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ICT & Computing in Education

Articles on education technology and related topics
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    • Terry Freedman's Books Bulletin
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Review of Tips for teachers: 400+ ideas to improve your teaching

May 16, 2024

Don’t let this book’s size (nearly 600 pages) put you off. It’s comprehensive, and very well structured and laid out.

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In Bookshelf, Reviews Tags teaching ideas, reviews

It’s a start! Photo by Terry Freedman

Money, money, money -- again

May 2, 2024

This is an updated version of an article I published on my writing website in 2015. In my experience, it absolutely applies to artists, teachers and other creatives as well as writersor consultants.

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In Discussion topic Tags remuneration, money

Snowball, by Terry Freedman

I don't like ice-breakers

May 1, 2024

One of the more unfortunate effects of lockdown and its concomitant requirement of online learning is the application of different kinds of ice-breaker. To be fair, most ice-breaker activities leave me cold…

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In Discussion topic Tags ice-breakers

This is what Ideogrm.ai came up with in response to the prompt “Person using AI”.

Do kids still need to learn how to code?

April 30, 2024

A week or so ago we were chatting to a neighbour. She said she thinks her daughter, who looked about six years old, should learn how to code, as that’s the future. Didn’t I agree? I’m afraid I said that didn’t.

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In AI, Discussion topic, Using and Teaching Computing & ICT Tags AI, artificial intelligence, Hello World

Image by OpenClipart-Vectors from Pixabay

The Joint Consultative Committee

April 15, 2024

Every so often I read about a headteacher caving in to students ‘demanding’ their rights, or demanding something or other. The usual technique is to go from zero degrees to boiling in no seconds flat, bunking off lessons to ‘protest’. My response would be to (a) suspend the lot of them

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In Blast from the past, Reflections Tags consultation, staff-student consultatioon

I was a teenage geek (Updated)

April 15, 2024

One day when I was 15, I was milling around in this youth club trying to look cool, when someone came up to me and asked me if I’d be interested in joining a cinematography club. I’d never touched a cine camera in my life.

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In Autobiography, News & views Tags club, computer club, computing, consultation, geek, Computing Programme of Study

Get off of my lawn

April 9, 2024

One of the few good things about the emphasis on ‘coding’ now is that as most people acknowledge that they know nothing about it, they leave the people teaching it in peace.

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In Blast from the past, Leading & Managing Computing & ICT, Using and Teaching Computing & ICT Tags Lance Sharpe, Supernaace

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7 reasons that the FAIL acronym fails (Updated)

March 30, 2024

Failing is empowering.

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In News & views, Assessment Tags FAIL, failure

Why you should collaborate on a Computing scheme of work (Updated)

March 29, 2024

In the article 12 Characteristics of a good Computing Scheme of Work I said that people should work with other people on their Computing scheme of work. Why?

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In Computing, Leading & Managing Computing & ICT Tags collaboration, scheme of work

12 Characteristics of a good Computing Scheme of Work

March 28, 2024

*UPDATED* What are the attributes of a good ICT and Computing scheme of work? Here's the list of characteristics I've always looked for.

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In Using and Teaching Computing & ICT Tags scheme of work
Something ain’t right, by Terry Freedman

Something ain’t right, by Terry Freedman

Bad pitches

March 28, 2024

Examples of how not to try and sell a product or an idea.

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In News & views Tags marketing, pitch, relationship
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How useful is AI for generating words?

March 25, 2024

As it happens, I first addressed this question in 2012, and the first part of this essay, down to the part about robots, is taken from the notes I made then. My opinion hasn’t changed, in spite of the enormous strides in AI in the last twelve years.

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In AI, Reflections Tags AI, artificial intelligence, writing
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Quick looks: The collaboration book

March 20, 2024

I’ve just sent Teach Secondary magazine my review of this book, so I can’t say much before that’s published.

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In Bookshelf, Leading & Managing Computing & ICT Tags quick looks, collaboration
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Mobile phones: Another ritual

March 7, 2024

Every so often an Education Secretary announces a ban on mobile phones in school (which always turns out to be guidance, not mandatory). It's a sort of non-policy, a statement for the purpose, in my opinion, of wanting to say something, anything.

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In News & views Tags mobile phones, smartphones, phones, cell phones

Photo by Terry Freedman

Teacher admin tasks: the ritual is alive and well

March 6, 2024

In January 2024 the English Department for Education published its initial thoughts on teacher admin tasks, as in what teachers should not be expected to have to do.

This is one of those rituals that the DfE goes through every so often in one form or another.

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In News & views Tags workload, admin
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Quick look: The Language of Deception

February 28, 2024

I’m not convinced to any extent at all that not being able to tell the difference between a computer and a person means that the computer is intelligent. However, the original formulation of Turing’s ‘imitation game’ was whether a machine could be perceived as being intelligent.

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In Quick Looks Tags Deception, AI, artifical intelligence, reviews
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The 3,000 Part Computing Lesson Revisited

February 22, 2024

I daresay there are schools in which teachers are expected to divide all their lessons into manageable chunks in accordance with Cognitive Load Theory (CLT). The fact that CLT is light on the specifics and is a load of rubbish is seemingly no deterrent.

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In Computers in Classrooms, From the Archives, On the lighter side, Research Tags 3 part lesson, 3000 part lesson, TTom Bennett
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Review: The Book at war

February 19, 2024

The Book at War is a fascinating study of how books and other reading matter have variously influenced politics, propaganda and history over time.

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In Bookshelf Tags reviews, The book at war, history

Evaluation of a press release created by AI

February 18, 2024

I have a course coming up, one that I’m teaching. I asked an AI writer to draft a press release for it. Here’s what it came up with, with my annotations in italics and in square brackets.

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In AI, Research Tags AI, artificial intelligence, press release
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Review: Iterate: The secret to innovation in schools

February 16, 2024

Having endured some fairly dreadful ‘initiatives’ in my time, delivered from on high with the directive to ‘make it work’, I approached Iterate with some trepidation.

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In Bookshelf, Leading & Managing Computing & ICT Tags reviews, Iterate, innovation
← Newer Posts Older Posts →
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