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ICT & Computing in Education

Articles on education technology and related topics
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Lessons from the world of sports: #4 The rule of expert guidance (Updated)

September 23, 2022

A conversation that has never taken place, and probably will never take place.

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In Using and Teaching Computing & ICT Tags Olympics, expert ICT teacher, expert advice, experts, rules, sports

What if "she" decided whether or not you got the job?

8 ideas for story-writing in Computing

September 23, 2022

Here are 8 ideas for encouraging pupils to write stories on Computing and related topics.

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In Using and Teaching Computing & ICT Tags story-writing, fiction, science fiction, ideas, teaching ideas

Image by OpenClipart-Vectors from Pixabay

Lessons from the world of sports: #3 The rule of eclecticism (Updated)

September 22, 2022

I’ve called today’s rule the rule of eclecticism because it’s about learning from different, and disparate, disciplines.

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In Using and Teaching Computing & ICT Tags Liam Tannock, Olympics, eclecticism, rules, sports

Esoteric programming languages (Revisited)

September 22, 2022

Programming languages are meant to be useful, right? I mean, I didn’t miss a memo or anything? That’s what I thought too. However…

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In Digital Education Tags programming, esolangs, esoteric, Oulipo

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Lessons from the world of sports: #2 The rule of detailed analysis (Updated)

September 21, 2022

Anyone who voluntarily leaps off a board which is 10 metres high – imaging three double-decker buses stacked on top of each other with a car balancing on top – has to be nuts. That’s not me saying that, but Leon Taylor…

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In Using and Teaching Computing & ICT Tags Leon Taylor, Olympics, detailed analysis, details, rules, sports

Question mark - Terry Freedman

National Coding Week: why? (Updated)

September 21, 2022

I’ve always been of the strong opinion that (a) people should talk about programming, not coding, and (b) people learn best on a kind of need to know basis.

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In Computing, News & views Tags National Coding Week, coding

Image by OpenClipart-Vectors from Pixabay

Lessons from the world of sports: #1 The 1% improvement rule (Updated)

September 20, 2022

Small, perhaps seemingly insignificant, improvements can make a big difference.

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In Using and Teaching Computing & ICT Tags 1% improvement, Brailsford, aggregation of marginal gains, cycle, cycling, rules, sports

Image by Bev from Pixabay

No laughing matter

September 14, 2022

It seems that everyone is worried about causing offence, or maybe just concerned about being accused of wasting time.

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In News & views Tags humour

Question mark, by Terry Freedman

Yes, But What Do I Actually Have To Do? (updated)

September 14, 2022

Would you know what to do if you were listening to you?

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In Leading & Managing Computing & ICT Tags details, practical issues

Screenshot of part of the People Database, by Terry Freedman

An interesting way to make use of pivot tables

September 13, 2022

Pivot tables help you to see possible questions that might otherwise have remained hidden.

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In Using and Teaching Computing & ICT Tags pivot tables

My automated assessment machine

My issues with assessment by AI

September 13, 2022

I have serious misgivings about the use of AI to assess students’ work.

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In Assessment, Discussion topic Tags AI, artificial intelligence, assessment

Please click the cover to see this book on the publisher’s website

Book review: Climate Change for Dummies

September 12, 2022

This book is as a timely addition to the debate around climate change.

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In Bookshelf, Reviews Tags climate change, review

Please click the cover to see this book on the publisher’s website.

Book review: Engineering in Plain Sight

September 12, 2022

This book sets out to give assorted planners, architects, engineers and technicians their due, with its examinations of electricity distribution, communication platforms, roads, bridges and more besides.

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In Bookshelf Tags engineering, review

Click to see this book on the publisher’s website.

Book review: Story Machines

September 12, 2022

While the book is both detailed and enjoyable, it is not entirely convincing.

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In Bookshelf, Reviews, Discussion topic Tags review, AI

My Queen and I

September 9, 2022

A personal tribute.

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In Moments, News & views Tags The Queen

Click to see this book on the publisher’s website

Book review: No Excuses Turning around one of Britain’s toughest schools

September 9, 2022

Written mainly in the form of a diary, this is an account of how Colwell’s headship changed the culture of a community’s school.

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In Bookshelf, Reviews Tags review, No Excuses

Please click on the cover to see the book on the publisher’s website

Book review: Futureproof: A comprehensive framework for teaching digital citizenship in schools

September 9, 2022

The growing importance of digital citizenship isn’t just evident from what we hear in the news, but also recent findings from Ofsted that students often aren’t as digitally literate as teachers tend to assume.

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In Bookshelf Tags review, Futureproof

Book review: Brave New World -- the graphic novel version

September 7, 2022

in some respects, Brave New World seems closer to our lived reality than does Orwell’s 1984.

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In Dystopian Visions, Discussion topic, Bookshelf Tags reviews, Huxley

Image by Tumisu from Pixabay

In case you missed them (or had forgotten about them): memory articles

September 2, 2022

Just before the end of the last school year I published an article about memory, and a review of a book about memory.

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In News & views, From the Archives Tags memory, archives

Image from Pexels Licence: CCO

What makes a good training day? 12 suggestions and a link

September 1, 2022

Training days don't have to be dire. If you have choice in how you spend at least some of the day, here are twelve suggestions, plus a link to a humorous audio recording.

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In Professional development Tags training day, cpd, professional development, pirates
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The 39 stories in this collection span a hundred years, during which Polish society underwent seismic political change several times over.

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Quick look: Digital Culture Shock: Who Creates Technology and Why This Matters

Chapters look at how technology is used around the world, online communities, and building a culturally just infrastucture, amongst other topics.

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Quick look: Artificially Gifted: Notes from a Post-Genius World

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Quick look: Dr. Bot: Why Doctors Can Fail Us―and How AI Could Save Lives

Dr Bot discusses something I hadn’t really considered…

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Review: Dear Data

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Review: Blueprints: How mathematics shapes creativity

What place might Blueprints merit on a teacher’s bookshelves?

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