Holiday job, Updating my classes iPad to iOS 11. Investment in the mac Server app, £19.99, and turning on caching has really speeded things up.
Life in Links 20-10-2017

Some things that have caught my interest over the last week:
- Good Teachers Talk: Better Teachers Listen | Class Teaching The post is more interesting, to me, than the title.
One way of achieving this identify shift is to come unprepared to a lesson! For example, working on a poem in English that neither the pupils nor the teacher have read before. In doing so, pupils begin to see that their identities can fluctuate from learner to contributor, thus giving them the confidence to enact this discourse themselves in the classroom and beyond.
Which speaks to vocalising your process. I do that (I hope) in writing, but not so much in reading.
- School walls are oozing with unhelpful growth mindset cheese…. | teacherhead
Get these slogans blown up and laminated and plaster your corridors and walls in them… Bingo! Go Growth Mindset
And
Live it. Don’t laminate it. Stick that on a poster
.
- Developing a Proper Growth Mindset – The Educator Blog
False Growth Mindset
After the recent pushback on Growth Mindset this post suggests that there can be real Growth Mindset and “Many of the best teachers are already there”
- Online training – Raspberry Pi We recently launched a new way for people to learn about computing with the Raspberry Pi Foundation: free online training courses, available to anyone, anywhere in the world!
- How to Live Without Google Google trackers have been found on 75% of the top million websites. This means they are not only tracking what you search for, they’re also tracking which websites you visit, and using all your data for ads that follow you around the internet.
- Physical Computing With Scratch | Raspberry Pi Projects
The version of Scratch included with the Raspberry Pi has a number of unique features; one of the most useful is its ability to communicate with the GPIO pins (General Purpose Input Output). These pins allow you to connect your Raspberry Pi to a range of devices, from lights and motors to buttons and sensors. The original Raspberry Pi had a 26-pin header and newer models (B+, Pi 2, Pi 3, etc) have a 40-pin header, but this workshop will work with any model.
I’ve generally failed with any raspberry pi stuff that involves extra hardware beyond a camera this might help.
- Simple Scratch intruder alarm « Blog My Wiki!
uses any old Raspberry Pi with Raspbian and some parts you’d find in a CamJam EduKit or similar: an LED, a resistor, a push-button switch, a buzzer and a Passive Infra Red (PIR) movement sensor wired up
Looks like it might be a nice we project for school.
- Fragmentum – A microcast from Adam Procter A new microcast. Glad to see a education one appearing.
- Clips – Google Drive lesson plan to use clips to produced short, 30 sec, movie about a country.
- Spreadsheets – Google Drive Resources for teaching spreadsheets. Year 5 (England)
- iOS Keynote is so darn cool! – Learners Together: Teaching with Technology Animated presentations for six word stories.
Featured image: Got Links? | On some large road machine from Gila County AZ | Alan Levine | Flickr CC-BY
Curlew and first post from micro.blog desktop.

waterfall near Kildonan

Ophelia battered heron

Approaching Arran

This sounds really interesting. I’ve not done much with sheet scripting other than copy the odd script. But I am wondering if you could still use a social bookmarking service, say pinboard, then use IMPORTFEED in your sheet to grab all the links, and descriptions . This might be easier than opening a google form every time you want to add a link? Or not YMMV.
But you could then automate the creation of the newsletter as you outline above. Pinboard would be goods as you can get a feed for a tag (newsletter).
Digital Nostalgia
I just opened my old 2001 iBook, running 10.3.9 (2005) with 320 MB of RAM. The Finder was surprisingly snappy. It slowed down a bit once I had an application or two running.
In the dock (on the right had side, vertical) Graphic Converter, Safari, SuperCard, AppleWorks, Claris Emailer, Flash MX, Tex-edit-plus, terminal, NetNewsWire, IE, QuickTime, System Prefs and Classic. There are a few other fond memories in the Application Folder.
I couldn’t get it on the Wifi but it connected via Ethernet.
I was hoping to find out what podcasts I was listening to back then, but no luck, nothing in iTunes at all, I think I cleared out it out at some point to pass on to my wife or daughter.
(My first mac was a performa 475 bought in 1996 just as the power pc macs appeared.)
Goose at Ardinning

