Welcome to

           Taking it Mobile:

     Success Stories from the
New Frontier of Un-tethered Learning

                                   Julie Evans
                                   Project Tomorrow
                                   jevans@tomorrow.org




         © Project Tomorrow 2011
Download presentation materials, share ideas, and
discuss concepts shared in this session by joining our
Edmodo Group with the following code: FETC40


            Join the FETC Community at
            http://www.edmodo.com/fetc




                       © Project Tomorrow 2011
Today’s Discussion: The Big Questions

• What is the vision of today’s students for mobile learning?

• How does this student vision compare with the educators’
  realities? How are schools and districts leveraging mobile
  technologies for achievement and productivity?

• What challenges or obstacles do educators face in
  implementing mobile learning? What benefits are already
  being realized? What is holding back greater adoption?




                         © Project Tomorrow 2011
Agenda

• Brief introduction to Speak Up and some new
  data results

• Discussion with our expert panel

• Audience Q&A



                   © Project Tomorrow 2011
Introducing our Expert Panel
                            Judy Copeland
   Director, Media, Instructional Technology & Secondary Services
                     Onslow County Schools (NC)

                          Sharon Gabriel
                  Principal, Ocoee Middle School
                 Orange County Public Schools (FL)

                          Camilla Gagliolo
               Instructional Technology Coordinator
                    Arlington Public Schools (VA)

                             John Lien
                  Sr. Administrator, Technology
                Professional Development Services
                Orange County Public Schools (FL)


                           © Project Tomorrow 2011
Speak Up National Research Project

• Annual national research project
    Online surveys + focus groups
    Open for all K-12 schools and schools of education
    Institutions receive free report with their own data

• Collect ideas ↔ Stimulate conversations
    K-12 Students, Teachers, Parents, Administrators

• Inform policies & programs
     Analysis and reporting
     Services to help transform teaching and learning


                      © Project Tomorrow 2011
Speak Up is facilitated annually
         by Project Tomorrow
     (formerly known as NetDay)

         Project Tomorrow
        (www.tomorrow.org)
is the leading education nonprofit
   organization dedicated to the
empowerment of student voices in
             education.
               © Project Tomorrow 2011
Speak Up National Research Project

• Empowering authentic voices – since 2003:
    1.9 million K-12 students
    180,000 teachers and librarians
    124,000 parents
    15,500 school and district leaders
    30,000 K-12 schools – from all 50 states, DC,
    American military base schools, Canada, Mexico,
    Australia, int’l schools . . .


          2.2 million respondents

                     © Project Tomorrow 2011
Speak Up survey question themes

      Learning & Teaching with Technology
      21st Century Skills: Digital Citizenship
      Science and Math Instruction / STEM Career Interests
      Professional Development / Teacher Preparation
      Internet Safety
      Administrators’ Challenges
      Emerging Technologies in the Classroom
         Online Learning, Mobile Devices, Digital Content
         Educational Games, Web 2.0 tools and
         applications
      Designing the 21st Century School

                       © Project Tomorrow 2011
Saluting our Speak Up Sponsors:




                     © Project Tomorrow 2011
Thank you to our K-12 National Champion
Outreach Partners:




         And the 75+ other national education and business
      associations & nonprofit groups that promote Speak Up to
               their stakeholders, members & affiliates.


                          © Project Tomorrow 2011
National Speak Up 2010 Participation: 379,355



    K-12 Students                                   294,399
    Teachers                                        35,525
    Librarians                                      2,135
    Parents (in English & Spanish)                  42,267
    School/District Administrators                  3,578
    Technology Leaders                              1,391
    Schools / Districts                             6,541 / 1,340

    Participating States for Student Surveys: 48 states
    Top 12 (# of participants):
      TX, CA, AL, AZ, FL, NC, IL, MD, IN, NV, PA, WI

                          © Project Tomorrow 2011
National Speak Up 2010 Participation: 379,355



                    Release of national findings:

                    Student & Parent Data: April 1

                    Educator Data: early May


      Stay tuned to all Speak Up announcements:

                     www.tomorrow.org

           SpeakUpEd – Twitter and Facebook

                          © Project Tomorrow 2011
Creating Our Future: Students Speak Up about
their Vision for 21st Century Learning




 Three Essential Elements of the Student Vision:

                 Social–based learning
                 Un–tethered learning
                 Digitally–rich learning

                         © Project Tomorrow 2011
Learning in the
    21st Century:
 Taking it Mobile!

