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Top 10 BYOD concerns — and how to overcome them [Part 1]

Neo LMS

BYOD at school is more than the latest buzz phrase you hear at every corner of the teacher’s rooms or along school hallways. More and more schools adopt BYOD policies and allow students to bring their own mobile phones, tablets, eBooks, and other devices in the classroom, and use them as tools to enhance learning.

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7 Skills Students Need for Today’s Classwork

Ask a Tech Teacher

Digital Citizenship. Each year, add a few more from this list of nineteen digital citizenship topics including cyberbullying, digital footprint, digital law, fair use and public domain, copyrights, plagiarism, social media, and digital commerce. you have a BYOD school, teach these.

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A letter of support

NeverEndingSearch

We curate new forms of digital texts. When schools introduce their 1:1, BYOD, Chromebook or iPad roll-outs, it is the librarian who is best positioned to ensure that quality resources and apps are curated on those screens. We move learners from digital citizenship to digital leadership–to participation, ethics, agency.

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Librarians at the Forefront of “Future Ready”

edWeb.net

Michelle Luhtala commented that New Canaan High School went BYOD just this year as part of their personalized learning intiative. The Future Ready Librarians Framework acknowledges that librarians play a powerful role in: Curating digital resources and tools. Empowering students as creators. Building instructions partnerships.

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A true gift from SHEG: DIY digital literacy assessments and tools for historical thinking

NeverEndingSearch

You may remember Stanford History Education Group (SHEG) for its groundbreaking and utterly depressing report, Evaluating Information: The Cornerstone of Online Civic Reasoning. In the November 2016 Executive Summary , the researchers shared: When thousands of students respond to dozens of tasks there are endless variations.