http://www.hdnews.net/Story/ipads101311
OTIS — Otis-Bison is a small school district, but nevertheless, it has positioned itself on the technological forefront.
This summer, the Otis-Bison school board voted to purchase Apple iPads for all students in the sixth through 12th grades. On Tuesday, the school hosted an iPad Day, where students were assigned an iPad, listened to orientation lectures and dabbled with the iPads in different training sessions.
Read the full story: http://www.hdnews.net/Story/ipads101311
iTunes: Automatically download new music purchases to all your devices over Wi-Fi (or 3G). No syncing necessary. Download anything you’ve already purchased in the iTunes Store to all your devices. Ok so this could be handy, in fact I was traveling this weekend and have already taken advantage of this feature.
Photo on all your devices: iCloud pushes any photo from your iOS device or computer to the other—without syncing. Photos from your computer will automatically show up in the Photos app on your iPhone, iPad or iPod touch. With Photo Stream, you’ll have access to the last 1,000 photos on your device stored on iCloud, not your computer or iOS device—unless you want it.
Documents in the Cloud: Keeps your documents up-to-date automatically. You’ll have access to your docs and most recent updates wherever you are on whatever device you’re using by signing into icloud.com/iwork, you’ll be able to view and edit your iWork files—and even download in iWork, Word or PDF format. OK, so all those MS offic fanatic should be happy!! Me, I have MS office on my MAC, but I have confess that I never use it. I always use iWork. Just simpler!!
Apps, Books & Backup: Apps will be everywhere you are—no need to download any multiple times on each device or computer you have. Same with books. iCloud will push all apps and books, including notes, highlighted text, etc. automatically. iCloud will back up your data daily over Wi-Fi. Finally, somebody was thinking. I back up, but now it will do it for me!! YEAH!!
Calendar, Mail, Contacts: iCal, Mail and Contacts will all also be pushed automatically, plus bookmarks, notes & reminders are included.
Find My Friends & Find My iPhone (iPad, iPod touch, Mac)
Turn your device into a location device—by sharing data, you can pinpoint where your friends and family are. Same goes for your devices should you loose it or it gets stolen. Wow, that is piece of mind, I lost my iPhone last year, what a hassle!! But looks like that will not be the case any more.
To learn more about iCloud, check out apple.com/icloud.

Time check out Wired Magazine app on your iPads. If you don’t have a subscription to Wired, you can purchase the special issue for $2.99.
This isn’t the normal Wired Magazine, but a special publication that puts all of the interviews of Steve Jobs that Wired did in one place. Very cool to have all of the articles together in print again and only available on the iPad. Absolutely worth $2.99. If you are a Wired subscriber, it is free with your subscription.
I was honored this summer to do a podcast with TeacherCast and have been using the site quite a bit, but this new design is great. Makes things super easy to find. Looking forward to sharing with my students. If you have never visited the TeacherCast site, check it out!
“Dear Friends of TeacherCast
I am writing to you to spread the news of something big happening at TeacherCast. Our website has gone into what we are calling TeacherCast 2.0.
Thanks to your support and dedication to the website, we have grown tremendously and we are helping great educators in more than 80 countries and 49 states. Our iPhone app has been downloaded more than 200 times and our LiveBinders, Podcasts and Curation projects are widely tweeted about each day.
We are looking to grow TeacherCast even further in the next few weeks by adding great content such as app reviews, podcasts, and screencasts. We have added a video section to the website as well as a section we call “Software How-to’s”. In addition, our iPhone app, which features great blogs and content from many of you, was just submitted to Apple for our first major update.
Thank you for your help and support. Please help us by continuing to share TeacherCast with great teachers, administrators, parents, and app developers.
Please take a moment over the next few days to check out TeacherCast. Please write some great reviews for us on our iTunes feed and leave us a nice 5 Star Rating. This will only help TeacherCast grow exponentially. Please continue to tweet and retweet about TeacherCast to your friends and coworkers.
Once again, Thank you for helping me with my dream.
All the best,
Jeff
www.TeacherCast.net
@TeacherCast”
NBC’s Brian Williams asks an audience of educators at the Education Nation summit about the myriad challenges they face. This is the complete unedited version of the live broadcast.
Click here it watch the broadcast
I watched live Sunday afternoon and if politicians were watching I am sure they saw a very different picture of what education, teachers, students, and schools need and want. I hope they are listening!!
Consumption of digital content has become a daily part of teen and pre-teen students’ lives and teachers around the world are looking to keep pace with educational resources about Digital Citizenship, according to a 2011 survey conducted by the National Council for Digital Citizenship (NCDC).
NCDC conducted a survey of International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) members last April to gain insight into educators’ understanding of digital citizenship and classroom needs.
