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ICT & Computing in Education

Articles on education technology and related topics
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  • Search
  • Newsletters
    • Digital Education
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    • Welcome
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Thumbnail sketch: Teaching in the Online Classroom

April 30, 2021

I’m always wary of books that are written while the issues that it addresses are new and current.

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In Books in Brief, Bookshelf, Reviews Tags thumbnail sketch, Teaching in the Online Classroom, review, 57

Thumbnail sketch: Online learning for dummies

April 30, 2021

This book addresses online learning from the point of view of the learner, rather than the teacher or the institution

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In Bookshelf, Reviews, Books in Brief Tags thumbnail sketch, Online Learning for Dummies, Covid-19, Covid19, review, 57

Thumbnail sketch: The Turning Point

April 30, 2021

I like where this book is coming from. It regards teachers as experts.

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In Books in Brief, Bookshelf, Reviews Tags The Turning Point, review, 57, thumbnail sketch

Barriers to purchasing education technology

April 26, 2021

This article outlines some general factors that prevent heads of department and other school leaders from buying products and services.

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In Leading & Managing Computing & ICT, From the Archives Tags marketing, barriers

What should your organisation's newsletter contain?

April 26, 2021

I wrote this article for a readership of edtech companies. But the suggestions would work just as well for any organisation that wishes to keep in touch with its members/clients/visitors etc.

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In News & views Tags newsletter, newsletters, marketing
The scream by Terry Freedman

The scream by Terry Freedman

Judge not -- again

April 23, 2021

In my experience, an expectation of compliance was baked in to the system, and that really does mitigate against innovation.

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In Leading & Managing Computing & ICT, Research Tags Ofsted, inspection, Inspections Across the UK

Product placement technology: a step too far

April 23, 2021

There’s something a bit “iffy” about inserting an advert into a programme that wasn’t there originally.

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In Discussion topic Tags advertising, advertising code, product placement
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On this day: Covid19 and the ed tech revolution

April 19, 2021

It’s astonishing to realise that a year ago today I wrote about education technology in the context of dealing with the educational fallout from Covid19.

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In From the Archives Tags Covid19
Click on the cover to see this book on Amazon

Click on the cover to see this book on Amazon

Book review: Your Press Release Is Breaking My Heart

April 18, 2021

Most press releases are boring. Even worse, some are annoying. And the people who send them can be even more annoying. I can tell you these things with some authority because I receive dozens of them a day.

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In Bookshelf, Reviews Tags PR, Janet Murray, Review

A great survey program

April 18, 2021

If you set surveys, have a look at Tripetto. It has some lovely features.

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In Reviews Tags Tripetto, review

Using codes when note-taking

April 12, 2021

My various squiggles in my notebook or Evidence Form may not have meant much to anybody else, but it conveyed a lot of information to me.

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In Tips for teachers Tags note-taking, codes

Dystopian visions: My Object All Sublime

April 9, 2021

What if an amazing technology like time travel were used purely and simply as a form of punishment?

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In Discussion topic, Dystopian Visions Tags Dystopian visions, Poul Anderson, time travel

Obtaining customer feedback: Why do it, how to do it, and how to use it

April 8, 2021

Why feedback matters.

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In News & views Tags marketing, Bee Digital

Using a word cloud generator to check students' work

April 6, 2021

I ran the Department for Education’s educational technology strategy through a word cloud generator to see if it really was about educational technology.

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In Using and Teaching Computing & ICT Tags word cloud, word frequency

When it comes to PR, learn from the worst

April 4, 2021

At best, “corporate guff” deadens the senses of the reader, and is simply regarded as a written equivalent of background noise.

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In Leading & Managing Computing & ICT Tags jargon, Guffpedia, Lucy Kellaway, Bee Digital, PR

Judge not, etc

April 3, 2021

A lot of inspectors judged how good the subject was being taught by how nicely formatted the kids' work was.

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In Digital Education, News & views Tags Ofsted, subject inspections
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Love the product, shame about the documentation

April 2, 2021

Once a school has purchased your ed tech product or service, what then? In my experience, a lot of great products are let down by terrible documentation.

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In Using and Teaching Computing & ICT Tags documentation, marketing

Remembering Old Nick

April 2, 2021

In the five years I was a pupil at the school, I didn't see him smile. Not once. Not even to fellow teachers.

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In Autobiography Tags autobiography, Old Nick, teachers
Recent book reviews
Review: Social Media for Academics
Review: Social Media for Academics

This book is very readable, and if I sound surprised that is because it’s not always true of academics!

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Quick looks: VIBE Coding by Example
Quick looks: VIBE Coding by Example

For the time being, this book is free in Kindle format.

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Review: The Game Changers: How Playing Games Changed the World and Can Change You Too
Review: The Game Changers: How Playing Games Changed the World and Can Change You Too

Despite the relative paucity of immediately obvious National Curriculum links, teachers will find several of sections of this book to be highly engaging.

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Review: The Dictators: 64 Dictators, 64 Authors, 64 Warnings from History
Review: The Dictators: 64 Dictators, 64 Authors, 64 Warnings from History

In some respects one could view this book as a single warning repeated 64 times.

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Review: The Bookshop, The Draper, The Candlestick Maker: A History of the High Street 
Review: The Bookshop, The Draper, The Candlestick Maker: A History of the High Street 

Taking readers from the Middle Ages to (more or less) the present day, Gray charts how the places where we do our shopping and what we buy have changed over the centuries.

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Review: Extraordinary Learning For All
Review: Extraordinary Learning For All

As a source of potential ideas and inspiration, the book could be very useful indeed.

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Review: Bad Education: Why Our Universities Are Broken and How We Can Fix Them
Review: Bad Education: Why Our Universities Are Broken and How We Can Fix Them

One has the impression that the main role of the university these days is to maximise profit, while that of the majority of teaching staff is to ensure the ‘correct’ views are passed on to students. All the while, students’ main concern seems to be to seek protection from anything that might make them feel unsafe.

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Review: Next Practices - An Executive Guide for Education Decision Makers
Review: Next Practices - An Executive Guide for Education Decision Makers

Is a 2014 book on managing the computing provision in a school still worth buying?

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Still relevant (sadly): How to lie with statistics, by Darrell Huff
Still relevant (sadly): How to lie with statistics, by Darrell Huff

Although this book is over 60 years old, it is remarkably apposite for our times -- and especially in the fields of educational research and assessing pupils' understanding and progress.

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Quick looks: Bad Education: Why Our Universities Are Broken and How We Can Fix Them
Quick looks: Bad Education: Why Our Universities Are Broken and How We Can Fix Them

It was a great source of pride to me, getting hundreds of students through their A levels and encouraging them to go to university. But for some time I have asked myself a question: would I recommend this route now?

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