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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Rescooped by John Evans from iGeneration - 21st Century Education (Pedagogy & Digital Innovation)
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Sphero Introduces new robot - Bolt

Sphero Introduces new robot - Bolt | iPads, MakerEd and More  in Education | Scoop.it
Robotic toy company Sphero announces its newest product, Bolt, a robotic ball with coding capabilities through the Sphero EDU app.[Product Review: Kubo]Features

Via Tom D'Amico (@TDOttawa)
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Sphero ® Design Challenges to Get Kids Coding and Creating in No Time

Sphero ® Design Challenges to Get Kids Coding and Creating in No Time | iPads, MakerEd and More  in Education | Scoop.it
If you're familiar with Sphero®, you know that this tiny, highly engaging robot will have kids coding and creating in no time. Get students started with four popular design challenges from Diana Rendina.
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Sphero’s in the Classroom –

Sphero’s in the Classroom – | iPads, MakerEd and More  in Education | Scoop.it
There are many tools, resources, and applications that can be used to enhance student learning and develop their lifelong learning skills. The Sphero is one of these tools. It is amazingly versatile and will engage and empower your students. A tennis ball sized robot connected via bluetooth to a mobile device, the Sphero can be used to transform teaching and learning across various curriculum areas.

The Sphero can roll at a speed of up to 7km/h in any direction, spin, flip, and change colour. Using a range of Apps students can accurately direct the movement of the Sphero using code.

Creatively designed lessons incorporating Sphero’s can develop many of the attributes we want for our learners. Students will be designing and creating code to direct the Sphero while connecting, communicating, collaborating, problem solving, testing, failing, and iterating, all key characteristics of 21st century learners.

Here are some of my favourite lessons using Spheros;
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Robotics = Low Risk Failure.

Robotics = Low Risk Failure. | iPads, MakerEd and More  in Education | Scoop.it
I’ve been doing a ton of thinking alongside a colleague named Kevin Coulter lately. Kevin is a longtime math teacher who as recently transitioned into an instructional technology facilitator role in our building.  Most recently, Kevin was pitching me on a robotics club that he is starting in our building.

In the course of that conversation, he mentioned that he’d bought a Sphero 2.0 for his six year old son to tinker with — and he talked me into buying one for my six year old daughter.

I can’t wait for the Sphero to get here for a ton of reasons.  

Perhaps most importantly, it will give my daughter some early experiences with coding and programming — skills that I am convinced will be difference makers by the time that she grows up.  I’ve had her tinkering with Scratch Junior over the past year, but she’s never been all that motivated by moving an imaginary cat around a screen.  My hope is that the Sphero rumbling around the living room or the backyard will be far more motivating because it is tangible — she can see it and feel it working in a way that just isn’t possible with Scratch.

What I’m most excited about, though, is that the Sphero will give my daughter a thousand opportunities to fail without risk.

She’s going to write flawed instructions time-and-time again.  The Sphero won’t move at all — or it will go too far or too fast or too slow to do whatever it is that she’s trying to get it to do.  It will make wrong turns and end up stuck under the couch. It’s bound to knock over a few drinks sitting on the carpet.  Who knows, it might even bounce off of Nana’s shins a few times instead of going straight through her legs.

#fingerscrossed
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Sphero Makers: Ben's Mini Table – SPHERO SPRK – Medium

What’s the first thing you think of when you think of Sphero? Robots, right? Probably a safe assumption. That said, there’s a lot more to Sphero than just the bots. Sphero as a whole is also made up of designers, engineers, developers, product managers, QA and more.

But more so than all of that, Sphero is all of YOU — our makers, builders, educators, parents, students, and fans. Without you, we wouldn’t be here doing what we love day in and day out. So, for the sake of creation and for all of our tinkerers out there, we want to inspire you to make cool stuff and learn new things.

Actually, Scratch that.

We want YOU to inspire you.
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Sphero EDU - Makerspace Guide

Sphero EDU - Makerspace Guide | iPads, MakerEd and More  in Education | Scoop.it

"This guide was written to provide a school, library or after-school makerspace program enough support to begin using Sphero and maintain some initial momentum. In other words, to help establish an instructional program that leverages Sphero in a makerspace, supporting everything from dedicated maker projects aligned with curriculum to original student-driven inventions / creations to after-school programs and even free play."

 

Download the Guide

 

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Sphero’s awesome R2-D2 robot does the one thing no other’s done before

Sphero’s awesome R2-D2 robot does the one thing no other’s done before | iPads, MakerEd and More  in Education | Scoop.it
There has never been an R2-D2 toy quite like this.

Sphero, the company that helped bring the scene-stealing BB-8 to life in Star Wars: The Force Awakens and then delivered a tiny, but lively BB-8 robot toy, is breaking the traditional Sphero ball mold with a pitch-perfect 1:24 scale R2-D2 toy robot.

And it's magnificent.

Not only did Sphero get every detail right — the colors, the lights, and sounds (directly from Lucas Film Archives' original Star Wars: A New Hope recordings) — but Sphero’s R2-D2 app-enabled-droid moves like the real thing.
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