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Entries from March 1, 2013 - March 31, 2013

Saturday
Mar302013

BFTP: Checking hoaxes

A weekend Blue Skunk "feature" will be a revision of an old post. I'm calling this BFTP: Blast from the Past.  Original post March 31, 2008. See also my article The Hoax on You.

I really want most urban legends to be true. - from My Biases
They told me I was gullible... and I believed them.-  from Doug's t-shirt says

Monday is April Fool's Day. A great time to pass along a good urban myth or two - or more likely, receive them from one's colleagues.

Where do you head first to check out whether that long circulated story about cookie recipes, Kentucky Fried Rat or a tourist photo taken from the top of the World Trade Center dated 9/11 has any basis in reality? And more importantly, do you teach or kids and staff to verify the accuracy of those amazing factoids received by e-mail?

WTChoax.jpg

These are my standby sites to check hoaxes

  • Snopes - the granddaddy of urban legend checkers. Wide scope and good search engine. Very current.
  • Truth or Fiction - Concentrates on information spread via e-mail.
  • Hoaxbusters. (U.S. Department of Energy) Good site if you believe the government can be trusted. Oops, no longer associated with the DOE. Retired in 2017.)

Going to keep this short. I need to send a box of Neiman-Marcus cookies to a terminally ill boy and get my mail to see if that check from my Nigerian partner has come yet. Remember not to put your PIN number in backwards or the police will be summoned and that cell phone use causes Alzheimer's. 

Really. 

Phone scams - commercial source with good information 

Thursday
Mar282013

Is being the first better than being the best?

In our district, iPads are the zombies of educational technology.

Mindlessly and in numbers uncountable, they are pushing against our school house doors in unending waves, funded by grants, by departmental budgets, by textbook funds, 1:1 pilots,  and, well, by-hook-or-by-crook.

In my 30+ years of education, I have never seen a technology become so demanded by educators, so rapidly. And a surprising number of these devices are actually being used very effectively with kids - as teaching stations, as e-readers, as productivity tools, and as adaptive/adoptive devices.

And it does seem to be iPads alone - not Android tablets (to the dismay of my techology purists), not Chromebooks. not lapttops. Why?

In What It’s Going To Take For Teachers To Give Up Their iPads appeared first on TeachThought, Terry Heick writes:

As more people purchase the [iPad] device, it receives more attention from everywhere–major news media, social media, face-to-face conversations, etc. This in turn creates even more buzz. More are sold, and now to satisfy the demand for additional coverage it’s discussed in more detail—not simply in terms of sales and cost, but its design, its peripherals, its integration, and so on. It’s labeled an inspiration and literally changes what we, as consumers, expect from a product.

In other words, iPads are doing well in schools because of hype? Hmmmmmmm. I think it is more than that, Terry.

First, I own no stock in Apple. I believe I can objectively determine both the usefulness and value of a technology. I recognize many ways the Android OS and the devices that run it are superior to iPad and iOS. But it would take some sort of miracle or cataclysmic event for our district to move to a new mobile hardware or mobile OS. And here's why...

  • Apple was the first to deploy a successful device of this size and functionality. We in Minnesota tend to be early adopters of technology and there was nothing else available when we started down this path two-three years ago - and we all love what we are familiar with. Early adoption by a large number of schools has led to a critical mass that makes the development of management software, charging stations, and other peripherals - as well as task-specific educational applications, potentially lucrative for developers.
  • Educators like the closed-technology biome. That only Apple approved apps run on the devices, that the device can't be "programmed" unless jail-broken, and that the device works best with Apple's online cloud systems is a plus, not a minus as it is for so many "techies." Many technologists share the tinkerer's love of customizing and tweaking, much as some people like souping up cars, making their own clothes, or cooking from scratch. Most of us just want a car that runs, clothes that fit and are easy to care for, and food that is fast, nutritious, and tasty. iPads just work, and work reliably - a far more desirable attribute than customizability.
  • The "closed-biome" also results in a short, shallow learning curve for basic operations. 'Nuf said. A very short inservice is all it takes to get most educators up an running on the basics. Hey, the dang thing only has one button - how hard can it be to use?
  • Educators see positive uses for these devices on a personal or professional productivy level - not just as a tool to use with students in the classroom. Checking e-mail, accessing the weather, reading online news have made these devices useful to adults before they ever start using them in the classroom. This builds a comfort level that extends then to the device's use with kids. A lot of teachers who are parents also have seen how their own children use the device and transfer that use to the classroom. I've always said that technology has to personally empower the teacher before he/she will use it in the classroom. That's still true.
  • There is comfort in numbers. When other districts near us are deploying the same device, we can form support groups, share knowledge and strategies, and do not look like such total risk-takers to our sometimes conservative communities. Call it the lemming strategy of technology implementation. 

Many of the arguments I made explaining "Why we use Macs" apply to iPads as well. Had Google come to the market first and targeted education would we be using Nexus tablets today? I think we would - we're totally invested in GoogleApps for Education - not Microsoft Learn 360 which was late out of the gate.

Sometimes being the first is better than being the best.

 

Image source

Wednesday
Mar272013

Getting to know you

Getting to know you,
Getting to feel free and easy
When I am with you,
Getting to know what to say

Haven't you noticed
Suddenly I'm bright and breezy?
Because of all the beautiful and new
Things I'm learning about you
Day by day. - from The King and I

Screen shot of a recent Blue Skunk blog post displayed in the soon-to-be-defunct GoogleReader:

 

A screen shot of the same blog post when viewed in Feedly:

 

You've got to admit, there can be some aesthetic benefit to changes now and then. I am increasingly glad that i was "forced" to this new RSS reader. I may never have this far more pleasant reading experiece had I not.