Technology + Online + Industry + Partnerships
US Schools Leaving Mobile Devices Idle
A new study reports that we lag behind Asia and Europe in the use
of handheld technologies to enhance learning.
THE USE OF POPULAR HANDHELD mobile
devices such as cell phones, PDAs, and iPods in
schools continues to attract debate among US
educators. But according to "Pockets of Potential:
Using Mobile Technologies to Promote
Children's Learning," the newest report from the
Joan Ganz Cooney Center at Sesame Workshop, producers of Sesame Street,
the debate shouldn't be around whether these
devices should be used in schools, but how they
can be used to enhance learning.
The report's author, Cooney Fellow Carly
Shuler, examined more than 25 handheld
devices and research projects around the world
to explore the current use of mobile technology
in learning and identify any challenges to
expanding its use going forward, and to investigate
relevant market trends and innovations.
What Shuler found was that, compared to its
economic rivals in Europe and Asia, the US
has a lack of "well-financed, coherent, or highly
visible efforts" in handheld-based learning.
The notable efforts that do exist, Shuler claims,
exist in "pockets" that need to be connected
through multisector leadership.
HANDS ON Schools need to
integrate mobile technologies.
According to the report, educators, vendors,
and policymakers must address challenges such
as privacy threats, cultural norms and attitudes,
and lack of an accepted mobile-learning model
before handheld devices can be fully exploited
for educational purposes. Once those challenges
are addressed, schools should seek out the
academic opportunities that mobile handhelds
offer, including reaching underserved children,
improving 21st-century social interactions, and
increasing personalized learning.
The report culminates with an ambitious,
multisector action plan to help make successful
mobile learning a reality in the US. The plan
includes calls for new investment in research and
development, the building of a digital teachers
corps, the creation of a White House initiative to
promote mobile innovation, and the lifting of
bans on handheld devices in the classroom.
The Cooney Center hopes that the report will
bridge the gap between what children do with
technology in and out of school, and bring about
a more engaging and effective learning experience.
"Mobile devices are part of the fabric of
children's lives today; they are here to stay," said
Michael Levine, executive director of the
Cooney Center, in a statement about the report.
"Sesame introduced children to the educational
potential of television. A new generation of
mobile media content can become a force for
learning and discovery in the next decade."
"Pockets of Potential" was supported by the
Pearson Foundation, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and PBS Kids Raising Readers. To view the full report,
visit the Cooney Center website.
Green Spot
MICHIGAN SCHOOLS MODELS OF ENERGY AWARENESS
OKEMOS HS STRIVES TO BE
CARBON-NEUTRAL. Carbon
Neutral Volunteers, an
organization dedicated to empowering
people to reduce their carbon
footprint, is helping Okemos High
School (MI) become the world's
first carbon-neutral high school.
The school teamed up with CNV
to launch an Alternative Energy
and Sustainability Program
designed to increase its energy
efficiency. Okemos is also calling
on people from all over the world
to earn Volunteer Carbon Credits
through CNV by making ecofriendly
lifestyle choices, and then
contributing the credits to offset
the school's carbon footprint.
CNV is planning on expanding
this program to all North American
schools later this year.
WHITMORE LAKE HS PILOTS
GREEN TECH COURSES.
Throughout a yearlong pilot program,
Whitmore Lake High School
(MI) is using the Creative Learning
Systems' Alternative Energy
SmartLab-- a fully integrated system
of curriculum, computer
workstations, software, and digital
tools-- to offer courses in green
technology. Students will explore
alternative energy sources in the
lab and will participate in handson
activities such as designing
wind-turbine propellers and cooking
with solar ovens. Whitmore
Lake hopes its program serves as
a model other schools can follow.
:: Awards and Contests
ONLINE SAFETY CONTEST LAUNCHES.
In their continued efforts to build
awareness about cyber safety issues,
The National Cyber Security Alliance
(NCSA) and
the Multi-State Information Sharing
and Analysis Center (MS-ISAC) have launched a new
contest for K-12 students. Entrants can
create either posters or short videos
and podcasts explaining an internet
security problem or specific actions
students can take to stay safe online.
Individual students or groups may
submit entries on the NCSA website
until March 31. Three winners will be
chosen from both of the two categories
(poster, video/podcast) at each
grade level-- K to 5, 6 to 8, and 9 to
12. First-place winners will receive
$500, second-place winners will
receive $250, and third-place winners
will get $100. All winning entries will
be posted on the NCSA and MS-ISAC
websites, and may be used in national
security awareness campaigns.
ADOBE ACCEPTING ENTRIES FOR
INNOVATION AWARDS. Through
May 8, Adobe is
accepting submissions for its 2009
School Innovation Awards program. The
annual program honors imaginative
technology design projects from high
school students in the US and Canada.
