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ICT & Computing in Education

Articles on education technology and related topics
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Using codes when note-taking -- republished with a discussion

April 14, 2023

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

Free illustrations for your blog or website (updated)

April 1, 2023

News of a new version of this original post featuring websites where you can find high quality pictures that are free to use on your own website or blog. I’ve listed more than 25 resources.

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In In the picture Tags illustrations, blogging

Review: Leadership: Lessons from a life in diplomacy

March 29, 2023

My reason for reviewing this book was to see if it might contain any useful lessons for SLTs.

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In Bookshelf, Leading & Managing Computing & ICT Tags reviews, Diplomacy, leadership

conference session, by Terry Freedman

What I Look For in a Conference (Updated)

March 21, 2023

I attend a lot of conferences, and over the years I've developed a useful set of criteria by which to evaluate them. Here, then, in no particular order, are my top 14 characteristics of a good conference.

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In News & views Tags conference, conferences, kids at conferences

Review: Strange Code: Esoteric Languages That Make Programming Fun Again

March 10, 2023

Given how much there already is to cover in the computing curriculum, why spend time exploring programming languages that are, so to speak, way off the beaten track?

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In Bookshelf, Reviews Tags reviews, programming, Strange Code, esoteric, esolangs

Review: Science Fiction: Voyage to the Edge of Imagination

March 10, 2023

My review of this book has recently been published in Teach Secondary magazine. I thought some readers might be interested in spotting the differences between the published version, and the copy I submitted.

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In Bookshelf, Discussion topic, Reviews Tags reviews, science fiction

UPDATED! The world according to Stephen Potter

March 8, 2023

How can the insights of “one-upmanship” be applied to education technology?

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In From the Archives Tags Potter, Stephen Potter, measurement, measuring, metrics
A history lesson in the Atari room

A history lesson in the Atari room

UPDATED! 10 ways to encourage reluctant teachers to use education technology

March 4, 2023

If part of your job is to encourage other teachers to use technology in their lessons, this article, based on my own experiences, may help. Now updated with additional points.

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In Leading & Managing Computing & ICT Tags education technology, technology co-ordinator, ICT Co-ordinator, ICT provision

My feet after visiting Bett

Last chance to register online for Bett (for free)

March 3, 2023

I’ve just discovered that today (3rd March 2023) is the last day to register online for free for the edtech show known as Bett.

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In Bett Tips, News & views Tags Bett

Updated! Supporting teachers through a challenging period

March 1, 2023

Updated! Discounts for Teachers is a free membership scheme which joins forces with retailers to help all staff, in any role working across the education sector to save money.

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In Sponsored Article, News & views Tags discounts

Nick Youngson CC BY-SA 3.0 Alpha Stock Images

More on our corrections policy

February 17, 2023

Just to let you know, this website is being reviewed by Newsguard.

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In News & views Tags corrections

Our corrections policy UPDATED

February 16, 2023

UPDATED My corrections policy wasn’t easy to find so I’ve created a dedicated page for it.

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In News & views Tags corrections, Newsguard

From Tom Gauld’s Revenge of the Librarians

Is this the future of ChatGPT for authors?

February 9, 2023

A depressing future for writers?

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In On the lighter side Tags humour, AI, artificial intelligence, Tom Gauld
Robot writer, by Terry Freedman

My depiction of ChatGPT getting more and more frazzled by the number of assignments I throw at it — Drawing by Terry Freedman

Coming soon... Digital Education ezine, focusing on ChatGPT

February 6, 2023

Yes, it’s all over the internet, but ChatGPT is still worth looking at. I am compiling a list of useful (I trust) links, and have a few things to add to the plethora of comments already out there.

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In News & views Tags Digital Education, artificial intelligence, AI, ChatGPT

Review of the hieroglyphs exhibition

February 2, 2023

Taking place at the British Museum in London, the exhibition could be used to provide interesting perspectives or links to several subjects — including programming.

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In Reviews, Using and Teaching Computing & ICT Tags reviews, exhibition, hieroglyphs

Experiment by Nick Youngson CC BY-SA 3.0 Alpha Stock Images

Three experiments (and a bonus one)

January 29, 2023

As a teacher, you’re meant to be the fount of all knowledge, right? Even if your teaching style is to be a guide on the side rather than the sage on the stage, you’re still expected to actually know stuff. Well, sometimes it pays not to know, or at least to appear not to know.

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In Discussion topic, Web 2.0 Tags experiment

Video by Terry Freedman — nothing to do with the exhibition, but I thought it looked science fictiony.

Review of a science fiction exhibition

January 25, 2023

There’s a great science fiction exhibition on at the Science Museum in London at the moment — until 4 May 2023. Science |Fiction is a great medium for discussing technology…

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In Reviews Tags science fiction, reviews

Can ChatGPT write decent course outlines?

January 22, 2023

I’ve been experimenting with using ChatGPT to write course outlines, and for one of the courses I compared the result with the outlines I had already written (and taught to). The results were interesting.

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In Discussion topic, Using and Teaching Computing & ICT Tags AI, artificial intelligence, ChatGPT, Course outlines

An advertisement for my newsletter -- courtesy of ChatGPT

January 11, 2023

I asked ChatGPT to write some dialogue advertising my newsletter in the style of a 1930s wise guy gangster.

Here’s what it came up with….

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In On the lighter side Tags ChatGPT, advert, wise guy, AI, artificial intelligence

How can CHatGPT be used in education? And can it write decent book reviews?

January 10, 2023

I asked ChatGPT, and here’s what it said…

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In Discussion topic, Computing, Reviews Tags AI, artificial intelligence, ChatGPT, book reviewing
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Recent book reviews
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Need a break? This book of short stories could be just the ticket!

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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Review: Digital Culture Shock: Who Creates Technology and Why This Matters

An interesting look at how differently societies across the globe view and use technlogogy.

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Review: The Idea Machine: How Books Built Our World and Shape Our Future

The written word has endured for millennia, and herein you'll discover why.

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Review: Craftland: A Journey Through Britain's Lost Arts and Vanishing Trades

A book that offers a glimpse into the way traditional crafts were practised before the Industrial Revolution.

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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

The author, Mechelle Gilford, explores how AI may render our usual way of interpreting the concept of “gifted” obsolete.

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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: Seven Brief Lessons on Physics: Anniversary Edition

Rovelli draws readers into his world by describing the development of theories that scientists have posited to try and explain our world and the universe beyond.

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Review: Dear Data

The authors spent a year sending each other postcards on a different theme each week, with pictorial representations of the data they had collected.

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Review: Blueprints: How mathematics shapes creativity

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

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