Read the full story and see the results, CLICK HERE
Columnist Gareth Cook writes in support of the “flipped” classroom model, in which students receive online instruction at home and practice what they have learned with a teacher in the classroom. Cook writes that this approach is especially beneficial for teaching math, which can be seen in the rising test scores in a California school district that has been using Khan Academy videos to help students learn math concepts at home and at their own pace. The Read the full story in the Boston Globe, Click Here
Bob Sprankle, Bit by Bit blog and Seedlings Podcast is an Elementary Technology Integrator in Wells, Maine. He is always inspirational and this post and list of resources about teaching and remembering 9/11 and using technology is nothing short of brilliant.
Bob has quite an extensive list of sites, including Room 208, his kids podcast. Check those out too. http://bobsprankle.com/bobsprankle/index.html
(cross-posted at TechLearning)
“This coming Sunday will mark the 10th Anniversary of 9/11. This will, without doubt, be a difficult day for many. Ten years is a long time, and yet it feels like just yesterday when I received the note handed to me while teaching that alerted to me of the tragedies taking place that fateful day. I still have that note. Every once in a while, I take it out and re-read it. It immediately transports me back to that horrible day and propels me into deep reflection.”
Read more: http://bobsprankle.com/bitbybit_wordpress/?p=3327
By Suzie Boss
Suzie Boss (@suzieboss on Twitter) is a journalist and author of Reinventing Project-Based Learning: Your Field Guide to Real-World Projects in the Digital Age. She’s also a regular blogger on Edutopia.
Whether it’s with a moment of silence or an outpouring of service, schools across the country are considering how to help their students observe the tenth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. A wide range of resources are available to assist educators as they seek learning opportunities around this emotion-charged date.
Read the full story, CLICK HERE
Many schools across the country have rules about tech in the classroom, but they’re not the rules you might think. Teachers instruct students to take out their smartphones, to power up their iPads, and to log in to Twitter.
Technology’s role in the classroom has been widely debated: does it simply feed an addiction to a mobile lifestyle, or does it give otherwise shy students a way to find their voices? A national survey released in April by Pearson Learning Solutions found that only “2 percent of college faculty members had used Twitter in class, and nearly half thought that doing so would negatively affect learning,” reported The New York Times. However, at the same time, a recent survey by the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth found that “98 percent of higher ed institutions are on Facebook, and 84 percent are on Twitter,” said InsideHigherEd.com.
Read the full story: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/08/21/high-tech-schools-innovative-tech-in-classroom_n_925450.html#s326592&title=iPads
WATERLOO, Iowa — Senior Alexis Hellman spends less time finishing assignments since returning to Columbus High School earlier this month equipped with an iPad 2.
Alexis said she completes her school work on the slender notebook computer, eliminating a lot of the paper and folders she used in past years.
“I like it because it’s easier to do homework right there and answer the questions that the teacher asks,” she said last week while working on an exercise in her Spanish class. “It seems like I get it done a lot quicker and know what to do right away.”
The country’s achievements in education have other nations doing their homework
Lainie Rowell shows us how to use an iPad as a document camera. So obvious and genius!
“Iowa, Did You Know?, the video is aimed at Iowa policymakers, citizens, and educators and is intended to help them feel a greater sense of urgency when it comes to changing our schools. Right now there’s a fair amount of complacency; the average Iowan isn’t coming to his or her school board or politician saying, “Hey, why aren’t you preparing my kids for this digital, global world we now live in?!”
Take a look at the video and see what you think. Even if you don’t live in Iowa, I think you’ll find it quite pertinent to your educational context too. More thoughts and resources after the video…http://www.iowafuture.org/2011/08/04/iowa-did-you-know/“
This Iowa Future video highlights the drastic changes occurring in Iowa and the world, and shows that schools are struggling to keep up in today’s dynamic new global environment. The video premiered at the School Administrators of Iowa Conference, Aug. 3, 2011.
This fast-paced video emphasizes the magnitude of the challenges ahead, the need for Iowans to support the changes that schools must make if our learners are to be career, college, and citizenship ready, and the imperative to do this now, rather than later.
The seven-minute presentation is aimed at all Iowans, from all walks of life. It may be used with a variety of audiences, including students, parents, community members, school board members, legislators—virtually anyone with an interest or a stake in Iowa’s education future.
The “Iowa Did You Know?” video is the latest of a growing number of resources in the Iowa Future toolkit to provide school and community members with information and tools to help them lead or participate in education change efforts in their communities.
Scott McLeod authored “Iowa, Did You Know?” which is based on the popular general “Did You Know?” series written by Scott and others.
Here is the speech that actor Matt Damon gave today to thousands of teachers, parents and others who attended the Save Our Schools march on the Ellipse near the White House to protest the Obama administration’s education policies that are centered on standardized tests.
Damon was the last of many speakers, including Diane Ravitch, Linda Darling-Hammond, Deb Meier and Jonathan Kozol. I’ve published posts of theirs before, so here is something different: Damon’s common-sense, straight-to-the-point speech.
I flew overnight from Vancouver to be with you today. I landed in New York a few hours ago and caught a flight down here because I needed to tell you all in person that I think you’re awesome.
