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Education Scotland to report on iPads-in-schools pilot

The Scottish Government will consider whether pupils across Scotland would benefit from having access to portable technology like the iPad in class, based on the experience of a number of pilots across the country.

Pilots are underway in ten local authorities, putting iPads into the hands of pupils at 20 schools across Scotland. Education Secretary Michael Russell today visited one of those pilots, at Sciennes Primary School in Edinburgh, where dozens of students in P5 and P6 classes are trialling use of the iPad in class.

In a classroom crowded with pupils, school administrators, Scottish Government officials and journalists, Russell saw students deliver a presentation on the history of games consoles, delivered using iPad apps and including a video produced on the device.

“There are a number of pilots already underway around the country, including the use of iPads here at Sciennes. I have asked Education Scotland for recommendations on how we can realise the benefits of mobile technology for all learners in Scotland, including ensuring how we get the best possible value for our schools, and whether national guidance is needed for the sector,” said Russell.

In some of the Sciennes pilot classes, students get to keep the iPads throughout the day, taking them home to complete assignments. Other classes are keeping the devices in school.

Students at Sciennes showed visiting adults not only their astounding ease with technology that most of their elders have yet to get to grips with, but also the ways the technology is being used to enrich the learning experience. Classes have set up their own ‘wiki’ pages to share information and research; can be set work by their teacher in a blog format, and return it for correction; and can use a variety of free educational applications. Over the school’s wifi network, the students also have free access to the digital collection of the City of Edinburgh Libraries.

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Holyrood morning roundup: Wednesday 16 May, 2012

Good morning – here are the top 10 stories in Scotland this morning: Cameron ‘not fussy’ about timing of vote (Press & Journal) Benefit reforms paint ‘bleak picture’ for Scotland’s most vulnerable (STV News) Helicopter flights to resume, says company (Press & Journal) Total gas leak operation begins at Elgin North Sea platform (Guardian) Scottish independence: MoD ‘will want out’ of separate Scotland (Scotsman) Tory peer says independence will happen even if SNP lose referendum (Daily Record) Labour reach agreement with Tories to run Fife Council as minority administration (Daily Record) First Minister acclaims 500 oil jobs boost (Herald) Weeks to wait for full figures on council elections turnout (Guardian) Second World War Arctic convoy veterans should be rewarded with own campaign medal, demands Keith Brown (Daily Record) Today’s Scottish [...]



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Abertay gets its man to close book on last year’s merger controversy

It was a job that might not have existed, but today the University of Abertay Dundee has announced that Professor Nigel Seaton will be its new Principal and Vice-Chancellor. Professor Seaton, 51, hails from Falkirk, and is a former Senior Deputy Vice-Chancellor of the University of Surrey and Vice-Principal of the University of Edinburgh. His field is chemical engineering, having gained his BSc from Edinburgh in 1982, followed by an MSc and PhD from the University of Pennsylvania. After working for Atkins Research and Development and BP, Seaton went on to teach at Clare College Cambridge, Cornell University and the University of Edinburgh. As Vice-Principal at Edinburgh, he was responsible for areas including strategic planning, internationalisation, student recruitment and the library, controlling a budget of £110m. It’s a CV that [...]



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Holyrood morning roundup: Tuesday 15 May, 2012

Good morning – here are the top 10 stories in Scotland this morning: Minimum alcohol price in Scotland to be set at 50p a unit (Guardian) Scottish teacher and NHS pension payments exceed £1 billion (Daily Telegraph) Helicopter had engine failure just weeks ago (Press & Journal) Oil workers refusing to fly on Bond helicopters after North Sea ditching (STV News) Four Royal Alexandra Hospital vomiting bug patients die (BBC Scotland) Alex Salmond: Scotland and Norway can contribute greatly to Europe’s ambitions for green energy (Daily Record) Migrant staff ‘abused’ by Scots firms (Herald) Hardest job in politics: Lesley Hinds takes charge of Edinburgh trams (Scotsman) Future of Scottish regiment names ‘back in melting pot’ (Daily Telegraph) Carbon capture leak simulated in sea off Scotland (Guardian) Today’s Scottish Parliament highlights: [...]



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Ready for change

From purchasing books to teaching literacy, Scottish Book Trust CEO Marc Lambert is ready for the debate When Marc Lambert took charge of the Scottish Book Trust in 2002, it had two staff and an annual budget of £200,000. Ten years on, Scotland’s lead organisation in promoting literacy, spreading a love of reading, and supporting the next generation of writing talent is recruiting to bring its workforce up to 34, has a turnover of £4m, and is set to begin a programme of intervention in some of Scotland’s most deprived communities. Change, therefore, is not something that fazes Lambert. All the better because literature – the way it is produced, accessed and consumed – is in a state of flux. “Publishing models are changing and will have to change dramatically [...]



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[caption id="flickrImage_1" align="alignleft" width="200" caption="Nicola Sturgeon MSP by theSNP"][/caption] Scotland is increasingly seen as a world leader in telehealth and telecare, Health Secretary Nicola Sturgeon said today, but added that...
The Scottish Government will consider whether pupils across Scotland would benefit from having access to portable technology like the iPad in class, based on the experience of a number of...
Good morning - here are the top 10 stories in Scotland this morning: Cameron 'not fussy' about timing of vote (Press & Journal) Benefit reforms paint 'bleak picture' for Scotland's most vulnerable...
It was a job that might not have existed, but today the University of Abertay Dundee has announced that Professor Nigel Seaton will be its new Principal and Vice-Chancellor. Professor Seaton,...
Scotland is one of the leaders in telehealth in Europe but we need to maintain that momentum, Professor George Crooks, director of the Scottish Centre for Telehealth and Telecare has...
 

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