Questions about the iPod Touch
In the last post, Lynda asked a bunch of questions about the iPods. I want to answer them here, because it will help me reflect more.
1) How many students are sharing these 3 iPods?
The students are arranged into guided reading groups of 5 or 6. They
rotate to different stations around the room, and they use the iPods and
share them during that station. So, two people share an iPod.
2) What apps are loaded on the ipods?
eReader -
an e-book reader app.
Stanza -
another e-book reader app.
Wurdle -
A Yatzhee-type of word game.
Word
Whirl -
You get seven letters and you have to make words that are from 3 to 7
letter long.
World
Wiki -
A wiki for every country in the world.
American Heritage Desk
Dictionary -
Apparently a pretty popular dictionary. Who knew?
Declaration
and
Constitution -
Some historical documents that most people feel are pretty important.
iFlipr
Lite -
Flashcard app.
Flashcards -
A good flashcard app that allows you to add pictures and photos to the
flashcards. Very much worth the $2.99
Kid Book
Envi -
This is a cool app that allows you to read kids’ books. Very cool.
There are a lot of great apps and I will probably buy more, because
there are so many neat things.
3) How long is an ipod “session”?
They get 10 minutes at each station, so 10 minutes on the iPods.
4) How do you decide who uses the ipod? Is there a schedule? Is it
time-based, or project-based?
That is, does a slower student get more time than a quicker student?
This is a good question, and I think that the students feel the best
about the situation when they all get equal time on the iPods. One of
the apps on there is a book reading app, and I may use that more in the
future with the guided reading.
5) Is time on the ipod used as a perk or reward?
This is a touchy area of using technology. Technology is a privilege,
not a right. I really want to use technology, and it is easier and more
enjoyable for me, and so I try to not take it away. Well, these guided
reading groups are not really easier, but they are worth it. I have had
to take away the reading groups from one class, and I made that the
punishment, not taking away the iPods.
6) What is the ideal ratio of students per iPod?
Ideally, I would want to have 1 student per iPod, but I don’t think that
is the best way to do it. I think having 2 kids on each iPod is good
because they keep each other on task.
7) Does the student do work on the iPod? On a computer? On paper?
They do work on all three. Most of the work on the iPods have been
watching instructional videos, where I am teaching something that I
recorded previously and loaded onto the iPod.
8) Do you download podcasts from the iTunes store?
I have downloaded a movies from iTunesU that relate to the book that we
are reading, Freak the
Mighty. There are a
lot of useful things from the iTunesU K-12 section that I will use, I am
sure.
9) Are the students creating their own podcasts? If so, are they audio
only? Video?
They eventually will create some sort of podcast, but that probably
won’t be done on the iPods unless I can get some microphones that
work.
I hope these answers are satisfactory for you. If anybody has any ideas, feel free to let me know.
Have a Good Life.
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