Archives For Laptops

If implemented correctly, 1:1 computing can have a measurable and significant impact on teaching and learning. Too often, 1:1 is poorly implemented and becomes an added cost without any added educational value. These findings and many more significant details on the utility and factors for success in 1:1 computing were revealed through Project Red, an initiative to “Revolutionize Education” through technology. The Project Red researchers surveyed almost 1000 schools over the 2009-2010 school year has identified 9 key implementation factors in a 1:1 program that make both a statistically and educationally significant difference in student performance. These factors include:

  1. Intervention classes: Technology is integrated into every intervention class.
  2. Change management leadership by principal: Leaders provide time for teacher professional learning and collaboration at least monthly.
  3. Online collaboration: Students use technology daily for online collaboration (games/simulations and social media.)
  4. Core subjects: Technology is integrated into core curriculum weekly or more frequently.
  5. Online formative assessments: Assessments are done at least weekly.
  6. Student/computer ratio: Lower ratios improve outcomes.
  7. Virtual field trips: With more frequent use, virtual trips are more powerful. The best schools do these at least monthly.
  8. Search engines: Students use daily.
  9. Principal training: Principals are trained in teacher buy-in, best practices, and technology-transformed learning.

Perhaps the most significant finding is that schools with poor implementations of 1:1 programs were not statistically different from schools with little or no technology integration.

Download the Key Findings…

What Changes

Dwayne Harapnuik —  December 4, 2009 — Leave a comment

What Changes
Image retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/wrichard/3743686850/in/set-72157621765265022
Came across this image that really captures what ubiquity of Internet access is starting to bring about. This is image was only modified from its original state by the the addition of the caption

What Changes with Ubiquitous Access?

The original image posted on flicker was used to show just how many Mac computers there were in in a lecture at the Missouri School of Journalism.
Non-Macs

Either image conveys the fact that our learners today are coming into our classrooms prepared to use laptops and I would dare to say all other forms of technology to help them learn– what are we doing to prepare for this.

Jason Hiner’s Tech Republic Tech Sanity Check blog Netbooks are dead. Long live the notebook addresses the evolution of Netbooks from tiny underpowered 7″ screened mini laptops with impossible keyboards to their current iterations as 10-11″ screen laptops with full sized keyboards and enough power to be useful. Hiner does clarify that with the introduction of CULV (consumer ultra-low voltage) chips we should be seeing even more functional mini laptops with full sized keyboard.

Having purchased many Netbooks (including a 7″, 9″ & 10″ ASUS Eee and an ACER 9″ & 10″) over the past few years I am looking forward to what I see is the laptops evolution. My current Netbook is the HP Mini 1000 and its 95% full size keyboard fits my full sized hands.

Read the full article…