I was raised by a teacher. My mother is a professor of early childhood education. And from the time I went to kindergarten through my senior year in high school, I went to public schools. I wouldn’t trade that education and experience for anything.
I had incredible teachers. As I look at my life today, the things I value most about myself — my imagination, my love of acting, my passion for writing, my love of learning, my curiosity — all come from how I was parented and taught.
And none of these qualities that I’ve just mentioned — none of these qualities that I prize so deeply, that have brought me so much joy, that have brought me so much professional success — none of these qualities that make me who I am … can be tested.
I said before that I had incredible teachers. And that’s true. But it’s more than that. My teachers were EMPOWERED to teach me. Their time wasn’t taken up with a bunch of test prep — this silly drill and kill nonsense that any serious person knows doesn’t promote real learning. No, my teachers were free to approach me and every other kid in that classroom like an individual puzzle. They took so much care in figuring out who we were and how to best make the lessons resonate with each of us. They were empowered to unlock our potential. They were allowed to be teachers.
Now don’t get me wrong. I did have a brush with standardized tests at one point. I remember because my mom went to the principal’s office and said, ‘My kid ain’t taking that. It’s stupid, it won’t tell you anything and it’ll just make him nervous.’ That was in the ’70s when you could talk like that.
I shudder to think that these tests are being used today to control where funding goes.
I don’t know where I would be today if my teachers’ job security was based on how I performed on some standardized test. If their very survival as teachers was based on whether I actually fell in love with the process of learning but rather if I could fill in the right bubble on a test. If they had to spend most of their time desperately drilling us and less time encouraging creativity and original ideas; less time knowing who we were, seeing our strengths and helping us realize our talents.
I honestly don’t know where I’d be today if that was the type of education I had. I sure as hell wouldn’t be here. I do know that.
This has been a horrible decade for teachers. I can’t imagine how demoralized you must feel. But I came here today to deliver an important message to you: As I get older, I appreciate more and more the teachers that I had growing up. And I’m not alone. There are millions of people just like me.
So the next time you’re feeling down, or exhausted, or unappreciated, or at the end of your rope; the next time you turn on the TV and see yourself called “overpaid;” the next time you encounter some simple-minded, punitive policy that’s been driven into your life by some corporate reformer who has literally never taught anyone anything. … Please know that there are millions of us behind you. You have an army of regular people standing right behind you, and our appreciation for what you do is so deeply felt. We love you, we thank you and we will always have your back.
The use of digital media to enhance learning for at-risk students should be considered a necessity rather than a luxury, says author S. Craig Watkins. Research shows digital technology has a positive effect on student learning and schools should ensure that all students have equal access to digital tools and projects, even amid budget cuts and other concerns. KQED.org/Mind/Shift blog
Quick tour of what’s ahead this year for VoiceThread including our first Mobile App for Apple’s iOS devices, VoiceThread Information System Integration (Auto-creation and population of Groups/Classes), updated research articles, member list and licensing options, and finally, some scheduled maintenance to make all the new features possible.
And now Voicethread Mobile
Update Research…The Data is in. As predicted in the 2009 Horizon Report, VoiceThread’s impact is being felt across the entire landscape of teaching and learning. See a list of current members and independent sources of research relevant to VoiceThread in Education. These scholarly articles and studies can be referenced in applications for educational grants for federal funding for VoiceThread. Download a copy.
VoiceThread Mobile for Apple® iDevices
http://voicethread.com/about/features/accessibility/
http://voicethread.com/about/features/accessibility/
http://voicethread.com/about/features/accessibility/
The St. Charles Parish school system in Louisiana will begin a pilot program this fall to allow students to bring their mobile devices to school. Educators say the initiative is aimed at offering more personalized lessons and encouraging students to bring lessons home. “We want to teach them responsible use of developing technology,” district official Colleen Charles said.
Read the full story The Times-Picayune (New Orleans)
Share your docs on the go with the improved Google Docs for mobile
Google Docs is about collaboration, but as many of us know, others often rely on us even when we’re nowhere near a computer. That’s why we’re excited to bring the features you need to your tablet and mobile device’s browser. Today, we’ve updated the look of Google Docs for mobile browsers and added the ability to sort, narrow, and share multiple docs in your mobile docs list.
To get started, go to docs.google.com from your supported device’s browser. Press Sort to organize the list of docs visible in the mobile browser, or pressNarrow by to specify the subset of docs you’d like to see.

To share from your mobile docs list, select one or more documents, press the Share button, and select Share, Get the link to share for public or unlisted docs, or Email as attachment. Sharing a doc in your mobile browser works the same way as it does on the desktop.

We’re committed to improving the experience of accessing your docs from your mobile device. We’d love to hear what you think is working and what isn’t in oursupport forums as well as in the comments of this post.
Posted by: Hossein Attar, Software Engineer







