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by Stephen

The top 5 ways students use technology to cheat.

September 19, 2009 in Cell Phones, Education, Tech, Wireless, assessment by Stephen

Very interesting list.

  • 26% store info on their phone and look at it while taking a test
  • 25% send text messages to friends, asking for answers
  • 17% take pictures of a test – and then send it to their friends
  • 20% use their phones to search for answers on the Internet
  • 48% warn friends about a pop quiz with a phone call or text message

There has been some serious discussion in the edtech blogosphere about these. Is letting your friends know that you had a pop quiz really cheating? When I was a teacher I wouldn’t always give pop quizzes to each class on the same day. I might have given one early in the day, and by the afternoon classes all the students were expecting one. They were so miffed when I didn’t give them one. I even had some of them complain about it. “Why didn’t you give us a pop quiz like you gave 1st period?” I would explain to them that since they knew about it that it really wouldn’t be a “pop quiz” for them, and that they would get theirs on a different day and they wouldn’t know when it was coming. I rarely gave pop quizzes anyway, but the possibility was always there.

Anyway, here is a link to the complete article.

by Stephen

If this is what you see as a teacher, how will you change?

July 28, 2009 in Apple, Education, Tech, Web, Wireless by Stephen

I hate to report this, but the answer for many teachers is “not at all.”

access

Photo from the University of Missouri School of Journalism.

Look at all those Macs! I see the same thing where I work….way more Macs than PC laptops.

Caption added by Will Richardson.

Original photo here.

by Stephen

iPhones at Abilene Christian University

July 26, 2009 in Apple, Cell Phones, Education, Tech, Wireless, iPhone, iPod by Stephen

They started this a year ago, and here are the results.

We knew the “what” already: ACU handed out 957 devices to incoming freshmen, as well as 169 to faculty and another 182 to staff. It wasn’t a blind move, or a gimmick; it was the result of much research, planning, and even a faculty contest to submit ideas for implementing technology — namely, the iPhone — into the curriculum in ways which would be beneficial, non-distracting and begin to chip away at the age-old paradigms of the lecture hall.

The incoming freshmen were given a choice between an iPhone, an iPod touch, or neither. Unsurprisingly, every incoming student accepted one or the other, with about 36% choosing a iPod touch over an iPhone. This is in large part due to the fact that the school, for several reasons, was unable to provide any contract with the iPhone, and many students had existing cell phone contracts which would result in a significant enough penalty to discourage starting an AT&T plan. Even among those, though, there were some iPhone switchers willing to pay the price.

The ACU iPhone initiative would be a gimmick if research wasn’t done in post to determine its results. Several surveys were taken (with an unusually large percentage of respondents), and information was compiled. One of the questions asked was about the distraction level the iPhones and iPod touches generated in the classroom. George tells me that, in a post-semester survey, 90% of the faculty and staff stated that the devices “were not a distraction in class.” Students reported that they were bringing their devices to class, and that their performance, grades and class work all benefited. The studies also revealed that 82% of the students had used the web portal at least once per week during the Fall semester, 49% said they were given at least one assignment that required device usage outside of class, and 60% of students said they had regular opportunities to use the device for at least one class.

On the faculty side, about 65% of the 167 iPhone/touch-using faculty and staff members responded to survey questions on topics such as demographic and experience factors, personal and classroom usage, and perceived impact on student engagement and performance. An overwhelming majority of the respondents deemed the program a success, said that there was adequate communication and that the device was easy to use and implement. 70% responded positively about the course calender, 83% were in favor of online course documents, 63% for podcasts, 74% were happy about in-class internet searches, 76% responded favorably to the devices’ role in taking attendance, and a whopping 87% stated that they felt comfortable about using the devices for required course activities. The research also revealed that faculty were using the devices to students’ benefit, even when the students in their class didn’t have them. All in all, a positive response from the faculty and staff, and a desire for further training and continued app development.

Read the rest here.

by Stephen

Allergic to WiFi??

July 25, 2009 in Tech, Weird, Wireless by Stephen

Say it isn’t so!!

Steve Miller is not agoraphobic and has not got Swine Flu. So why is he under virtual house arrest? The answer, strangely enough, is because he’s allergic to WiFi. No, really.

Although not widely publicised, nor understood by many in the medical profession, Electrical Hypersensitivity (ES) is said to cause symptoms including sleep disturbance, headaches, concentration problems, limb and joint pains, impaired balance and hearing loss.

