iPads, MakerEd and More in Education
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iPads, MakerEd and More  in Education
News, reviews, resources for AI, iTech, MakerEd, Coding and more ....
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How Makerspaces in Schools Help Students Learn to Code - EdTech Magazine

How Makerspaces in Schools Help Students Learn to Code - EdTech Magazine | iPads, MakerEd and More  in Education | Scoop.it
Makerspaces in schools are giving educators new options to teach students core coding concepts. Learn why makerspaces could be right for your classroom.
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Rescooped by John Evans from Invent To Learn: Making, Tinkering, and Engineering in the Classroom
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Girls Knit Their Way to a Math Career – Bright

Girls Knit Their Way to a Math Career – Bright | iPads, MakerEd and More  in Education | Scoop.it

"Knitting and crocheting require mathematical thought. A growing movement hopes to use these crafts to interest girls in the sciences."


Via Sylvia Martinez
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We Love Books, Just as Much as Makerspaces: The Story of How Our Students Built Our Collection - Laura Fleming @lflemingEDU

We Love Books, Just as Much as Makerspaces: The Story of How Our Students Built Our Collection - Laura Fleming @lflemingEDU | iPads, MakerEd and More  in Education | Scoop.it
Something that bothers me so much is when I read articles that talk about how libraries are becoming makerspaces.  Our makerspace is one component of the participatory culture that runs through our space.  Anyone who knows my story knows that my point of entry into the Maker Movement was through literacy, so for me, literacy and making have always gone hand in hand.  

When I began as the Library Media Specialist at New Milford High School, I walked into a library that was similar to many school libraries in older schools.  It was very traditional looking, with tall stacks and lots and lots of books that students simply did not check out, nor have an interest in.  The collection was out of date and had not been weeded in decades.  One of the tasks for me was to weed the books.  During that weeding process, I decided that traditional nonfiction that made it through the weeding process would be sent to classrooms to build up their classroom research libraries.  I decided to keep any memoirs or narrative nonfiction that we had in our collection, since those were the kinds of books I discovered so many of our students did enjoy reading and would check out.  Amongst the vast fiction collection, we did find a few gems, but mostly we either discarded books that were no longer relevant to our students, gave them to classrooms who wanted them, or to individual students who showed an interest.  In the end, I was able to preserve just a few shelves of books.  As a result, I was tasked with rebuilding our collection.
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