Help Gina - Answer 12 Questions
Please help Gina with her research on handhelds::I am a teacher in the Detroit Public Schools in Detroit, Michigan. I am currently working to finish my Master of Educational Technology degree from Lawrence Technological University. I have completed all of my coursework and now I am writing my thesis. I am looking for educators who currently use handheld computers in the classroom with their students to complete a brief survey (12 questions). The survey is being used to gather basic information about types of handhelds and applications used as well as teachers feelings about the value of handhelds as educational tools.
If you are interested, please click the following link to access the survey.
Teacher Link: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=rhhKoa1cTBVZemo5K4dXEQ_3d_3d
There is also a student survey. If there are any students (K-12) who currently use handhelds in their classroom and may be interested in completing a brief survey, the following link is for the student survey.
Student Link: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=pOe5_2bSH6YcI3MIyN_2bUd1Eg_3d_3d
Thank you so much to anyone who is willing to take a few minutes of your valuable time to help me with this project.
If you have further questions you may contact me at gina.wilcox@detroitk12.org.
Thanks,
Gina Wilcox
Labels: research
Learning2Go Phase 2 Report
There's more evidence that handhelds improve student learning. Wolverhampton's Learning 2 Go partnership in the United Kingdom released a report at the end of 2006. The 46-page End of Phase 2 Report is full of notable facts, figures, charts, and recommendations:- The number of schools in the Learning 2 Go project expanded dramatically in Phase 2, the academic year 2005-2006, from approximately ninety handheld devices in use to over a thousand.
- Handhelds are not the not 'magic answer' but effective use is conditional on other aspects of effective teaching, class management, as well as school culture.
- In general progress is not so good [in secondary schools] and baseline achievement has not yet been established by all schools.
- There is almost no evidence of distraction from established learning approaches caused by devices as feared by some teachers.
- Attendance at school appears to be significantly improved, certainly in Primary schools, which was notable against the general trend across the Authority [school district]. Attendance for boys was shown to be more improved than for girls.
- There was evidence that a school's ability to manage innovation and change at the highest levels was critical to success.
- Year 6 students achieved 5 percentage point increase in science, 3.5 increase in math, and -1 point increase in English. No explanation is available for the English outcomes, but the report offers further insights.
- Mini-Computers Bring Test Boost was published by BBC News and briefly shares some of the report's results. Dave Whyley from the project is quoted, "Attendance figures have gone up. We're also seeing boys switched on to reading. They like e-books. One boy read his e-book until his battery went flat on his PDA at night."
- The report includes lots more information, including examples of what students and teachers are doing with their handhelds, parent reactions, technical issues, and much data analysis.
- The key message for all audiences remains that unless current PDAs and software are implemented with a well prepared and structured support framework; then the successes seen in the Wolverhampton project will not be realised.
Learning with Handheld Technologies Handbook
Futurelab is a nonprofit U.K. organization committed to sharing the lessons learned from research and development in order to inform positive change to educational policy and practice. Last month Futurelab published the handbook Learning with Handheld Technologies. The 35 page PDF has implementation ideas and detailed case reports. This handheld book is useful for schools just starting to explore handheld computing and for schools who want to improve their current program. It's based on two years of research from the University of Bristol, which observed and interviewed some of the leading practitioners of handheld learning in the UK.The second page of the handbook lists the key recommendations from the research.
- There should be an authentic purpose with clear learning goals.
- It is harder and takes more time to manage a small set of devices than it is to manage models of use where each learner "owns" their own.
- Professional development is very important. A collaborative community of practice that involves the whole school will help embed handheld technologies in the curriculum.
- Wireless internet connectivity is preferred because it makes the devices much more useful.
- Schools need to figure out long term storage of students' data as they will produce so much work it won't all fit on the devices.
- Spare handhelds should be on-hand for quick replacement of broken units.
- Teaching styles must accommodate personal ownership of learning.
- Successful projects used handhelds for accessing content and for producing projects.
- Adoption of handhelds goes smoothly when integrated with with existing technologies like interactive whiteboards, software, and data projectors.
Research Study Results on Handheld Computing!
Just in time for NECC, GoKnow Learning released scientifically-based research that demonstrates handheld computer use in K-12 classrooms leads to student achievement gains. The research will help schools nationwide secure funding for handheld computing!Two research studies were conducted by the University of Michigan. One looked at simple recall of math facts in two third grade classrooms. The University of Michigan developed a game called Skills Arena for GameBoy where students practice basic math facts. One class used the handheld games while the other used flashcards. And the results?
- In the five-week instruction with the handheld, the handheld game group (HG) outperformed the flash card group (CG). The HG students performed 7 percent better than those of the CG group on the gain scores from pre-test to post-test.
- In the five-week instruction, the low-achieving students using the handheld performed 11 percent better than the flash card group. Thus, Skills Arena helped the low-achieving students; Skills Arena was a way for low-achieving students to succeed just like the high-achieving students.
- In the first year of using handheld devices, the handheld groups performed 2 percent better than the paper and pencil groups did in combing all gains (%) of three units.
- In the second year of using handheld devices, the handheld groups performed 13 percent better than the paper and pencil groups did in the combined gain score (%) of three units.
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