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Tuesday, September 27, 2011
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Running Head: The
IPAD Educational Uses in K-12 Classrooms
Literature Review
George DeanJason Gillett 7/26/11 11:55 AM
Jason Gillett 8/22/11 7:55 PM
Jason Gillett 7/26/11 11:56 AM
Jason Gillett 7/26/11 2:41 PM
Running Head: K-12 CLASSROOMS
The IPAD Educational Uses in K-12
Classrooms.
Within classrooms in the last two years there has been a
growing trend to integrate the IPAD into the choices of classroom technology to
the Teachers of America.
Apple has sold
more than 19 million iPads since they launched last year, according to the
company's earnings reports. It is not known how many were bought by
schools specifically, but Chicago-area schools are not alone in introducing
iPads to preschool and kindergarten classrooms. Last month, a Maine school
district agreed to outfit every kindergartener with an iPad2 this fall.
But some
educators and scholars caution the technology has swept into classrooms so
quickly that the research has not yet caught up to measure how well students
learn using the tablets. Rarely do public schools equip kids with a new
technology at the same time adults race to acquire it themselves.
"A lot of
people are rushing to get content and it hasn't really been empirically tested,"
said Sandra Calvert, founder and director of the Children's Digital Media
Center, based at Georgetown University. "What we see is a lot of promise,
and informal observations to suggest kids are very engaged."
So educators
and early childhood development experts are watching closely as schools put the
technology in the hands of their youngest learners.
This fall, the
National Association for the Education of Young Children is expected to update
a technology statement that dates to 1996. While the current policy does not
account for touch-screen tablets, officials said the core principle still
applies: Children learn best by building from simple to complex concepts, from
two-dimensional to three-dimensional worlds. (Malone 2011)
Rafael is a star on the school tennis team; the coach finds him
focused and dedicated. If it weren’t for sports, Rafael probably wouldn’t come
to school at all.
He is disciplined about his fitness and gifted athletically, but
he struggles to remember what he’s read or learned in class. Even though his
gross motor skills and coordination are first-rate, his fine-motor skills and
handwriting are a huge problem. His coach has told him that even though he’s
the number one player on the tennis team, he has to bring up his grades in history
and English to be eligible to play.
To help with history, his teacher puts her lectures into
podcasts that she creates with GarageBand and then imports into iTunes; she’s
added some chants and music to help the memory challenges. Rafael downloads
this material on an iPod and heads off for his daily five-mile run. The daily
review has helped him feel more confident in class, and he seems to remember
better when his feet are moving.
Rafael is working on his keyboarding skills, and he finds that
it’s much easier and faster to use a word-processing application to write his
papers than to struggle with handwriting. When doing Internet research, he uses
Safari and adds Sticky Notes available from the Services command to help him
remember key points on web pages.
Rafael likes being able to add pictures to his
writing assignments. He takes a digital camera with him everywhere to look for
images and real-life scenes to complement his compositions. He then uses Pages
layouts to produce papers that combine his text with his photos. He’s proud to
turn in such neat, organized, attractive papers. Suddenly, school’s become more
interesting, and Rafael’s teachers see a real change in his motivation. (Male
2011)
Even younger children have
no problem using the IPAD And Supporting Software, or setting up a Bluetooth
Printer to work with their IPAD.
I had another enlightening experience. A colleague’s
7-year-old son, Mikey, has his own iPad courtesy of his grandpa. A week ago, he
was visiting our lab and wanted to print something from his iPad. His dad said
that he would have to wait until he got home because although
our new printer had Bluetooth access, nobody had yet figured
out how to make it work. Mikey got to work and had his document printing in 10
minutes. (Rosen 2011)
Jason Gillett 7/26/11 11:57 AM
Jason Gillett 8/22/11 7:57 PM
Roxanne 8/22/11 8:06 PM
Jason Gillett 7/26/11 11:47 AM
Roxanne 8/22/11 7:58 PM
Roxanne 8/22/11 8:02 PM
Running Head: K-12 CLASSROOMS
It appears that the developers of the IPad coincidentally
or not have struck on the Main Elements of Keller’s Personalized System of
Instruction or PSI for an acronym, which is an extension of Bloom’s Taxonomy.
