Upload
janet-pinto
View
316
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
DESCRIPTION
Learn how to take advantage of BYOD safely in your classrooms with digital open educational resources.New Options for the New Normal: How to Capitalize on Open Educational Resources (OER) and Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) To Expand Learning Without a lot of CostThe use of Digital Open Educational Resources (OER)and Bring Your Own Device programs are growing in popularity in K-12 education. Yet educators have questions about OERs, smartphones, and tablets in the classroom. We will clarify all the misconceptions about what OERs are, how they work, and how to develop instructional strategies. You'll learn about NEW networking solutions that can help to ensure the smartphone or tablet is used for educational purposes only.• Effectively use Open Educational Resources (OER).• Evaluate the quality of Open Educational Resources.• Understand the basics of digital licenses.• Learn how to take advantage of BYOD safely in your classrooms.
Citation preview
New Options For the New Normal Janet Pinto, Curriki
Reed Pangborn, AT&T
Booth #5530
2
Free Learning Resources for the World
www.curriki.org
AT&T Is Proud To Support
3
Quality Resources
• 47,000 free resources
• Vetted by Curriki Content Specialists & Members
Global Community
• 6.5 million unique visitors from 192 countries
• 284,000 active members (membership is optional)
• 16 million students reached/year
• 660 collaborative groups
Curriki = Quality
4
Discover how OERs broaden the use of alternatives to textbooks while maintaining instructional quality, and lowers costs.
Learn how to use BYOD and OER to enhance classroom curriculum and to collaborate with other teachers.
Learn how to take advantage of BYOD safely in your classrooms.
Today’s Mission
5
Uploaded by eduTecher on May 15, 2009 http://youtu.be/nJ0nlh5FU5A
…again.
6
Device Evolution
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/09/19/magazine/classroom-technology.html
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
They Get It. They Live It.
What are Open Educational Resources (OER)?
17
18
OER Content Management
• How do I find stuff?
• How do I know it’s accurate?
• How do I share content?
• How do I organize content?
• How do I categorize content?
Teacher Contributed
• Vetted by Curriki Content Specialists
• Reviewed by Members
Curriki = Quality
Partner Contributed
• Hand-selected by Curriki
• Recommended by members
47,000 Free Resources
19
Our Partners
20
21
No Search Engine “Noise”
22
Align to Standards
23
Organize Content Collections
24
My Content Library
25
Assign Resources
26
Get Published
27
28
29
30
Think of Curriki as…
Library of Congress
Personalized Content Collections
Videos, Podcasts, Animations, Simulations
Social Networking
Open Source Licensing
Expert and Group Reviews
Community-Developed Content
31
32
FREE Curriculum Browser
FREE Curriculum Publisher
FREE Curriculum Library
FREE Virtual Workspace
Think of Curriki as…
33
What Curriki Does is Extraordinary
34
Recap
OER can broaden the use of alternatives to textbooks while maintaining instructional quality.
OER can enhance classroom curriculum and help you to collaborate with other teachers.
OER can help to lower costs of instruction.
383M
Tablets and smartphones in the US by 2016
315M
Projected US population by
2016
1.2
Devices per person by
2016
Source: Forrester Group Source: US Census Bureau
35
Device Explosion
Mobile data traffic on the AT&T network grew more than 20,000 percent from 2006 to 2011, more than doubling in 2011 alone.
20,000%
Source: 2011 AT&T Annual Report
36
Mobile Broadband Explosion
71%
Percent of school district IT leaders who said wireless infrastructure was their top priority in 2011, up from 46% in 2010.
Source: State of the K-12 Market Report 2011, EdNet Insights, MDR
37
Need For Wi-Fi In Schools
Taking BYOD From
Good to Great
38
Good BYOD Programs
Allow students to bring their devices to school, but, don’t allow them to connect to a network.
39
To read digital books
To access learning apps/games
Better BYOD Programs
Allow students to bring their devices to school, and provide them filtered internet access.
40
To access internet-based content
To use learning apps/games requiring network access
Great BYOD Programs
Allow students to bring their devices to school, and provide them access to the school network.
41
To access licensed content purchased by the school
Great BYOD Programs
42
Internet Access
38 Kbps
Average internet bandwidth per student in 2011
Source: State of the K-12 Market Report 2011, EdNet Insights, MDR
50 Kbps
Recommended internet bandwidth per student
Source: The Broadband Imperative, SETDA
43
Considerations
Wi-Fi Coverage
Identify critical coverage areas
Access point placement
Post-install RF signal test
Secure access
On-going network monitoring
Equipment failure plan
44
Considerations
Student Devices
How can you limit student texting, Facebook, tweets and other activities at school?
45
Limit Unauthorized Use Device Container
Containerize the device with MDM software and implement an AUP for only the academic container only.
Considerations
46
Questions