The next time something goes terribly wrong when you’re using technology, console yourself that it’s happened to everyone!
Read MoreRules, rules rules. Photo by Terry Freedman
Rules, rules rules. Photo by Terry Freedman
The next time something goes terribly wrong when you’re using technology, console yourself that it’s happened to everyone!
Read MoreIf you're told you'll be teaching Computing from now on, but don't feel competent to do so, what practical steps can you take in order to get up and running? Here are 12 suggestions.
Read MoreWhat are the attributes of a good newsletter, and what should it contain? The list in this article will, hopefully, give you some ideas.
Read MoreThis is a demo blog post. Please ignore!
Read MoreMost talks I have heard on the subject of the internet of things, by which is meant the connecting up of objects with people and other objects through wireless technology, have been completely daft.
Read MoreThe writer does an excellent job of both reflecting the annoyance of dealing with a computer program that has no flexibility as well as no intelligence, and highlighting the need for programs to invite human input when the consequences of not doing so can be catastrophic.
Read MoreIf you sell a similar product or service to that of another company, what is it that makes yours stand out?
Read MoreCross-curricular ed tech evaluation, by Terry Freedman
Whether you are moving to a new school, or staying where you are, it’s good to stand back and try to gauge what the school’s education technology and Computing are like. Why you would want to do that if taking up a new post is obvious: you want to see how the land lies so that you can start to identify any improvements that could be made.
Read MoreIf you’re a teacher, and especially if you’re a head of department, ebooks are a great way of making available key information.
Read MoreTo borrow from Dr Johnson, I find that most innovative ideas in Computing I read about are both new and exciting. Unfortunately, the ones that are new are not exciting, and the ones that are exciting are not new. It’s all very well “pushing the boundaries”, but all that does is give you more of the same.
Read MoreRubrics look like an easy way to tackle assessment. But they can be deceptive in that respect, and can cause the unwary to slip up.
Read MoreWe seem to be living in an age in which the more half-baked the idea, the more likely it is to find traction. I wonder, often, if this is because people think, “X has said this. X is an intelligent and wise person. Therefore this must be sensible.”
Read MoreInstead of sitting down and having an actual break, you consume your lunch while diving into a pile of marking….
Read MoreThis book starts from the premise that while teaching is an art, it also relies on the mastery and application of skills.
Read More“… not only will it be informative to those colleagues who wish to be informed, it will save you from being an insufferable bore to those who don't.”
Read MoreHaving to wait a week for computer results may have been fine at the time, because we knew no better. But who in their right mind would look back on all that as some kind of golden age?
Read MoreImagine what Ada Lovelace might have achieved had Babbage actually built his “computer” and she hadn’t died at the age of 36.
Read MoreI once wrote a scathing (but, of course, very polite) article about something a well-known person had written. Later that day, I was going down an escalator at Waterloo Station, and he was coming up the other escalator!
Read MoreYou can end up being so focused on measurable criteria that you miss really important stuff.
Read MoreIn my experience, it’s quite nerve-racking to seek customer feedback. I mean, what if they say the product sucks, but that they have to use it because there’s not much of an alternative?
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