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ICT & Computing in Education

Articles on education technology and related topics
  • Front Page
  • Search
  • Newsletters
    • Digital Education
    • Terry Freedman's Books Bulletin
  • RSS
  • Info
    • Welcome
    • The "About" Page
    • Testimonials
    • CV/Resumé
    • My Writing
    • Published articles
  • Corrections Policy

Review: A Student's Guide to Python for Physical Modelling

November 30, 2021

While this book is comprehensive, and gives instructions step by step, it is not what you might call an idiot’s guide.

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In Bookshelf, Reviews, Using and Teaching Computing & ICT Tags review, Python

Why you should test your product

November 30, 2021

This article was originally published on the Bee Digital Marketing website. Although it was mainly aimed at companies, many of the principles apply to anyone wanting to implement a new application in school.

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In Leading & Managing Computing & ICT Tags testing, marketing

Review: Teaching Machines (for SchoolsWeek)

November 28, 2021

Here is a very strange paradox. On the one hand, everyone agrees that a key ingredient for success in life is having great teachers. On the other, there’s a relentless narrative that education is somehow broken and that fixing it entails replacing teachers or transforming some or all of what they do.

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In History, Bookshelf, Reviews Tags Teaching Machines, Audrey Watters, Review

Of COURSE classrooms have changed in the last few hundred years!

November 26, 2021

Is it really true that classrooms haven’t changed since the year 1600?

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In News & views Tags Changing classroom, classroom environment, classroom, Sir Anthony Seldon, buses, Audrey Watters, Teaching Machines

The art of listening: full article

November 26, 2021

It seems to me that one of the most important skills a salesperson should possess is to be able to listen. Yet some salespeople and technical support people launch into a script or a flowchart when you call the company, or when you meet them.

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In Leading & Managing Computing & ICT Tags listening, marketing

A perfect example of why you should keep copies of your articles...

November 25, 2021

Your article is not available at the moment. Ain’t that a shame?

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In News & views Tags error message, blogging

The Homework Excuse Management System, by Terry Freedman

Blast from the past: the homework excuse management system revisited

November 25, 2021

You can use a spreadsheet to solve even relatively trivial problems — but why should you do so?

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In Blast from the past, On the lighter side Tags spreadsheet, HEMS, homework

3 reasons your students are bored in Computing lessons, and 9 solutions

November 25, 2021
Day 2 - BoringAre your students yawning, checking their email, launching paper aeroplanes in your lessons? Perhaps you’re making one of these mistakes.
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In Computing Tags boring, computing, why is ICT boring

14 Ways to Make the Most of Teaching Assistants in Computing lessons

November 24, 2021

In my experience, many teachers make poor use of teaching assistants, regarding them as a sort of junior helper on the same level as a school pupil doing a holiday job. This is unfortunate.

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In 5 Minute Tip Tags teaching assistants

Use a spreadsheet for literary criticism: it's more accurate

November 21, 2021

If book blurb writers had any sense, they wouldn’t put wordy descriptions on the back cover of books. They would put a graph there instead.

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In On the lighter side Tags literary criticism, spreadsheets, analysis

Getting permission to go on a course or to a conference

November 20, 2021

Having to make the case for actually registering for an event is, in my opinion, treating teachers as if they were (a) non-professionals and (b) children.

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In Professional development, Leading & Managing Computing & ICT Tags CPD, in-service training, education conferences

On this day: Robot rights

November 19, 2021

You can just imagine the family rows of the future, should technology ever reach the point where it isn't possible to distinguish between humans and non-humans merely by looking at them.

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In News & views Tags robots, sci fi, science fiction, effects of technology

Using badges

November 18, 2021

The attractive thing about badges is that a school can invent their own categories and achievement levels.

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In Assessment, From the Archives Tags assessing ICT, assessment, assessing Computing, assessment for learning

Who is responsible for a company’s image?

November 17, 2021

The answer to the question “Who is responsible for a company’s image (or a school’s image)?” is, of course, everyone who works for it. But what does this mean in practice?

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

What differentiates your product from the competition?

November 16, 2021

If you sell a similar product or service to that of another company, what is it that makes yours stand out?

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In From the Archives Tags differentiation, marketing

Click the pic to see this on Amazon (affiliate link)

Quick look: Organise Ideas (follow-up)

November 12, 2021

[When I was a teacher,] as with many of my blog posts these days, my own handouts and lesson summaries were festooned with drawings, diagrams and arrows.

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In Quick Looks, Reviews, Books in Brief, Bookshelf Tags review, quick looks, Organise Ideas

Is it worth doing an MA? Continued

November 11, 2021

In June 2021 I wrote an article called Is it worth doing an MA? I listed several reasons why I think the answer is “yes”, but forgot to include one or two really important ones!

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In News & views Tags MA, higher education

7 questions about blogging

November 10, 2021

You can build up a body of work without having to try going through gatekeepers.

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In Web 2.0, News & views Tags blogging

My experiments with transcribing audio

November 10, 2021

I was surprised, at first, to discover that dictating articles is very easy. When I thought about it though, I realised that it should not have been surprising at all.

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In Audio, Using and Teaching Computing & ICT Tags transcribing audio, dictation

The horror, the horror! N-Noooo!!!, by Terry Freedman

The inspector cometh

November 9, 2021

Being told that the inspectors are coming is pretty scary, but I would say that some people respond in ways that are counterproductive, including to their own health. These are the things I’ve either come across first-hand or experienced when I was an Ofsted inspector myself, or when I was being inspected.

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In Leading & Managing Computing & ICT Tags Ofsted, inspection
Older Posts →
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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