Keller states that his system provides the following:
Ø
Directed toward mastery.
Ø
Objectives to be mastered clearly
specified.
Ø
Self-paced instructional system.
Ø
Material is carefully sequenced in
small steps.
Ø
Repeated testing is employed.
Ø
Learner is given immediate feedback
following testing.
Ø
Emphasis is on credit for success,
not penalty for errors.
Ø
Lectures are used for motivation, as
a reward. (Lefrancois, 1997)
Kelsey Leos balanced on her tiptoes, trying to look over
the shoulders of those ahead of her. She was desperate for a glimpse at her new
Algebra 1 textbook at the front of the line.
Kelsey, self-admittedly not a natural mathematician, is a
junior retaking the freshman-level class. She has never been eager for her math
textbook, until now. It's an iPad, a computer tablet with touchscreen and
everything.
Kelsey was one of 500 students at Silverado High School
who received an iPad on Tuesday night. This year, about 1,150 Clark County
middle and high school students will use iPads for their built-in interactive
Algebra 1 textbook called Fuse, developed by publisher Houghton Mifflin
Harcourt.
It's a trial run costing the district $687 per iPad,
including the Fuse software. That makes the total cost $790,000 for the pilot
program
And Kelsey is a perfect example of its purpose.
If she doesn't improve in math, she won't graduate. It's a
concern for half of Clark County sophomores who finished Algebra 1 freshman
year but still can't move on. That's because all Nevada students must pass four
tests -- high school proficiency exams -- in math, science, reading and writing
to graduate.
And the math test, consisting of Algebra 1 and other
concepts, is dragging down Clark County students.
Only half the county's students score high enough in math,
when first tested as sophomores, to be diploma worthy. That is the lowest
passing rate of the four tests. And students must retake it until they pass.
A quarter of students don't pass the math test after three
years of trying, therefore they don't graduate at the end of their senior year.
"Hopefully, I won't have to be a super senior,"
said Kelsey, who failed the math proficiency test and is preparing for a second
try. "We should move to another state, Mom."
Not all states require high schoolers to pass proficiency
exams.
Kelsey is taking an algebra class for sophomores and upper
classmen to pass the test. It is taught by Eric Drum.
"I'm thrilled, and I haven't always been thrilled
when they throw something at us and say it's 'technology in the classroom,' "
Drum said, noting that this will be the first time that students can take their
teacher home with them.
Fuse isn't just text on a computer screen, said Josef
Blumenfeld, Houghton's vice president of corporate affairs. iPads contain a
library of videos in which an instructor explains concepts while visual
displays pop up simultaneously.
The publisher can track students' every keystroke, and the
students seem to replay videos over and over more than anything else, based on
findings from 400 students in Fresno, Long Beach, San Francisco and Riverside,
Calif., who used it last year. They need repetition to understand, Blumenfeld
said.
"Rewinding your teacher is not so easy in the
classroom and embarrassing to ask for," he said.
Kelsey and other students, whose teachers already
introduced them to the program, agreed that the function would be most helpful.
And it seems to be working, based on testimony from
Riverside's superintendent, who said the percentage of students proficient in
Algebra 1 jumped to 90 percent from 60 percent after they used Fuse, Blumenfeld
said. (Millard 2011)
Jason Gillett 7/26/11 11:49 AM
Running Head: K-12 CLASSROOMS
Conclusion:
IPADS are being introduced in classrooms across America,
and are being met with great and modest success stories, from those that reach
the National Media or Press, and range to those where Special Education needs
are being met, as I previously relayed for one child in a citation in this
document. There are school districts that are hungry for this technology and
those who do not have the money to move forward on the opportunity it presents.
Running Head: K-12 CLASSROOMS
References:
Lefrancois, G. (1997). Psychology
for teaching. (9th ed., p. 447). Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.