Steve Miller knows all about it, because he has the thing and it is keeping him trapped inside the 18 inch thick granite walls of his remote detached house near Falmouth in Cornwall, UK. When he ventures out he feels sick, dizzy, confused and suffers from agonising headaches.

A trip down the local high street is a nightmare, and most pubs are out of bounds for Steve. As are, for that matter, airports and hotels. He can no longer travel by train because of the pain and suffering his condition causes.

And it’s all caused by WiFi.

Read the rest here!

by Stephen

Wi-Fi in your car?

March 20, 2009 in Tech, Wireless by Stephen

It’s about to happen for Cadillac owners.

GM this week announced plans to equip the Cadillac CTS Sports Sedan with Wi-Fi Internet access from Autonet Mobile, branded as Cadillac WiFi by Autonet Mobile (apparently, they’re unable to spell Wi-Fi correctly). The new offering will be on display next month at the New York International Auto Show.

Autonet Mobile already has an agreement with Chrysler — but, as Engadget’s Darren Murph notes, “The agreement is a first for Caddy, and also the first luxury brand that Autonet Mobile has managed to invade.”

“Consumer demand is growing for new features that will enhance a digital lifestyle while on the go,” says Mark McNabb, Cadillac’s North America Vice President. “Today, they are frequently searching for Wi-Fi access wherever they may be.”

“There is some concern that within a few years this technology will be useless, once 3G and 4G cell phone networks and devices are more readily available, cheaper and more reliable,” warns SlashGear’s Brenda Stokes. “But for now, it’s still pretty cool.”

Read the rest here.

by Stephen

I’m getting a Kindle 2…yes!!

February 27, 2009 in Education, Gadgets, Kindle, Tech, Wireless, e-books by Stephen

Anybody else out there got one?

amazon_kindle_2

by Stephen

Wi-Fi at the White House?

February 10, 2009 in Current Affairs, Tech, Wireless by Stephen

Looks like there are some challenges regarding modern technology.

Is the White House more of a museum than a working office? Does it even have WiFi?

MSNBC has reported that on their first day on the job, Obama’s White House staffers suffered from downgrades on every front. During the campaign and the transition, Obama’s team was a Mac shop; they arrived in the White House to find six-year-old Windows PCs and a mess of disconnected land-line phones. (Windows! The horror!)

Not only that — staffers were forbidden from accessing outside email accounts or chatting online, too. MSNBC quotes one Obama spokesperson as characterizing the transition as “kind of like going from an Xbox to an Atari.” Bummer.

However, Andrew Rasiej, co-founder of the blog TechPresident, notes that the President won’t be as isolated as we thought. “Obama is keeping his BlackBerry, or at least that’s the latest word,” he says. Even still, the White House doesn’t sound anywhere close to the standards of business 2.0. But what about life 2.0?

It’s not known whether the White House currently uses Wi-Fi, but the network security news site Dark Reading used a long-range antenna to scour the White House environs for vulnerable wireless networks in 2007. They found 104 networks and 66 wireless access points in the area, many of them encrypted with easily-hackable WEP passwords — mostly coffee shops, hotels, and offices. They couldn’t trace any of them back to the White House itself, until they access a database that mashes up WAP data with Google maps. They find eight networks coming from inside the building, but none of them visible or accessible to outsiders.

Read the rest here.

by Stephen

Free Wi-Fi spreading like a virus

December 16, 2008 in Tech, Wireless by Stephen

I haven’t felt the need to post much about WiFi lately, mostly because it’s becoming so commonplace. Here is a good update on that.

Fancy UK sandwich shop Pret A Manger announced that it will offer free Wi-Fi at about 170 of its stores across the UK starting today.

And while municipal Wi-Fi is dying an ugly, premature death in the United States, China is working on making the entire city of Beijing a giant free-Wi-Fi hotspot by 2011.

The airlines lately have been rolling out Wi-Fi that is the opposite of free: They charge way too much for it (there are few monopolies as perfect as the provision of wireless networking at 35,000 feet). However, Delta plans to start offering Wi-Fi on its puddle-jumper shuttle flights tomorrow. To promote the new service, they’ll offer the Wi-Fi free for the next two weeks.

Free Wi-Fi is breaking out at gas stations, on buses and even on French “bullet” trains.

Meanwhile, an open source Wi-Fi service called WeFi now claims 10 million hotspots worldwide.

Read the rest here.

by Stephen

President Obama will have to disconnect

November 16, 2008 in Current Affairs, Gadgets, Tech, Wireless by Stephen

In a way this is sad, but it makes sense from a legal standpoint.

Sorry, Mr. President. Please surrender your BlackBerry.