        A special collaboration with Blackboard, Inc.


http://www.tomorrow.org/speakup/MobileLearningReport_2010.html



                         © Project Tomorrow 2011
K-12 students’ personal access to mobile devices
(preliminary Speak Up 2010 data findings)


   Device               K-2            Gr 3-5                Gr 6-8   Gr 9-12
   Cell                21%                29%                51%       56%
   phone
   Smart               16%                19%                34%      46%
   phone
   Laptop              37%                42%                60%       67%
   MP3                 37%                55%                79%       85%
   iPad                10%                  8%               13%       10%

                                   © Project Tomorrow 2011
K-12 students include mobile learning in their
“ultimate school or class”
(preliminary Speak Up 2010 data findings)


              Designing the Ultimate School - Mobile Devices


               iPad

                                                                               Gr 9-12
                                                                               Gr 6-8
             Laptop
                                                                               Gr 3-5
                                                                               K-2
    Handheld device


                      0%   10%    20%        30%             40%   50%   60%



                                   © Project Tomorrow 2011
How would you use your mobile device to help
you with schoolwork?
(preliminary Speak Up 2010 data findings)


Top vote getters:
Check grades                                                 74%
Internet research                                            68%
Take notes for class                                         59%
Text or IM classmate or teacher re: schoolwork               53%
Use the calendar                                             50%


                      It’s all about productivity!

                                   © Project Tomorrow 2011
The Educator Perspective




 A new cohort of
 educators are pushing
 the envelope for mobile
 learning. . . .

                       Introducing the
            “Mobile Learning Explorer”


                    © Project Tomorrow 2011
Introducing the “Mobile Learning Explorer”


   2X as likely as other educators to have a smart
       phone; 4X as likely to have a netbook

   Technology is extremely important to student
      success: 100% agree!

   Administrators see value of mobile devices as part
      of their ultimate school

   Teachers currently using mobile devices within
      instruction


                       © Project Tomorrow 2011
Introducing our Expert Panel
                            Judy Copeland
   Director, Media, Instructional Technology & Secondary Services
                     Onslow County Schools (NC)

                          Sharon Gabriel
                  Principal, Ocoee Middle School
                 Orange County Public Schools (FL)

                          Camilla Gagliolo
               Instructional Technology Coordinator
                    Arlington Public Schools (VA)

                             John Lien
                  Sr. Administrator, Technology
                Professional Development Services
                Orange County Public Schools (FL)


                           © Project Tomorrow 2011
Thank you.
        Let’s continue this conversation.

                       Julie Evans
                   Project Tomorrow
                 jevans@tomorrow.org
                    949-609-4660 x15

                     Copyright Project Tomorrow 2011.
This work is the intellectual property of the author. Permission is granted
for this material to be shared for non-commercial, educational purposes,
    provided that this copyright statement appears on the reproduced
  materials and notice is given that the copying is by permission of the
     author. To disseminate otherwise or to republish requires written
                        permission from the author.


                            © Project Tomorrow 2011
Evaluations
Step 1: Go to http://edmodo.com/fetcevals
Step 2: Select session number (FETC40),
        session title, and evaluate.




