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Posts Tagged ‘iPad’

iPads in the Classroom

Monday, April 30th, 2012

Increasingly, we hear of schools seeking to deploy ipads or similar tablet devices. Yet, it sometimes seems to me that schools have not perhaps really grasped the nature of these devices and how they, and their usage, differs from the laptop or netbook.

300px IPad in Case21 iPads in the Classroom

The iPad on a table in the Apple case (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Let me start by making one of my beliefs clear; the ipad is not a replacement for a laptop and should not be viewed as such if it is to be used effectively. Deploying laptops in a school can be relatively straight forward (yeah?), you can create pupil profiles and allow the laptops to be distributed and used by any pupil in the school. In this way, the laptop becomes a school resource which can be used by pupils or teachers.

The ipad is different. For all their versatility, iPad and other tablet or mobile devices are personal devices; they are not designed to be shared among pupils. The mere idea of using an ipad which someone else has has their grubby fingers using is almost disgusting and certainly unhygienic. I would suggest it is something schools should not even be contemplating let alone trying to implement!

So here we have the first point which schools need to consider carefully. You cannot simply extend your centralised IT provision of desktop and laptop computers with tablet devices, neither can you start replacing those old devices with tablets. They are different quite different beasts and will require a change in the approach of technology deployment and usage within an institution.

Do not get me wrong, I am not saying you cannot use tablets in schools. What I am saying is change your approach. All too often schools have tried to involve new technologies into old approaches, let’s not make the same mistake with tablet and mobile devices.

 

For many years, up to now, we have had what might be considered a centralised, or maybe a top-down, approach to education technology. An approach in which, to varying extents, central government, local government and school networks have determined what technology is purchased, deployed and its usage. To a large extent, nowadays, we have let go of this approach and allowed much more flexibility into our uses of learning technology. To a large extent, the choice of learning technology has become chosen by the learner rather than by the institution or government body. It has been clear that learners appear to choose portable and mobile devices over fixed or bulky items.

This change presents many challenges to schools, not least in ensuring that their learning content, and perhaps their admin content, and other services are made available to a range of devices used by both staff and learners. Many of these devices, of course, will not be owned by the school or its local authority; many will not be owned by the user but possibly by parents or by third parties, such as mobile phone companies.

Here we have another problem facing schools. The varying ownership of the devices causes issues for schools who seek to control the devices and how/when/where they may be used. It is a problem which has ethical, legal as well as technical issues. Can a school ethical prevent a person using a device which they own? After all, we are not talking about a small inexpensive toy or comic book but an expensive electronic device. Can a school legally put its own software or controls on a range of devices to prevent users accessing certain content, especially when the device may not be owned by either the school or the user?

Now, you can see how this article has drifted from the personal to the central in discussing how tablet devices can be used in schools. This reflects what sometimes appears to happen in schools where the central problems seem to take over the discussion about deploying tablet and mobile devices. Which is why I advocate that the first step a school should undertake is to review and adapt its approach to technology in learning. This can start by making it the responsibility of the central system to ensure that its content and relevant services are mad available to a range of personal devices rather than trying to control how those devices are used. I’m sure most network managers would welcome this change toward making a positive contribution to learning with technology rather than controlling and restricting how that technology can be used.

Now we face another issue; having said that a school cannot merely use tablet devices to extend its existing provision and that it cannot simply replace old laptops with such devices. It soon becomes clear that in order to be fully effective a school may have to replace all, or most, of  its learning tech with portable devices en masse. This is both a very expensive, time-consuming and disruptive (not necessarily in the good sense of the word) approach and it is fully understandable that schools are likely to baulk at this.

I am also not an advocate of the ‘one-size fits all’ type of approach for, although I admire the versatility of tablet devices, I feel they may not always be the best solution or the preferred solution for all learners. So I believe it is the responsibility of a school to carefully identify how an existing centralised system can be utilised, though probably pared back, to support its work and how the learning needs of its pupils can be best supported by a range of technologies and services.

 iPads in the Classroom
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World Book Web and Virtual Libraries

Monday, January 9th, 2012

4686147794 756472809f m World Book Web and Virtual Libraries
Image by Ant McNeill via Flickr

 

I wrote an earlier post looking rather superficially at the differences between old fashioned textbooks and modern digital media in education. This post builds on a bit further from that original post.

If we accept that textbooks had certain advantages over modern digital media, could those advantages be harnessed further by turning textbooks into digital media in the form of, I guess, e-textbooks? Up to fairly recently, I’d say there hasn’t really been a suitable format for ebooks; – reading a book, or ebook, on a laptop or desktop computer really hasn’t proved a worthwhile experience for many of us. Perhaps now, though, we are seeing the emergence of new devices, such as ebook readers and the iPad, which make reading ebooks much more enjoyable and versatile. Perhaps now is a time to look again at the potential of etextbooks.

