Have our 3D Printer, drone, and a class set of Sphero’s in my office @hammondschool. Fun afternoon of applied learning with our 5th graders!
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What is Creativity Without a Keyboard (or Why I Want My Kids to Play Minecraft)?
Last night, my six year old daughter started playing Minecraft on my Windows desktop. She was clumsy with the keyboard / mouse combination that a desktop Minecraft experience requires. Telling her that “W” moves your character forward, and “S” backwards while you use your mouse to pan and active click (oh, and spacebar to hop) was interesting to process.
But she did it. And within a few minutes, she was flipping into her inventory (by pressing “E”) and back out with the right door or fence or block that she needed to build her underground home.
I tried to stand back and let her do her thing without acting like I wanted to build for her. But I knew I had to. I want her to learn how to use a keyboard.
Pro-Tip: I learned how to use a keyboard and type in the early 90’s working on my IBM clones and playing classic games like 1993’s Star Wars X-Wing and 94’s Tie Fighter.
These games did more for my keyboarding (and eventual programming) skills than any typing class in school that I had to take.
I want the same for my children, and I hope they realize the inherit power of a keyboard over an onboard software keyboard experience via iPhone, iPad etc.
Of course, I may be wrong. But I don’t think so.
In my mind, Seth Godin nails it…
Many people are quietly giving away one of the most powerful tools ever created—the ability to craft and spread revolutionary ideas. Coding, writing, persuading, calculating—they still matter. Yes, of course the media that’s being created on the spot, the live, the intuitive, this matters. But that doesn’t mean we don’t desperately need people like you to dig in and type.
The trendy thing to do is say that whatever technology and the masses want must be a good thing. But sometimes, what technology wants isn’t what’s going to change our lives for the better.
MH Learning Minecraft
Screens in the Classroom
To me, the crux of the issue of using devices in a classroom comes down to the culture of a specific classroom… is there a teacher at the front of the room sharing information and knowledge with an audience of students, or is there a collaborative environment (or something of a hybrid)?
This is written from a college professor’s point of view, but still valuable for k-12 educators and a good read (especially the elephant and elephant driver metaphor):
This is, for me, the biggest change — not a switch in rules, but a switch in how I see my role. Professors are at least as bad at estimating how interesting we are as the students are at estimating their ability to focus. Against oppositional models of teaching and learning, both negative—Concentrate, or lose out!—and positive—Let me attract your attention!—I’m coming to see student focus as a collaborative process. It’s me and them working to create a classroom where the students who want to focus have the best shot at it, in a world increasingly hostile to that goal.
via Why I Just Asked My Students To Put Their Laptops Away… — Medium.
Few technical difficulties but we’re back live on…
Few technical difficulties but we’re back live on http://hammondschool.tv @hammondschool
Thursday Night Lights @hammondschool Watch student run live…
Thursday Night Lights @hammondschool! Watch student run live stream at http://www.hammondschool.tv
Varsity game for @HammondSchool moved to tonight for…
Varsity game for @HammondSchool moved to tonight for weather.
Which iPhone 6 Should You Buy?
I’ve had quite a few people ask me which iPhone 6 (the 6 or 6+) they should buy (money aside). Here’s a nice review I’ll be pointing to:
Big vs. bigger: Which iPhone 6 deserves a place in your pocket? | Cult of Mac.
Microsoft Buying Minecraft?
This makes me sad…
The video games studio behind Minecraft is in talks to be taken over by Microsoft, according to reports.It has been suggested that Mojang might sell for more than $2bn (£1.2bn).
via BBC News – Microsoft is ‘set to buy Minecraft developer’.
Dave Winer on Twitter’s power users…
Dave Winer on Twitter’s power users:
“We’re working for you for free, I bet that’s where a lot of your P/E ratio comes from, btw.”
http://scripting.com/2014/09/07/
Yep.
@hammondschool custom iPhone case I designed being 3D…
@hammondschool custom iPhone case I designed being 3D printed…
Live shot from the inboard camera via iPhone…
Makerbot looks pretty awesome with the red filament…
Makerbot looks pretty awesome with the red filament loaded!
Heating up our Makerbot Replicator for a Special Print
Heating up our Makerbot Replicator for a fun afternoon of printing (really exciting print this afternoon)…more soon!
Location: Hammond School Galway Ln,Columbia,United States
I think we should all get behind this…
I think we should all get behind this call for squirrel emoji in iOS.
Rocketboard looks pretty transformational Taking the idea of…
Rocketboard looks pretty transformational. Taking the idea of smartboards to the device: http://ut.getrocketboard.com?ref=juWrWJPX
Very valuable read if you’re interested in the…
Very valuable read if you’re interested in the future of the web… time to rethink “Big Internet”
“Big Twitter was great — for a while,” says Jacobs. “But now it’s over, and it’s time to move on.”
These trends, if they are actually trends, seem related. I sense that they both stem from a sense of exhaustion with what I’m calling Big Internet. By Big Internet, I mean the platform- and plantation-based internet, the one centered around giants like Google and Facebook and Twitter and Amazon and Apple.”
Nicholas Carr at http://www.roughtype.com/?p=5010
Maybe Next Year…
My Cubbies will have a good season (miss the ’89-91 team)!
Dave Winer on how to stimulate the open web
We were talking about this way back in 2006 (and probably before, but that’s when I started taking notice as the social web started accelerating) and it’s good to see that guardians of the web like Dave Winer are still hard at work thinking and talking (and making apps) about this:
Create systems that are ambivalent about the open or closed web. If I create a tool that’s good at posting content to Facebook and Twitter, it should also post to RSS feeds, which exist outside the context of any corporation. Now other generous and innovative people can build systems that work differently from Facebook and Twitter, using these feeds as the basis, and the investors will have another pile of technology they can monetize.
via How to stimulate the open web.
Go read and use RSS.
Back to iPhone
I’ve been using a Nexus 4 then the Nexus 5 as my daily mobile device for the last two years as I wanted to learn Android.
I enjoyed the experience for the most part (especially Google Now and apps integration) but I’ve missed the reliability and stability of Apple hardware.
So, I’m back on an iPhone 5s (until the 6 or whatever it’s called next month) for hardware and Google etc for software for now.