Those are seven words President-elect Barack Obama is dreading but expecting to hear, friends and advisers say, when he takes office in 65 days.

For years, like legions of other professionals, Mr. Obama has been all but addicted to his BlackBerry. The device has rarely been far from his side — on most days, it was fastened to his belt — to provide a singular conduit to the outside world as the bubble around him grew tighter and tighter throughout his campaign.

But before he arrives at the White House, he will probably be forced to sign off. In addition to concerns about e-mail security, he faces the Presidential Records Act, which puts his correspondence in the official record and ultimately up for public review, and the threat of subpoenas. A decision has not been made on whether he could become the first e-mailing president, but aides said that seemed doubtful.

For all the perquisites and power afforded the president, the chief executive of the United States is essentially deprived by law and by culture of some of the very tools that other chief executives depend on to survive and to thrive. Mr. Obama, however, seems intent on pulling the office at least partly into the 21st century on that score; aides said he hopes to have a laptop computer on his desk in the Oval Office, making him the first American president to do so.

Link to article

by Stephen

Schools forced to admit that cell phones happen.

October 9, 2008 in Cell Phones, Education, Gadgets, Tech, Wireless by Stephen

Better get used to it, administrators. Cell phones are here to stay.

Richfield High School once had a total ban on cell phones.

But Principal Jill Johnson said she started hearing confessions from teachers that they were just as guilty of sneaking a call during the day as their students.

Now, Richfield schools allow cell phones, just not during class. Johnson said that gives students a chance to show responsibility.

Students and staff at several schools say blanket bans are unenforceable. And it’s that sentiment that has many Minnesota schools tweaking their policies.

“What seems like the easy thing to do is to just say ‘no’ to it. ‘Put it away, I don’t ever want to see those cell phones in school,’ ” Johnson said while looking at her own two cell phones at her desk. “But the reality is they’re such a fundamental … that not having them is so awkward it doesn’t make sense.”

Link to article

by Stephen

Technology and Cheating

October 8, 2008 in Education, Gadgets, Tech, Wireless by Stephen

Of course this was inevitable. As educators we need to always be planning on how we’re going to deal with this.

For many young Americans, technology has not only become an integral part of their everyday lives in the form of constant Internet access, cell phones and iPods, but it is also changing the way they cheat on tests, plagiarize papers and then share the how-to details. And educators are struggling to keep up with the latest tools and trends and reverse blase attitudes toward cheating that have spread like a viral video on YouTube.

Students enter classrooms these days with pockets, purses and book bags laden with techno-gadgetry. Music players, cell phones, cameras and computers are beginning to merge into do-everything, always-connected devices, like BlackBerry handsets or the Apple iPhone.

Today’s college and high school students also have attitudes that regard cheating in a much less negative light: Recent studies from the Center for Academic Integrity revealed that more than 70 percent of college students admit to cheating on a test or written assignment at least once while in school.

Link to article

by Stephen

Sprint Begins Mobile WiMax Network in Baltimore

October 1, 2008 in Tech, Wireless by Stephen

Very exciting. I hope more places start using this technology.

Sprint Nextel Corp. opened its new wireless network to customers in Baltimore on Monday, offering Internet service for laptops for $45 per month. It’s the first commercial network in the U.S. to use so-called WiMax technology for mobile customers.

Compared to more mainstream cellular broadband technology, WiMax provides fast downloads and is cheap to deploy. Sprint is betting on the technology, championed by Intel Corp., to give it a few years’ head start before cellular broadband catches up.

Link to article

by Stephen

Schools fight losing battle against student cell phone use

September 27, 2008 in Cell Phones, Education, Tech, Wireless by Stephen

I’m not sure I agree that this is a “losing battle.” Can’t it be a “winning battle” if the students are taught to use their cell phones to help them learn?

But while school administrators experience occasional heartburn over how creatively students may use their cell phones, some believe the time has come for teachers and school staff to work with technology used by students, not against it.

At this month’s meeting of the Utah Board of Education, board member Teresa Theurer warned fellow board members against restrictions on cell phones that might prove counterproductive as they craft a model policy regarding cell phones in schools. Theurer said her son’s English teacher at Logan High School has found ways to incorporate cell phone text messaging and e-mail into lessons and assignments that engage students to a remarkable degree. Assignments are sent as text messages or e-mail attachments, Theurer said. She’s also read accounts of teachers who use students’ cell phones to “text” a class discussion, rather than discuss a topic in class.

“If you want to get a message to a teenager, you send a text message,” Theurer said. “We need to incorporate what’s going on in the world. We can’t turn our backs on what’s happening, because it’s not all bad.”

