this still make the "flipped classroom" a good model? Or does the integration of technology take away from the experience? Technology- Help or Hinderance? Delete the scoop?
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Jason R Levine's curator insight,
May 11, 9:07 PM
"MOOCs were not designed to serve the missions of the elite colleges and universities. They were designed to undermine them, and make those missions obsolete. Yes there has been a great rebranding and co-option of the concept of the MOOC over the last couple of years. The near-instant response from the elites, almost unprecedented in my experience, is a recognition of the deeply subversive intent and design of the original MOOCs (which they would like very much to erase from history)."
Helena Capela's curator insight,
May 12, 4:42 AM
The adoption of Moocs by institutions and what they were created for
Robert Farrow's curator insight,
May 13, 3:10 AM
"MOOCs were not designed to serve the missions of the elite colleges and universities. They were designed to undermine them, and make those missions obsolete. Yes there has been a great rebranding and co-option of the concept of the MOOC over the last couple of years. The near-instant response from the elites, almost unprecedented in my experience, is a recognition of the deeply subversive intent and design of the original MOOCs (which they would like very much to erase from history)." Delete the scoop?
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Blake Turnbull's curator insight,
May 13, 5:19 PM
We all know who important vocabularly acquisition is, and so free apps to aid in this process are certainly a bonus!! Delete the scoop?
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Nik Peachey's curator insight,
May 17, 11:34 AM
This is my review of 123 Contact Form. A great tool for creating online learning. Delete the scoop?
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taccle2's curator insight,
May 17, 3:55 AM
Ofsted (England schools inspectorate) are talking about banning mobile phones from the classroom
Digital Directions's curator insight,
May 17, 11:57 AM
One of the biggest criticisms of millenials is that they are easily distracted and commonly multitasking - how do you make sure that new technology in lessons don't also become a multitasking distraction? Delete the scoop?
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Tony Chang's curator insight,
May 16, 6:16 AM
We need a patient relationship management system that provides private social networking for healthcare and team-based healthcare solutions. More at: http://pathcareblog.com/pathcare-the-interface-for-life-science-professionals/ Delete the scoop?
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Ricard Garcia's curator insight,
May 15, 7:21 AM
Read this after you watch Rita Pierson at TED... If that doesn't make you think... Delete the scoop?
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Carolyn D Cowen's curator insight,
May 15, 12:15 PM
Facinating! The comments on this piece also are interesting.
Lou Salza's curator insight,
May 16, 8:53 AM
I have been using text to speech almost exclusively for reading articles on the web, newspapers, and courese reading for a course in Leadership I am taking at Case Western Reserve University. I love the e-readers ( Read and Write Gold; Kindle, and Audio books) because I can jack up the speed and read with my ears as fast as non dyslexics who are fluent readers read with their eyes. We need to understand the 'cost' of eye reading to dyslexic students even when they "graduate" from OG or Wilson: the burden of phonological processing is too high in terms of fatigue. If we don't make the technology more available and acceptable in schools we will deny intelligent students with print challenges the opportunity to study in college, graduate or professional schools. I still read paper books. Right now I am reading A light in August by Faulkner. It is on my night stand and it is a wonderful if slow experience for me. For some, print will never 'fall away' and allow for effortless decoding and pholonological recoding.--Lou
Excerpt: "Understanding how reading on paper is different from reading on screens requires some explanation of how the brain interprets written language. We often think of reading as a cerebral activity concerned with the abstract—with thoughts and ideas, tone and themes, metaphors and motifs. As far as our brains are concerned, however, text is a tangible part of the physical world we inhabit. In fact, the brain essentially regards letters as physical objects because it does not really have another way of understanding them. As Wolf explains in her book Proust and the Squid, we are not born with brain circuits dedicated to reading. After all, we did not invent writing until relatively recently in our evolutionary history, around the fourth millennium B.C. So the human brain improvises a brand-new circuit for reading by weaving together various regions of neural tissue devoted to other abilities, such as spoken language, motor coordination and vision..." Delete the scoop?
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Ruth Vilmi's curator insight,
May 12, 3:45 AM
This is not new - I taught the International Writing Exchange (IWE) from 1993, but technology allows much more nowadays. Go for it and learn whatever your heart desires! Go for challenging courses though, not a book on the Web!!
Lola Ripollés's curator insight,
May 12, 4:10 AM
Information and knowledge is there. Only you decide what to make of it. Sharing knowledge will always give you back more than what you give.
Teachinginthe21st's curator insight,
May 13, 2:03 PM
I have participated in one...have you? Try them out. Check out www.coursera.org for courses! Delete the scoop?
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Ricard Garcia's curator insight,
May 13, 7:16 AM
Needless to say...iPads are not for typing... so... how do we fit them into class? Delete the scoop?
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RadaSiva's comment,
May 9, 4:42 AM
Paying attention to two streams of information; when does it even happen in a real classroom?
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Barbara Isasi-Brown's curator insight,
May 9, 7:21 AM
Reading, curating, sharing. My IPad has balloted an extension of me.
Ilpo Halonen's curator insight,
May 13, 4:30 AM
Poikkeuksellisesti rescooppasin tämän tulevaisuutta hahmottavan englanninkielisen jutun. Delete the scoop?
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I'm looking forward to seeing the published results from this survey.