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ICT & Computing in Education

Articles on education technology and related topics
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books to be reviewed by Terry Freedman

Navigating nonfiction books

June 12, 2022

One of the first things I look for when reviewing a non-fiction book is whether or not it contains an index. If it does, the next thing I check is whether the index is actually useful.

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In Bookshelf, Discussion topic, Reflections Tags index, table of contents, navigation

Conference, by Terry Freedman

Upcoming events

June 10, 2022

The following events may be of interest to teachers.

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In News & views, Professional development Tags events, conferences

Photo by Honest Paws on Unsplash

Is honesty always the best policy?

June 8, 2022

Starting a new job as head of the Information Technology and Business Studies department in a school, I was filled with excitement, and a certain amount of anxiety — but not entirely for the usual reasons…

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In News & views Tags honesty

The state of Computing

June 7, 2022

Ofsted (the Office for Standards in Education) has published its first report in ages into Computing as a subject. I've summarised the findings, and added some links and comments on my own in italics.

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In Using and Teaching Computing & ICT, News & views Tags Ofsted, computing, report, subject survey

#Flashback Friday: Review of The Long Tail

May 27, 2022

The “Long Tail" has been lauded and quoted at length. But what does the book actually say, and how does it stand up to scrutiny. In this lengthy review I give it a cautious "thumbs up".

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In Blast from the past, Bookshelf Tags #FridayFlashback, Long Tail, review

Books to be reviewed #3: Climate Change for Dummies

May 25, 2022

This is another book to be reviewed for Teach Secondary magazine.

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In Books Unseen, Bookshelf Tags bookshelf, reviews
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Follow the signs to a couple of new newsletters. Photo: Signpost pointing right, by Terry Freedman

New publications alert: If it don't fit...

May 24, 2022

After a year of weighing up the pros and cons I decided to start a couple of publications on Substack. One is about literature and life in general, and the other one is focused on education more generally

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In News & views Tags Substack

Review of Tools for Teachers

May 24, 2022

My review of this book has just been published in Teach Secondary magazine. The review there is slightly different from the one I submitted, so I’ve included my original one here as text, and the Teach Secondary one as a scan.

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In Bookshelf, Reviews Tags Oliver Caviglioli, Tools, review
Printing press, by Terry Freedman

Printing press, by Terry Freedman

Introducing teachers to desktop publishing

May 23, 2022

When I started at a school where part of my role was to encourage other teachers to use the education technology facilities, one of the strategies I used was to produce fake news stories using the school’s desktop publishing software.

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In Using and Teaching Computing & ICT Tags desktop publishing, DTP

Image by Tumisu, please consider ☕ Thank you! 🤗 from Pixabay

#FlashbackFriday: Lesson observation

May 20, 2022

A still-relevant article from a few years ago.

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In Leading & Managing Computing & ICT Tags observation, lesson observation, #FridayFlashback

Handshake, by Terry Freedman

Breaking the social media contract (Updated)

May 20, 2022

Why I’m unfollowing people more and more.

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In News & views Tags politics, swearing, ranting
TfL data by Terry Freedman

TfL data by Terry Freedman

An article about data

May 18, 2022

Elaine keeps telling me to remember to clock in and out at stations, even if the barriers are open. She’s right.

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In Blast from the past Tags data, Transport for London

Books To Be Reviewed #2: Futureproof

May 16, 2022

There are some interesting-looking books at the top of the to-be-reviewed pile. This is one of them.

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In Books Unseen Tags Futureproof, digital citizenship, digital literacy

Books to be reviewed #1: No Excuses

May 16, 2022

There are some interesting-looking books at the top of the to-be-reviewed pile. This is one of them.

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In Books Unseen Tags No Excuses, Colwell

Quick looks: Support Not Surveillance, by Dr Mary Bousted

May 14, 2022

As far as I’m aware no Education Secretary has had the ability or the courage to deal with the teacher recruitment and retention crisis.

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

Quick looks: Tools for Teachers, by Oliver Lovell

May 14, 2022

Overall the book is a good investment, although I did have some quibbles with it.

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In Books in Brief, Bookshelf, Quick Looks, Reviews Tags Oliver Lovell, quick looks, reviews

Quick looks: About Our Schools, by Tim Brighouse and Mick Waters

May 14, 2022

If you want to see the humble brag elevated to an art form, this is the book for you.

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In Bookshelf, Books in Brief, Quick Looks, Reviews Tags quick looks, Brighouse, Waters
Crowds and queues, by Terry Freedman

Crowds and queues, by Terry Freedman

Job-seeking as a metaphor for assessment in computing

May 12, 2022

jobs lineWhen I saw several hundred people lining up for some sort of job registration recently, I immediately thought of the challenges of assessing pupils’ educational technology capability. A bit of a stretch? Not necessarily.

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In Assessment Tags assessment, assessing computing

Assessment machine, by Terry Freedman

Artificial Intelligence and marking: pitfalls (2022 Update)

May 12, 2022

If AI generates an essay, and another AI grades it, has anything useful actually happened?

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In Assessment, News & views, Unintended consequences Tags AI, artificial intelligence, Warner, confirmation bias, essay-marking

“Erm, what?” Photo by Tadeusz Lakota on Unsplash

The "voluntary" national tutoring scheme

May 6, 2022

The Department for Education’s newly beefed-up National Tutoring Scheme enables schools to arrange tutoring for their students at discounted rate is purely voluntary, but…

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In News & views Tags National Tutoring Scheme, DfE
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Recent book reviews
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A question of leadership

I have somewhat dichotomous views of this question of whether leaders make a difference, or much of a difference. I think my views can be classified as macro and micro.

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Review: Making Good Progress?

Daisy Christodoulou carefully picks apart the pitfalls of various kinds of assessment, drawing on different subject areas to do so.

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Review: Principles and Practices of Assessment

There is plenty in this book to like.

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Review: Effective Teaching: Evidence and Practice

Although this is a few years old now (2018), it has stood the test of time.

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Review: One for maths teachers

This wide-ranging book takes in probability, fractals, astronomy, Babbage, Lovelace and a host of other areas and people.

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Reviews: Two for History teachers

Two books on the Nazi era.

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Review: One for English teachers

No book about the craft of writing seems complete without a stern chapter on the importance of eschewing adverbs and adjectives - but what to put in their place?

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Review: The Great Formal Machinery Works: Theories of Deduction and Computation at the Origins of the Digital Age

If you’re of a mathematical bent this could be just the book to delve into.

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Review: How to lie with statistics

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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Review of Blueprints

I submitted my review of this book to Teach Secondary magazine, an educational magazine in the UK. The first review is what the magazine published. The second one is what I actually wrote! In substantive terms there is little difference between the two, but you may find it interesting to see what the editor altered.

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