The biggest advantage of a textbook is that it usually contains much more information or detail about a topic than could be found on the world wide web or an interactive DVD. So if that information could be made available in digital format, then it could be easily referenced, searched, tagged and utilised by learners.

Imagine also if all the quotations, references and citations that exist in textbooks were automatically hyperlinked to their source, then there would be a lot more information that could be easily found by learners.

Let us also think of the possibilities of web 3.0, the semantic web, for etextbooks. Each time a learner reads an etextbook or links to part of a book in an essay, they are presented with possible further text books to extend their study or maybe they can be given other authors with a complementary or alternative viewpoint.

Imagine if every text book that ever gets written has to not only go into the library of congress or the British Library but also has to have a digital version made available, pretty soon the amount of information available to learners would dwarf the amount currently available on the web. Not only would the amount of information be increased but the quality of it should be improved. Sure, learners would still need to be taught how to access it and how to use it properly but the benefits to learning could be enormous.

It could well be the case that such a ginormous (is that a word?) amount of information would be too much for a school or for younger learners. Yet, what is to stop a school setting up a subset of that information, a subset that it feels will be of value to its learners? Couldn’t a school setup a ‘virtual’ library of ebooks that pupils can use in their learning and also for their entertainment. Such a ‘library’ could be setup on the school servers and the ebooks made available to download onto computers (either school based ones or the pupils’ own) for use in school and also for use at home.

Now the possibilities of such a venture fills me with excitement at the benefits it could bring, which is such a great change after the depression I felt when I first watched the Twitter discussion on textbooks. The biggest ‘buzz’ is that most of this is already possible and is forward looking rather than backward looking, that so seems to dog edtech currently.

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Put your iPad on Your Desk

Sunday, May 8th, 2011

I don’t have an iPad

300px Steve Jobs with the Apple iPad no logo4 Put your iPad on Your Desk

Image via Wikipedia

But I have seen people using them and the first thing that strikes me is just how awkward and cumbersome they seem to be.

I daresay that when people first used a mobile phone or a video camera, they may have felt that it was cumbersome but soon got used to it. The iPad is slightly different, though, because it seems cumbersome and awkward when you finish using it.

Just what do you do with it when you’ve finished using it? Yes, I know, some of you have probably not got to that stage as you’ve been using it constantly, like a junkie, since you first got it and others will respond that the time to finish using it is when the battery needs recharging!

Seriously, though, unlike the iPod Touch which you can switch off and slip back into your pocket, the iPad is not so easy. I have seen some slip it into their laptop bag or into a briefcase. I guess many at home or at work may just put it down on a table or desk. I have even seen some who carry it around in their hand or even hold it in place under their arm or elbow; which doesn’t seem a very secure place to hold an expensive piece of technology.

Seeing this, my mind began to wander as to how the iPad might be used in schools. We couldn’t expect schoolchildren to carry their iPad under their arm or walk around with them in their hand all day. I guess they might keep them in their school bag or a satchel … (waits for fashion police to come and arrest him for suggesting people should go back to having satchels) … or would a teacher simply say ‘ right, children,’  (it’s a primary school!) ‘ put your iPads on your desk and look at me.’ ?

Put your iPad on your desk …

now that seems to conjure up new possibilities. With just one iPad face up on a desk or table (I’m referring to desks in deference to present government thinking!), you can have 1, 2 or up to 4 pupils working together with the one device. This is something that perhaps was not so easy with desktop computers, laptops, netbooks or even the iPod Touch (owing to its smaller screen). We could now have a small number of pupils working cooperatively together via the single device, the iPad.

I wonder, could the iPad bring about a re-emergence of board games? I know, we’ve all seen Scrabble (r) and Monopoly (r) software but, let’s be honest, they’re not quite the same when you’re playing by yourself or against the machine. Maybe, the format of the iPad could add an extra dimension to interactive boardgames?

May 2011 update,

I now do have an ipad!

and I’m fully prepared to admit that I may have been a bit wrong in my original assumptions of the device. I had considered it to be largely a ‘consumer’ product and, indeed, it could be used in that way. However, particularly with the arrival of the ipad2 (which I don’t have), I feel the ipad can be seen much more as creative tool. I also feel that its role in schools could be greater than I had at first envisaged. Ironically, this seems to be particularly so in special education, a field I know very well!

I still feel it looks and feels cumbersome, though, which is why I have a case for mine.

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