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Teaching with iPads

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    We'll talk about how to get content on to the device, including documents
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    We'll talk about how to get output out of the device to do presentations
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    We'll try to couch a little bit of this around teaching and
    learning, and talk about some apps that might be applicable
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    as you try to use this in the classroom or use
    this in your own performance to do some teaching
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    whether that's for reading or researching, or looking for materials,
    or preparing presentations to deliver in your own classroom.
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    One of the things that's a little different
    when we have conversations about iPads is
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    what really is an iPad. Is it a computer? Can you do the
    same things with it that you can do with your computer?
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    Can it replace your computer? Is it a cell phone? Does is do the things that your
    cell phone can do? Is it very portable? Can you stick it in your pocket?
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    It's much more portable. What we want to talk about
    today is that it's really neither one of those.
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    It's really somewhere in between. You can't make a telephone call on your iPad.
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    Although if you have the right equipment you can make a Skype
    phone call. So it's a little bit like a cell phone.
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    I'm going to try to show you today how you
    might be able to bring this into the classroom.
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    You can actually deliver a presentation entirely from your iPad. So in one way, it's kind of a computer. But those of you
    who have had it for a while would side with me and say that it's not really either one of those.
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    It's something different... it's in between the two of those. You're going to
    do things with your iPad that you don't do with your computer.
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    And you're going to do things with your iPad
    that you don't do with your cell phone.
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    It's sometimes difficult to tell which version you
    have because they look a lot alike.
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    A good way is based on the box. So if you're a shopper
    and you're going to go out and buy one of these
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    This is the iPad One box. It's the big iPad. The iPad Two box
    is the skinny one. For the most part the devices are the same.
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    This is the iPad One box. It's the big iPad. The iPad Two box
    is the skinny one. For the most part the devices are the same.
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    And most of what I'm going to show you today you can do
    on an iPad 1, you can do on an iPad 2
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    The apps that you can install for the most part are the same.
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    There are a couple big exceptions to that, and unfortunately one of them
    that we want to talk about has to do with teaching.
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    There are a couple big exceptions to that, and unfortunately one
    of them that we want to talk about is teaching.
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    The thing that happens with these iPads, and this workshop is always terrible because I have to take three
    bags to get all my stuff here because it's not just the iPad, it's all the accessories
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    that come with the iPad. We're going to show you some of these today. When
    you get your box, you get very few of these with your iPad.
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    You get this lovely little cable. And if you've hand an iPod or iPhone, you know this is
    the little proprietary dongle that Apple makes and that it's a USB on the other end.
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    The one I don't have, it also comes with
    a plug to plug it into the wall.
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    And it's important to hang on to that. Your iPod is
    going to charge best if it's plugged into the wall.
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    Rather than trying to plug it into a computer, it's going to charge must faster. And if
    you try to plug it into your computer it won't charge while you're using the iPad.
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    So it will come on and it will work but it won't charge.
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    So if you're using an iPad and you want
    to charge it, plug it into the wall.
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    All of the other accessories I'm going to
    show you today, of course, are separate.
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    All of the other accessories I'm going to
    show you today, of course, are separate.
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    And like everything with Apple, they come with a price. And they're not $9.99.
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    They go in larger multitudes of that.
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    Some of the ones you might think about while we're going to talk about how to get stuff into your iPad.
    We're going to show you that Apples does come with a built-in keyboard to enter content in your iPad
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    But if you're doing any significant writing, you might want
    to invest in these. It's a USB keyboard.
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    This is the Apple version but there are a
    lot of other keyboards you can get.
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    It makes it a lot easier to enter content.
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    It makes it a lot easier to enter content.
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    into your iPad. It's kind of a pain because you
    have another thing that you have to carry around
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    I don't have one of them... Does anyone
    have a case with a built-in keyboard?
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    More and more cases now are coming with built-in with USB keyboards, and so if you're a
    keyboard user you might want to look at that as you look at the case
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    Speaking of cases, of course Apple's going to charge you
    for a case to put this thing in.
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    The iPad Ones come with these lovely black cases from Apple that
    fold over and let you set them up like this
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    You can always tell an iPad 2 user
    because they usually have these bright colors
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    on top of their Ipad. So these iPad 2 covers fit
    on, they're magnetic and you can pull them off.
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    There are a thousand and one different covers out there for your iPad. But
    I would encourage you to get something to put your iPad in.
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    We've seen many catastrophes here on campus with iPads that we know of... climbing
    up the steps and hitting it as you're walking up or
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    having it fall out of your bag. And these screens, even
    though they're pretty tough they can crack pretty easily.
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    And getting the screen replaced is almost the
    same cost as getting a new iPad.
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    So you want to put it in something and protect it.
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    You can do output from the iPad. Since the iPad doesn't have that traditional
    USB out it has that proprietary iPad, iPod, Apple connector at the bottom
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    You have to buy the $30 cable form Apple to actually do output
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    There are two cables that allow you to do output. You want
    to be careful which one of these you buy now.
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    This is the one that allows you to to to VGA
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    VGA is what's in most of the classrooms across campus. It's
    the traditional cable that you plug into your computer.
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    In 99% of place across campus, this is the
    only cable that is going to work.
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    The other cable looks very different, and it's very exciting. This is an HDMI
    cable. It's going to let you do high-def output from your iPad
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    It also does sound and video from one cable without having to
    run a separate cable from the audio jack to your computer
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    The problem is that we have very few
    places on campus that have HDMI input.
Title:
Teaching with iPads
Video Language:
English
Duration:
07:48
Amara Bot edited English subtitles for Teaching with iPads
Amara Bot edited English subtitles for Teaching with iPads
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