Students in grades 9 to 12 can use Adobe
applications to create projects in the categories
of Web Design and Development,
Film and Video, or Graphic and Print
Design that express this year's theme:
"The World Is Your Stage." A panel of
judges from Adobe will select a winner
from each category to receive Adobe
Creative Suite 4 software. Out of those
three, a top prize-winner will then be
chosen to receive a CS4 site license
for his or her school. The grand-prizewinning
student's teacher will receive
a trip to the 2009 National Education
Computing Conference (NECC) this June in Washington,
DC. Enter and review complete contest
rules.
:: Industry News
PEARSON AND TABULA
DIGITA FORM MATH
PARTNERSHIP.
Tabula Digita is creating
customized versions of its
DimensionM educational
math video games that align
to the math curriculum in
three of Pearson Education's
math programs: Scott
Foresman-Addison Wesley
enVisionMath for elementary
students, and Prentice
Hall Mathematics and Connected
Mathematics for middle school students.
This partnership combines awardwinning
educational gaming and math
curriculum with the goal of engaging
students in learning critical math skills
and improving achievement. The new
DimensionM Powered by Pearson games
will be available for the 2009-2010
school year.
PROJECT TOMORROW TO HOLD
CONGRESSIONAL BRIEFING. Julie
Evans, CEO of nonprofit education
research organization Project
Tomorrow, will
present the key findings of its Speak
Up 2008 survey during a congressional
briefing. Speak Up is an annual national
research project that collects and
reports on unfiltered feedback from
students, parents, and teachers on key
educational issues. Several key partners
and a panel of K-12 students,
teachers, administrators, and parents
will join Evans for the briefing, which
will take place at the Rayburn House
Office Building on Capitol Hill on
March 24, from noon to 1:30 p.m.
SCOTCH AND DISCOVERY CREATE
NEW SCIENCE WEBSITE. Scotch
brand products from 3M and Discovery Education have recently
launched a website that provides free
resources for creating innovative
science fair projects. The website,
called Scotch Science Fair Central, offers help to students in the
areas of planning, conducting, and presenting
science fair projects, and also
gives teachers, science fair coordinators,
and parents tools to help guide students
through their projects.
FUNDS FOR LEARNING LAUNCHES ERATE
BLOG. To boost understanding of
the federal E-Rate program, Funds for
Learning,
a national E-Rate compliance services
firm, has launched the E-Rate Blog on
its website. The new blog offers information
and tips on the program, which
provides public schools with discounts
on telecommunications technologies,
as well as commentary from the company's
compliance experts. Funds
for Learning is also accepting guest
contributions to the blog, subject to
the blog guest posting guidelines found
on the Funds for Learning website.
DESIRE2LEARN TO CONTINUE XOXO
PROGRAM. Continuing its successful
XOXO program begun in fall 2008,
Desire2Learn has set a goal of raising funds to purchase
100 XO laptops for the One Laptop per
Child project in
2009. In addition, the e-learning company
will continue to raise awareness
of One Laptop per Child across North
America. Several partners, including
education technology companies
Elluminate and Respondus, will
join Desire2Learn in this initiative to
support the e-learning needs of students
in underprivileged areas.
TURNING TECHNOLOGIES UNVEILS
NEW SERVICES. Turning Technologies,
a provider of student response systems,
recently introduced three new
consulting services for K-12 schools.
The Turn Up Achievement program is
a comprehensive school improvement
initiative designed to create measurable
increases in student achievement. Turn
Up Learning follows a three-tiered
response to intervention (RTI) model,
which identifies instructional needs
and intervenes with evidence-based
practices. And Turn Up Engagement is
a systemic approach to increasing the
level of student engagement through
the integration of educational gaming
in core content areas. In addition to
the three consulting programs,
Turning Technologies launched the
Click2Achieve Professional Development
Program and summer/fall
workshops designed to help teachers
maximize use of their student
response systems.
INSPIRATION SOFTWARE OFFERS
FREE WEBCASTS. Inspiration Software, a
provider of visual learning tools, is
offering K-12 teachers two free online
workshops a month as part of its 2009
webcast series. The webcasts will
focus on helping teachers use visual
learning techniques to improve student
achievement across all subjects. Each
workshop will be archived and available
for viewing by teachers who are
unable to participate in the live webcasts.
For more information on the
workshops, visit here.
EPSON AND POLYVISION DONATE
TO TEACHER PROGRAM. Technology
manufacturers Epson America and PolyVision have teamed up
to donate new audiovisual products to
Florida Digital Educator, a statewide program that
aims to integrate technologies into
Florida classrooms. The program will
receive 10 Epson PowerLite W6 projectors
and 10 PolyVision Eno interactive
whiteboards to be used for peer training
by its Master Digital Educators.