Remove Chromebook Remove Digital Citizenship Remove Flipped Classroom Remove Professional Learning
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Educator Perspectives: Leading in a Pandemic

MIND Research Institute

Our 3rd- through 6th-grade school was already 1:1, and all of our teachers had Chromebooks, so we were mostly prepared as far as devices. We got them all iPads simply because Chromebooks are hard to get right now. Google Classroom has been pretty important. Google Everything! All of our teachers use it as their main platform.

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Is Your School "Future Ready"?

Graphite Blog

A quick look at the Future Ready Schools framework reveals seven major areas of concern that are framed by leadership: 1) Budget and Resources, 2) Use of Time, 3) Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment, 4) Technology and Hardware, 5) Data and Privacy, 6) Community Partnerships, and 7) Professional Learning. August 20, 3 p.m.

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"I Used to be Sitting in Seat 17D" - How I Rejuvenated My Teaching Career

Fractus Learning

There have even been a few days that I’ve been participating in #BFC530 (Breakfast Club 530 where we discuss one question for a quick 15 minutes to get our day off on a learning note) and then included that in class two hours later. I’ve completed, and won, grants to get 2 carts of Chromebooks for our building.

Edcamps 40
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It’s About the Learning, Not the Technology … Until It Breaks

Graphite Blog

Learn to define your own success in a meaningful way through data, digital citizenship, and the national PTA standards. Laptops, Tablets, and Chromebooks? Blended learning, hybrid learning, digital learning, flipped classrooms, and project-based learning -- jargon overload!