Finger paints, picture books and ipads
— the newest classroom tools for some preschools, kindergartens. (2011, May
10). Chicago Tribue. Retrieved from http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2011-05-10/news/ct-met-ipad-for-prek-0511-20110510_1_ipads-preschool-classroom-kindergartens
Rosen, L. (2011). Teaching the
i-generation. Education Leadership, 1(2), 11. Retrieved from www.ascd.org
Millard, T. (2011, Septmember 18).
Pilot program brings ipads into the classroom. Las Vegas Review Journal.
Retrieved from http://www.lvrj.com/news/pilot-program-brings-ipads-into-the-classroom-129779148.html
Getting started: apple technology for
diverse learners. (2010, M M). Retrieved from
http://www.apple.com/education/ipad/#features
Jason Gillett 7/26/11 11:50 AM
Jason Gillett 7/26/11 12:02 PM
Jason Gillett 7/26/11 11:51 AM
Jason Gillett 7/26/11 11:52 AM
Jason Gillett 8/22/11 8:12 PM
Roxanne 8/22/11 8:08 PM
Roxanne 8/22/11 8:10 PM
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
1. After evaluating your professional environment, what area(s) of interest have
you focused on for your Action Research Capstone project?
THE I-PAD AS ASSITIVE TECHNOLOGY FOR AUTISTIC AND ASPERGER'S CHILDREN.
2. Why have you chosen this direction? I AM THE DAD OF AN AUTISTIC 12 YEAR OLD BOY, WHO HAS THIS EDUCATIONAL NEED. I FEEL THE NEED TO HELP OTHER PARENTS AND CHILDREN WITH THE SAME OR SIMILAR ISSUES OUR FAMILY HAS WITH AUTISM.
3.
topic, please describe any challenges/difficulties you are having with this
process and/or any helpful hints/tips that you have discovered to make this
process easier.
you focused on for your Action Research Capstone project?
THE I-PAD AS ASSITIVE TECHNOLOGY FOR AUTISTIC AND ASPERGER'S CHILDREN.
2. Why have you chosen this direction? I AM THE DAD OF AN AUTISTIC 12 YEAR OLD BOY, WHO HAS THIS EDUCATIONAL NEED. I FEEL THE NEED TO HELP OTHER PARENTS AND CHILDREN WITH THE SAME OR SIMILAR ISSUES OUR FAMILY HAS WITH AUTISM.
3.
- Describe your target audience. PARENTS, AND EDUCATORS AND SPECIAL EDUCATION PERSONNEL.
- How do you anticipate them playing a role in ensuring that your results will make a difference in your environment? YES TO A POINT I DO, BUT THE FINAL DETERMINATION OF THIS TECHNOLOGY'S USE IS UP TO EACH INDIVIDUAL TEACHER THAT MY SON HAS, AS I WILL BE USING HIM AS A PHASE I EXAMPLE, SINCE I DO NOT ACTIVELY HAVE A CLASSROOM AT THIS TIME.
topic, please describe any challenges/difficulties you are having with this
process and/or any helpful hints/tips that you have discovered to make this
process easier.
APPLE COMPUTERS INC. SINCE 1999 HAS PROHIBITED ANY CONTACT WITH RESEARCH EFFORTS FROM ANY COLLEGES OR UNIVERSITIES, SO, TALKING TO ANYONE ON THEIR DEVELOPMENT TEAM IS NOT POSSIBLE. HOWEVER, I AM IN THE PROCESS OF CONTACTING THIRD PARTY DEVELOPERS FOR DIFFERING APPS THAT HELP AUTISTIC CHILDREN ON THE INTERNET. I ALSO PLAN TO CONTACT FUTURE HORIZIONS, THE JOINT BUISNESS VENTURE OF DR. TONY ATWOOD, AND DR. TEMPLE GRANDIN, FOR TIPS ON RESEARCHING THIS TOPIC, AS SOON AS POSSIBLE.
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