This has been superseded by an updated and enlarged version. See https://www.ictineducation.org/home-page/free-illustrations-for-your-blog-or-website-updated for details.
I recently taught a course for adults on blogging. As I expected, some people still believe that if an image is discovered on Google Images then it is free to use. The advice is, as always: check the licence!
More articles on using and teaching education technology
A week or so ago we were chatting to a neighbour. She said she thinks her daughter, who looked about six years old, should learn how to code, as that’s the future. Didn’t I agree? I’m afraid I said that didn’t.
One of the few good things about the emphasis on ‘coding’ now is that as most people acknowledge that they know nothing about it, they leave the people teaching it in peace.
This resource comprises a number of prompts to kickstart a discussion in your classroom about AI and its effects in society.
Boring projects are the worst kind of thing to give students. My way of thinking is simple: if you can’t think of anything exciting, get them to come up with something themselves.
It’s almost unheard of for me to read advertorials or sponsored posts, especially when the words “Advertisement” appears in small print somewhere other than the headline. But the title made me curious.
What makes an excellent ICT or Computing lesson? In this document I've tried to encapsulate the answer to that question.
To the casual listener, stride piano, boogie woogie piano and rock-n-roll piano all sound pretty much the same. Yet Fats Waller, perhaps the most famous stride pianist, detested boogie woogie.
If I had to choose just one causal factor to focus on, as to why students find ICT lessons boring, it would be the start of the lesson.
I will be running another online course in blogging in the evenings of the 17th and 24th November 2023.
*UPDATED* What are the attributes of a good ICT and Computing scheme of work? Here's the list of characteristics I've always looked for.