Classroom Teacher

Should teachers upgrade to the new iPad 3?

More and more teachers are wondering about the iPad in the classroom. A few of us have the iPad 2 and as the new iPad 3 just came out, the big question is whether teachers should upgrade their iPads.

Apple’s CEO Tim Cook wants us to know that we live in a “post-PC” era. And, of course, Apple is leading the revolution and “reinventing portable computing.” (video 2:00.)

Unless you’re at the bleeding edge of classroom technology, most teachers have their feet firmly planted in the personal computer era. It’s comfortable, it’s familiar, and it’s what we know (and also what we have access to.)

Meanwhile, some students are walking around with hundreds of dollars of smartphone technology in their pockets and the odd iPad, playbook, or personal laptop from home lurking in the hallways and lockers.

This week, Apple recently showcased the new iPad (iPad third-generation.) Being an iPad kind of teacher, people asked me what I thought about getting the new one.

The New iPad in the Classroom?

Here are some quick links to ideas in this 3 part series:

  1. Higher Resolution Retina Display
  2. A5X Chip – Faster Quad Core Graphics Processor
  3. Better iSight Camera (5MB and 1080P HD video)
  4. Faster 4G LTE cellular network access
  5. Exact same battery life
  6. New Software for the iPad 3
  • Part 2: So what’s the best part about the new iPad 3 for teachers?
  • Part 3: Reasons why I bought the iPad 3
  • I wrote this series using Dragon NaturallySpeaking. Find out more about how accurate Dragon NaturallySpeaking was this time.
  • Part 1: Here’s why schools don’t really need to upgrade to new iPad 3:

    Higher Resolution Retina Display

    A5X Chip – Faster Quad Core Graphics Processor

    Better iSight Camera (5MB and 1080P HD video)

    Faster 4G LTE cellular network access

    Exact same battery life

    New Software for the iPad 3

    [stextbox id=”info”]A few of my teacher friends are excited about the SMART technologies wireless slate. The SMART slate lets you use an interactive pen on a clipboard-like device to control your computer like a wireless mouse. The problem is that you don’t get an image on your clipboard which takes some hand eye coordination to be able to actually draw on the computer.

    On the other hand, the iPad is a visual screen device – you can basically touch the screen and draw on it with the painting program like sketchbook Pro. Connect Apple TV to your projector and all of a sudden you can connect your iPad wirelessly to your projector through your Wi-Fi network. In other words, if you’re an art teacher, you can walk around the classroom and to draw and demonstrate your techniques on your iPad and have students see exactly what you see on your iPad projected on the big screen. But you can do all this with an iPad 2. You don’t need to upgrade to the new iPad in the classroom.[/stextbox]

    I wrote this series on whether teachers should upgrade to the new iPad 3 by talking to my computer using Dragon NaturallySpeaking 11.5 Premium Wireless. What is Dragon NaturallySpeaking?

    [adrotate block=”3″]
    • There are 2328 words in this series. Dragon made 40 word errors. So, we had an accuracy of 98.3% in this document.
    • If you include punctuation and capitalization errors, Dragon made an additional 15 punctuation and capitalization errors. So, we had an accuracy of 97.6% in this document.

    Example of Word Errors made by Dragon NaturallySpeaking 11.5:

    • announced that this event = announced at this event
    • the odd iPad, = the art iPad,

    Example of Punctuation / Capitalization Errors made by Dragon NaturallySpeaking 11.5

    • iPad 3 = IPad three

     

    iPad in the Classroom: The new iPad 3 isn’t worth upgrading for teachers and students, if you already have an iPad 2. So, find out the best part of iPad 3 for teachers.

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