The six technologies "likely to have considerable impact on teaching, learning, and creative expression," according to the 2011 Horizon Report, are mobile devices and e-books ("both close to being mainstream in the next year or less"); game-based learning and augmented reality (2-3 years to wide adoption); and learning analytics and gesture-based computing (4-5-year adoption range). Some examples: … [Read more...] about 6 emerging technologies to affect ed: Study
School & Tech
How 2 teach w/ Twitter (esp. rt now!)
There's great material for a media literacy class (or dinner-table discussion) in Twitter these days – both traditional and new media literacy – especially if you and your kids or students follow Andy Carvin (@acarvin), NPR's senior strategist for digital media. I've seen hundreds of tweets and retweets by Andy as I've been following the protest movement in Egypt and around the Middle East. Today … [Read more...] about How 2 teach w/ Twitter (esp. rt now!)
Great advice to schools on cyberbullying
I don't think research on this exists, but it looks like a lot of schools are still laboring under the misconception that they can't do anything about bullying among students that's "off-campus" because online. School administrators need to be freed of that misconception fast. Even if only one student is being targeted, "off-campus" aggression is substantially disruptive because it not only … [Read more...] about Great advice to schools on cyberbullying
A teacher on Facebook at school
Teachers and parents concerned about social media in school might have a look at "10 Ways Facebook Strengthens the Student-Teacher Connection", by New York City educator Lisa Nielsen. She wrote this blog post after attending the just-held education conference Educon in Philadelphia. She'd heard a panel of students who, she writes, "shared the importance of, 'teachers relating to them as people, … [Read more...] about A teacher on Facebook at school
Understanding cyberbullying from the inside out
If you really want to understand cyberbullying, take advantage of a perspective that's essential to the discussion. View it from the inside-out – from teens' perspective, rather than that of adults on the outside looking in. "Friending" our kids online can help fill in the picture a bit, but talking with our own children and checking in on the work of researchers who talk with lots of other young … [Read more...] about Understanding cyberbullying from the inside out