                © Project Tomorrow 2011

Taking It Mobile: Success Stories from the New Frontier of Un-tethered Learning

  • 1.
    Welcome to Taking it Mobile: Success Stories from the New Frontier of Un-tethered Learning Julie Evans Project Tomorrow jevans@tomorrow.org © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 2.
    Download presentation materials,share ideas, and discuss concepts shared in this session by joining our Edmodo Group with the following code: FETC40 Join the FETC Community at http://www.edmodo.com/fetc © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 3.
    Today’s Discussion: TheBig Questions • What is the vision of today’s students for mobile learning? • How does this student vision compare with the educators’ realities? How are schools and districts leveraging mobile technologies for achievement and productivity? • What challenges or obstacles do educators face in implementing mobile learning? What benefits are already being realized? What is holding back greater adoption? © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 4.
    Agenda • Brief introductionto Speak Up and some new data results • Discussion with our expert panel • Audience Q&A © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 5.
    Introducing our ExpertPanel Judy Copeland Director, Media, Instructional Technology & Secondary Services Onslow County Schools (NC) Sharon Gabriel Principal, Ocoee Middle School Orange County Public Schools (FL) Camilla Gagliolo Instructional Technology Coordinator Arlington Public Schools (VA) John Lien Sr. Administrator, Technology Professional Development Services Orange County Public Schools (FL) © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 6.
    Speak Up NationalResearch Project • Annual national research project Online surveys + focus groups Open for all K-12 schools and schools of education Institutions receive free report with their own data • Collect ideas ↔ Stimulate conversations K-12 Students, Teachers, Parents, Administrators • Inform policies & programs Analysis and reporting Services to help transform teaching and learning © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 7.
    Speak Up isfacilitated annually by Project Tomorrow (formerly known as NetDay) Project Tomorrow (www.tomorrow.org) is the leading education nonprofit organization dedicated to the empowerment of student voices in education. © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 8.
    Speak Up NationalResearch Project • Empowering authentic voices – since 2003: 1.9 million K-12 students 180,000 teachers and librarians 124,000 parents 15,500 school and district leaders 30,000 K-12 schools – from all 50 states, DC, American military base schools, Canada, Mexico, Australia, int’l schools . . . 2.2 million respondents © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 9.
    Speak Up surveyquestion themes Learning & Teaching with Technology 21st Century Skills: Digital Citizenship Science and Math Instruction / STEM Career Interests Professional Development / Teacher Preparation Internet Safety Administrators’ Challenges Emerging Technologies in the Classroom Online Learning, Mobile Devices, Digital Content Educational Games, Web 2.0 tools and applications Designing the 21st Century School © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 10.
    Saluting our SpeakUp Sponsors: © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 11.
    Thank you toour K-12 National Champion Outreach Partners: And the 75+ other national education and business associations & nonprofit groups that promote Speak Up to their stakeholders, members & affiliates. © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 12.
    National Speak Up2010 Participation: 379,355 K-12 Students 294,399 Teachers 35,525 Librarians 2,135 Parents (in English & Spanish) 42,267 School/District Administrators 3,578 Technology Leaders 1,391 Schools / Districts 6,541 / 1,340 Participating States for Student Surveys: 48 states Top 12 (# of participants): TX, CA, AL, AZ, FL, NC, IL, MD, IN, NV, PA, WI © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 13.
    National Speak Up2010 Participation: 379,355 Release of national findings: Student & Parent Data: April 1 Educator Data: early May Stay tuned to all Speak Up announcements: www.tomorrow.org SpeakUpEd – Twitter and Facebook © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 14.
    Creating Our Future:Students Speak Up about their Vision for 21st Century Learning Three Essential Elements of the Student Vision: Social–based learning Un–tethered learning Digitally–rich learning © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 15.
    Learning in the 21st Century: Taking it Mobile! A special collaboration with Blackboard, Inc. http://www.tomorrow.org/speakup/MobileLearningReport_2010.html © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 16.
    K-12 students’ personalaccess to mobile devices (preliminary Speak Up 2010 data findings) Device K-2 Gr 3-5 Gr 6-8 Gr 9-12 Cell 21% 29% 51% 56% phone Smart 16% 19% 34% 46% phone Laptop 37% 42% 60% 67% MP3 37% 55% 79% 85% iPad 10% 8% 13% 10% © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 17.
    K-12 students includemobile learning in their “ultimate school or class” (preliminary Speak Up 2010 data findings) Designing the Ultimate School - Mobile Devices iPad Gr 9-12 Gr 6-8 Laptop Gr 3-5 K-2 Handheld device 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 18.
    How would youuse your mobile device to help you with schoolwork? (preliminary Speak Up 2010 data findings) Top vote getters: Check grades 74% Internet research 68% Take notes for class 59% Text or IM classmate or teacher re: schoolwork 53% Use the calendar 50% It’s all about productivity! © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 19.
    The Educator Perspective A new cohort of educators are pushing the envelope for mobile learning. . . . Introducing the “Mobile Learning Explorer” © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 20.
    Introducing the “MobileLearning Explorer” 2X as likely as other educators to have a smart phone; 4X as likely to have a netbook Technology is extremely important to student success: 100% agree! Administrators see value of mobile devices as part of their ultimate school Teachers currently using mobile devices within instruction © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 21.
    Introducing our ExpertPanel Judy Copeland Director, Media, Instructional Technology & Secondary Services Onslow County Schools (NC) Sharon Gabriel Principal, Ocoee Middle School Orange County Public Schools (FL) Camilla Gagliolo Instructional Technology Coordinator Arlington Public Schools (VA) John Lien Sr. Administrator, Technology Professional Development Services Orange County Public Schools (FL) © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 22.
    Thank you. Let’s continue this conversation. Julie Evans Project Tomorrow jevans@tomorrow.org 949-609-4660 x15 Copyright Project Tomorrow 2011. This work is the intellectual property of the author. Permission is granted for this material to be shared for non-commercial, educational purposes, provided that this copyright statement appears on the reproduced materials and notice is given that the copying is by permission of the author. To disseminate otherwise or to republish requires written permission from the author. © Project Tomorrow 2011
  • 23.
    Evaluations Step 1: Goto http://edmodo.com/fetcevals Step 2: Select session number (FETC40), session title, and evaluate. © Project Tomorrow 2011