Link to article

by Stephen

Wireless Power?

August 25, 2008 in Tech, Wireless by Stephen

Wouldn’t this make out lives easier?

Working off of principles proposed by MIT physicists, Intel researchers have been working on what they’re calling a Wireless Resonant Energy Link. During his keynote, Rattner demonstrated how a 60-watt light bulb can be powered wirelessly and said that doing so requires more power than would be needed to charge a typical laptop.

“Wouldn’t it be neat,” he said in the interview, “if we could really cut the cord and not be burdened with all these heavy batteries, and not worry if you have the charger? If we could transmit power wirelessly, think of all the machines that would become much more efficient.”

Joshua Smith, a principal engineer at Intel, said in a separate interview that the company’s researchers are able to wirelessly power the light bulb at a distance of several feet, with a 70 percent efficiency rate — meaning that 30 percent of the energy is being lost during the power transfer.

Link to article

by Stephen

F.C.C. Considering Free High-Speed Internet Network Plan

May 29, 2008 in Tech, Wireless by Stephen

Wow…this is an interesting development.

Federal regulators may require the winner of airwaves being auctioned off by the government to provide free wireless high-speed Internet service across a large swath of the country.

The Federal Communications Commission at its June 12 meeting will likely vote on an order setting terms of the spectrum auction that could include the free Internet service provision. A similar proposal was rejected last year.

”We’re hoping there will be increased interest (in the proposal) and because this will provide wireless broadband services to more Americans it is certainly something we want to see,” said FCC spokesman Rob Kenny.

Kenny said he didn’t know when the auction would be held and details must still be worked out. However, he said the resulting network must reach 50 percent of the population four years after the winner gets a license and then 95 percent after 10 years, he said.

Under the plan, the winning bidder would provide free high-speed service on a small portion of the spectrum that potentially could be available on millions of Americans’ phones and laptops.

Link to article

by Stephen

Pueblo SD Rolls Out WiFi for 1:1 Program

May 25, 2008 in Education, Tech, Wireless by Stephen

Xirrus is fast becoming a major player in the education WiFi market. I saw some of their equipment in action at a recent workshop. Quite impressive.

Pueblo School District No. 70 in Colorado has deployed a WiFi network across three of its schools to support the district’s 1:1 computing initiative and to support various mobile devices used in the district. The deployment was handled by WiFi developer Xirrus.

“Legacy access point-type architectures require far too many devices, switch ports, and cables–they offer mobility, but are brought to their knees by just one classroom of students,” said Ryan Elarton, Director of Business Services at Pueblo SD, in a statement released Wednesday. “We chose to go with Xirrus because of their ability to deliver the same performance we’re accustomed to from wired networks, but with far fewer devices, switch ports, cables, and real estate–saving the district enormous amounts of time and money.”

The WiFi deployment will immediately support about 2,600 students, staff, and faculty, according to Xirrus. Supported devices in the district include Dell notebooks and tablets, Apple iPhones, and Windows Mobile devices.

Pueblo School District No. 70 serves about 8,000 students in 32 schools, including charter and alternative schools, and is the largest district in Colorado in terms of geographical size.

Link to article

by Stephen

iPhone Portal at Vanderbilt University

April 5, 2008 in Apple, Tech, Web, Wireless, iPhone, iPod by Stephen

I wonder how many other schools have one of these.

by Stephen

3G iPhone coming in June?

March 30, 2008 in Apple, Gadgets, Handhelds, Tech, Wireless, iPhone, iPod by Stephen

My contract with Spring is up in May, and I have pretty much decided that I’m going to get an iPhone. I am very excited about the possibility of the 3G version with GPS capability. I’ve been playing around with an iPod Touch, and it is an amazing device. The new iPhone should be even better.

A June introduction of the 3G iPhone could tie in with Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference to be held in San Francisco from June 9 to 13, especially if that event also sees the arrival of the finished version of the iPhone SDK, which is currently in beta.

What’s going to be packed into the new iPhone? GPS seems likely, as well as a dual-camera arrangement to allow 3G video calls as well as taking photos with the screen as a viewfinder. The industrial design of the handset is likely to change, as Apple and handset buyers are both particularly style-conscious.

Link to article

by Stephen

Wireless Roundup

December 2, 2007 in Tech, Wireless by Stephen

Almost the end of the semester!

by Stephen

Wireless Roundup

November 25, 2007 in Tech, Wireless by Stephen

Hope everybody had a good Thanksgiving!