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Wednesday, January 30, 2019

Safer Internet Day

It seems like there is a day for everything.

Mother's Day

Father's Day

Pet Rock Day 
(yep - for real!!  The first Sunday in September!)

But here is one day that I can really get behind:

Now, it is very important that we are constantly aware of being safe on the Wild, Wacky West (www) of the Internet.  By setting aside one day though, we can create a special occasion that makes a really big deal about what being safer means.  The problem is, and the question that I get from most of my fellow educators is, what can we do to make the day significant?

Well, look no further as I got a great little package to share with you!!

Recently, I received an email from one of my colleagues in New York who put me onto a free program from Learning.com.  Learning.com is a subscription service that has a cornucopia of educational tools that help classroom teachers educate students about digital literacy skills.  Back when I was running the Consortium for Information and Academic Technology, I came across this company quite a few times and the educators using them had only the best to say of their experience!  (No I am not paid for any mention of the Learning.com service - remember, I don't do that commission thing!!  But I would take a coffee cup - hint, hint :-)

So if you are looking for something to do with your students this Safer Internet Day - now you have a solution!

Have you ever heard of Safer Internet Day and if so, what do you with your students on it?  I would love to have your comments on the blogsite.

Regards,

Yossie


YossieFrankel
Director of Technology
Check out my blog @ technorebbe.com
Hillel Logo
Harkham Hillel Hebrew Academy  
9120 W Olympic Blvd
Beverly Hills, CA 90212
310.276.6135

Monday, January 14, 2019

Can you hear me? (with apologies to Mike + the Mechanics)


I love a good hack as much as the next guy!


No, no! Not breaking into someone's computer.  That kind of "hack" is nasty!!

The kind of hack I mean is where you make an object (or computer program) do something other than it's intended purpose.  You know, like using spoons as a musical instrument!



Now... That's a hack!!

Well, I just heard about a potentially nasty hack using Apple AirPods.  


You know, those new-fangled Bluetooth earbuds from Apple.  (Thanks to InTELA member Jenn Zanoria for letting me know about this!  To learn more about InTELA, see my post here).

The hack involves using the Apple AirPod's "Live Listen" feature.  This feature was originally designed as an accessibility feature and allows the iPhone/iPad to used kind of like a hearing aid.  Turn "Live Listen" on and the microphone of the iPhone/iPad will pick up any sound and transmit it to the AirPods at an elevated volume.  Kind of cool - yes?

Now for the hack.  

Take your iPhone/iPad and leave it in a room and exit.  Now you can hear anything that is being said in that room.  This turns this feature from an accessibility function to a covert eavesdropping feature!

I can only begin to imagine how this can be used by creative students in the classroom.  In our school, the student charging station is in the principal's office. I shudder at the thought of what confidential information could be overheard!!

What do you think?  Am I being alarmist?  Paranoid? 

I would love to hear your comments on the blog page.

Yossie

YossieFrankel

Director of Technology
Check out my blog @technorebbe.com
Hillel Logo
Harkham Hillel Hebrew Academy  
9120 W Olympic Blvd
Beverly Hills, CA 90212
310.276.6135

Thursday, January 10, 2019

The Pen is mightier than the... Pencil? (with apologies to Edward Bulwer-Lytton)

There is a great story that I like to tell when I give presentations on the effective use of technology in a classroom.  You may have heard it!  It goes like this...


For the early American space program, there was a problem about how to use a pen in space!  With no gravity, it wouldn't write!!  Luckily, a private company had spent millions to create a pen that could be used to write in space. Millions!! 

How did the Soviets solve the problem of writing in space?  They just used a 50 cent pencil!!

I use this story to drive home the point (pun intended) that one should not necessarily look to the fanciest, most technically advanced way of achieving educational goals, but rather something as simple as a pencil can do the trick! Education should not be about the "tech toys."  It should be about the goals of the lesson!

Ah.. but, there is more to the story of the space pen that must be told...

It appears, that when the tip of the pencil would flake off, or when the pencil would be sharpened, the small bits of wood and graphite would float around the space capsule causing a huge fire hazard. To solve this problem, ultimately, the Soviets ended up purchasing "space pens" for their space program from the US! 

Not only did the space pen address the safety issues, but the innovation of the redesigned ink and pressurized ball-point cartridge became a mainstay of the pen industry today!! As a matter of fact, even I have one of these fancy pens - the Pilot Down Force - which can be purchased for $10 on Amazon! So you see, sometimes practical innovation has a price tag!

So what's my takeaway on this?

Well, I would suggest that we can sometimes trap ourselves in thinking that "better is the enemy of good enough." (Admiral Sergey Gorshkov, Soviet Navy from 1956 to 1985)  We become complacent with something that works "just fine" when there is a possibility that there is something "better" out there.

For example:  Why use an iPad to draw when a piece of paper is good enough? 

A piece of paper may be fine IF my only goal is to use the iPad as a substitute for the paper.  But, if my goal is to show my students how to take their drawing, share it with a collaborator in Israel who will add to the drawing, which will, in turn, be used to create a new product for the exploration of space, well then, that's a bit different.  My goal was not to substitute paper with the iPad but rather give a complete lesson on 21st-century skills that my students will need in order to survive in the world that they find themselves. (They don't necessarily have to use an iPad - it could be another tech tool... see my blog post on Rocket Man)

Speaking of the 21st-century skills, the CES (Consumer Electronics Show) is going on in Los Vegas this week and I always love to look at all of the new tech that comes out of it.  It is a great indicator of where we may be heading - technology wise - in our society.  This, in turn, helps me divine the trends that could affect our kids in the future and how I will have to support these innovations.

I am very cautious with this new tech though, as new tech isn't always "better!"  We need to remember that Confucius said: "Better a diamond with a flaw than a pebble without!"

Please share your thoughts through the blog page.

Regards,

Yossie

YossieFrankel
Director of Technology
Check out my blog @ technorebbe.com
Hillel Logo
Harkham Hillel Hebrew Academy  
9120 W Olympic Blvd
Beverly Hills, CA 90212
310.276.6135