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by bambax
3114 days ago
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> full of chalk and blackboard Thanks for the link to Mr. Alexandre's talk; very informative. He's a little heavy on the hyperbole but many of his warnings ring true, esp. the fact that Europe is squashed between the American GAFA and the Asian BATX, with no response of her own. That said, French schools are not esp. technology-adverse; most (all?) classrooms are equipped with a "TNI" (tableau noir interactif) which is in fact a great improvement versus traditional blackboard and chalk. Banning smartphones in schools is a very good thing IMHO; teaching technology is a distinct issue; kids don't use smartphones to learn technology but, most of the time, to consume content or exchange messages. Just because you have a car doesn't make you a mechanic, but it makes you walk less. |
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Having led some experiments with those, I am not sure they are a real improvement over a chalkboard:
- they cost much more and are pretty useless without computers / tablets for the teacher and pupils - they require skills from the teachers to operate them - the software ecosystem is poor - slightly OT, wifi is not allowed in schools
So, while the concept is attractive, the current implementations requires a lot of efforts and little value, even in the corporate world.
I'd like to read some reviews about google's jamboard though.