The next time someone shares with you another piece of shock journalism with claims that research says if kids use tech they'll get fat and stupid, arm yourself with this piece (10 Points Where the Research Behind Banning Handheld Devices for Children Is Flawed) which debunks that research. If you don't feel like reading it, it says this: The research cited against technology use for youth focuses on passive television viewing or addiction to video games that are usually of violent nature.
Of course video game addiction and passively intaking information for hours on end is bad for anyone. In those cases the problem is usually not the technology, but rather the lack of a responsible adult guiding these young people.
However, when young people have responsible parents and teachers in their lives, this does not describe what most young people do with technology. When responsible adults are involved in and understand the digital lives of young people, great things happen. Below is an arsenal of material that explains how today's youth are using technology effectively. Pick a few of your favorites. Then share, and shift the conversation from lamenting about "kids today" to celebrating the wonderful things young people are doing when given proper support and access technology.
Sunday, December 14, 2014
Saturday, December 13, 2014
The Hottest Posts Everyone's Reading
Here’s the roundup of
what's been popular on The Innovative Educator blog. Below you’ll see the top
posts along with the number of page views. I hope there's something that looks
of interest to you. If it does, check it out. If you’re inspired use one
of those icons below the post to share it with others and/or leave a comment.
Entry
|
Pageviews
|
Oct
29, 2014,
|
4219
|
Oct
12, 2014,
|
3949
|
Nov
2, 2014,
|
3204
|
Oct
12, 2014,
|
2949
|
Jun
13, 2013,
|
2855
|
Oct
15, 2014,
|
2597
|
Oct
26, 2014,
|
2190
|
Nov
5, 2014,
|
1844
|
Wednesday, December 10, 2014
Best Options for Purchasing a Domain
The best way to control your digital footprint is to purchase a domain for your site. Doing so is cheap (only about $15 a year) and easy, but which site should you use?
Don’t drive yourself crazy. Just pick one of the suggestions below and get on your way to taking control of the digital identity you want.
Sunday, December 7, 2014
One mistake presenters should never make and 8 strategies to avoid it
Fortunately, if you remember this one piece of advice, your future presentations will be brighter and your audience will leave more satisfied.
The advice is…
Always make sure your audience members feel “they have everything they need to be successful.”
Presenters fail when they say things like:
- "We have a lot to get through today."
- "I am speaking quickly so we have time to cover everything."
- "We're already behind schedule."
- "In the interest of time..."
- “I’m going to skip things so we can get out of here early.”
Or do things like:
- Require participants to take down everything you say, because you haven't provided it to them. They're focused on the low level task of copying, instead of the higher level thinking of making meaning.
- Not provide a detailed, timed agenda that could be turn-keyed.
- Not tell up front and remind participants in the middle and end what goals are and that they are making strides in accomplishing the goals of the session.
Instead…
A great presenter helps those who join her feel they got "just what they needed" out of the experience. They feel at ease, accomplished, and satisfied.
Here are some ways to achieve this:
Here are some ways to achieve this:
- Build in extra time at the beginning
Start out by putting your audience at ease. Create a collegial atmosphere as folks arrive. Perhaps a simple do/now ice breaker where you ask participants to talk to the people around them and find out what they hoped to get out of the day. This gets minds flowing and allows for a relaxed start with a networked room. - Plan for latecomers
Latecomers can throw off and delay a presentation. When you address the audience ask them to be the ones to fill in a latecomer should they sit next to them and let them know what to share. - Provide ALL materials
Speaking of what to share, keep it simple. Create a link where participants can access EVERYTHING you've shared. This way they don't worry about missing anything and you don't have to worry if they didn't get something down. I do this using a timed agenda. Here is a sample: http://tinyurl.com/NYCDOEEdmodoAgenda - Ensure Materials Can Be Re-purposed Don't share materials only in PDF. Don't give access without copy ability. Provide materials to participants so that it is easy for them to make their own, customize, and bring back to their work. This is a wonderful gift for teachers (time!) and students (great new learning materials).
- Smart Name Tags
You know that link I mentioned above? Don’t worry about saying it over and over or having to keep putting it back on the projector. Provide name tags or cards with all the information participants will need i.e. a link to the presentation, Twitter hashtag, how to connect to the internet, etc. This way, the answer to every question is “It’s on your name tag.” - Take backs
Ask participants to share what they'll take back to their work. This reinforces their learning. Some ways to do this could be via a Tweet, Text, post it, 140 characters outloud or using something like a 3-2-1 sheet where participants share 2 things to remember, 2 things, to talk about with someone else, and 1 thing you'll do before 30 days pass (HT to Ann Oro for this suggestion.). - Use reassuring statements
Let the audience you know you are right on track with statements like: - "After our time together you'll know exactly how to..."
- "We are right on time."
- Have two plans
Have one plan if the class moves slowly. Have an additional plan if they move quickly. If they do, let them know that they were so on point they get bonus learning. If they move slowly, they’ll still know exactly what you told them they would learn.
So what do you think? Have you experienced presenters who try to rush through information? Have any of these strategies worked for you? Are these strategies you would try when you present?
Saturday, December 6, 2014
The Hottest Posts Everybody's Reading
Here’s the roundup of what's been popular on The Innovative Educator blog. Below you’ll see the top posts along with the number of page views. I hope there's something that looks of interest to you. If it does, check it out. If you’re inspired use one of those icons below the post to share it with others and/or leave a comment.
Entry
|
Pageviews
|
Nov 19, 2014,
|
3391
|
Jun 13, 2013,
|
2227
|
Nov 5, 2014,
|
2065
|
Nov 2, 2014,
|
1609
|
Nov 12, 2014,
|
1429
|
Nov 23, 2014,
|
1257
|
Wednesday, December 3, 2014
Tech Requirements When Innovative Educators Present
- Computer
- High speed and less than three years old
- A place to project
- A modern projector and then make sure you have…
- Adapters
- HDMI, Apple and or whatever new device comes along.
- Find out what the presenting device needs (if they are not using the one at the facility) and get it.
OR
- A flatscreen television that can connect to a device
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