Products
Pocket Books
1/4/2011 By:
By Ellen Ullman
For most of our product roundups, we at Tech & Learning talk with
technology or curriculum directors. When it came to e-readers, however, we
found ourselves speaking to librarians and English teachers. And though it
was a challenge to find schools doing full-scale implementations, we heard
about many small pilot tests and other creative ways to finance a handful of
e-readers for classrooms and libraries.
Will DeLamater, a former high school English teacher and principal, started
EduKindle (edukindle.ning.com) to help educators who are using e-readers
connect with each other and share ideas and resources. DeLamater, who
bought his first Kindle early in 2008, believes that e-readers present three
distinct advantages:
1 Children can increase the font size, which research says helps improve
reading for kids with any learning disability.
2 E-readers vastly expand the range of
choice in reading material. “You can put
a complete library of books on your mobile
device, including the classics that are in the public
domain,” DeLamater says.
3 The ultimate benefit, he says, is an economic one. Districts can decrease their
book-replacement budgets substantially by downloading free or low-cost
e-books. Also, the site CK12.ORG , for example, which is part of the movement
toward open educational resources, features more than a dozen textbooks, all
vetted and correlated to standards in various subjects.
Kathy Parker, a librarian at the Seneca
(IL ) Grade School, agrees that e-readers
offer useful features. “The Kindle’s textto-
speech helps struggling readers and
ELL students follow and comprehend,”
she says. Parker also loves the dictionary
feature, which lets kids get the definition
of an unfamiliar word as soon as they
encounter it. “That appeals to their need for
instant gratification.”
Perhaps the most compelling reason of all,
particularly for a librarian, is that e-readers
make reading more fun. “Children come to
the library and say, ‘I want a skinny book,’”
Parker says. “On the Kindle, you don’t see
the size, so I can convince them to read
good books.”
Pinellas
County
Schools
Largo, FL
What do
you use?
Kindle (amazon.com/kindle)
Why
did you
decide
to get
e-readers?
The Clearwater High School principal’s goal,
according to Bonnie Kelley, supervisor of
library media and technology, is for every
student to have all textbooks on the Kindle in
three years. Already 11 math textbooks are on
the Kindle. “The instructional-material budget
from last year went to a literature e-book for all
four grades,” Kelley says. “Next up is science,
then social studies.”
How did
you fund
them?
“We have 2,200 Kindles, one for each high
school student, paid for with technology
funds.” These funds also covered 125 Kindles
for staff. To purchase the electronic books, they
use instructional-material funds.
Why did
you
choose
this
particular
brand?
They chose the Kindle for its interactivity,
its highlighting feature, and its note-taking
capability, Kelley says. Free Internet access was
an additional and huge benefit. “Amazon has
been a wonderful partner, and the publishers
are listening to our ideas.”
How are
they
working
out?
“Great! I can’t believe how well. The students
were so thrilled to receive them. During
distribution, I noticed that students—especially
boys, who are said to not like reading as much
as girls—did not move.” It has enabled the
teachers to enter grades on time, because
students use the district portal every night to
check their grades.
Any neat
things
teachers
are doing
with
them?
Students do math assignments, and everyone
uses the free Newspapers in Education.
Thanks to the headphone jack, world-language
students can hear words’ correct pronunciation
and build fluency. In other classes, kids take
notes on the Kindles and print them out later
to study them. Earth science is using a publicdomain
textbook.
Any
regrets
or
advice?
“Amazon gave us tremendous advice. Our
students took a survey on reading engagement,
and it’s our baseline data.” You need a school
leader to be the driving force, Kelley says. “The
Kindle’s auditory function and dictionary are
exciting our students beyond measure.”
Discovery Middle
School
Granger, IN
What do
you use?
NOOK (www.barnesandnoble.com/nook )
Why
did you
decide
to get
e-readers?
Librarian Kathy M. Burnette wrote a grant to
get e-readers in class. “We don’t have a lot of
technology, so I thought we could use them for
our special-needs children and to get everyone
excited about reading,” she says.
How did
you fund
them?
Through a grant from the school foundation.
Why did
you
choose
this
particular
brand?
“We couldn’t get Kindles, because we don’t
have an Amazon account,” Burnette says.
She talked to Barnes & Noble about getting
e-readers for the library and for small-group
work in classrooms. The NOOK fit the bill.
How are
they
working
out?
Because Barnes & Noble required the school
to register, Burnette had to limit her 10 NOOKs
to teacher use only. Feedback from teachers is
that the Nook is difficult to use in class because
you have to go to a different screen to highlight
something or take notes. Still, Burnette believes
it’s a great tool that encourages kids who don’t
like reading to pick it up.
Any neat
things
teachers
are doing
with
them?
“The special-needs classes are using them to
increase font size and load MP3 books that get
read to the students. We’re checking out the
NOOKcolor to see if it will be useful for special
needs as well.”
Any
regrets
or
advice?
Make sure you have an agreement in place,
Burnette says. She redid hers and spelled
everything out: the cost of the charger, the cost
of the case, etc. “Students need to know what
they are responsible for.”
Hannibal Middle
School
Hannibal, MO
What do
you use?
Sony Readers (www.sonystyle.com)
Why
did you
decide
to get
e-readers?
Paula Epker, a sixth-grade English and reading
teacher, thought her classes would enjoy using
e-readers. Her principal was on board, but
money was tight. No one else in her district uses
them, so she decided to start a pilot program.
How did
you fund
them?
In November she asked for the money to buy
a couple of Sony Readers through the online
charity Web site DonorsChoose.org. Since then
she’s used the site again. Today she has seven
Sony Readers.
Why did
you
choose
this
particular
brand?
“I needed one that wasn’t tied to a store,”
Epker says. “I liked that the Sony connects to a
computer to download; that way the kids can’t
charge new books.” The Sony is comparable to
her Kindle, she says. “Ours have a touch screen,
which the kids love. They are very easy to use.”
How are
they
working
out?
Epker discovered that it’s harder for students
to choose a book without seeing the cover. As
a result, she printed out front and back covers
and put them in a binder. Other than that,
it’s business as usual. Her students take turns
using the Readers. “We have an extensive class
library, but we’re running out of room. The
Readers save so much space. Also, the book
doesn’t wear out.”
Any neat
things
teachers
are doing
with
them?
Epker uses the Readers just as she does regular
books. Her students have an independent
book out at all times; sometimes it’s paper,
sometimes it’s electronic. Other teachers have
begun expressing interest. One has already
received two e-readers via DonorsChoose.org
and is asking for more.
Any
regrets
or
advice?
“Do some planning before handing them out.
Mine are numbered, and I know which books
are on each one. You’ll want to catalogue
everything so you can keep track of it.”
Other E-readers
¦ Augen TheBook e-Reader (www.augenus.com)
¦ Kobo eReader (www.kobobooks.com)
¦ Velocity Micro Cruz Reader (www.cruzreader.com/reader.php)
iPads for
Everyone
This year the Kodiak Island Borough School District
in Alaska spent 1.6 million in federal stimulus funds
to buy 343 iPads for students and 279 for teachers,
laptops, servers, professional development,
and apps. There are now five iPad labs serving the
K–12 students.

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Students at Kodiak Island Borough School District in Alaska love
their iPads.
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“At East Elementary School, each grade has its
own apps and Web sites,” says fifth-grade teacher
Jennifer Warner. “Once a month we sync up the
newest apps and Web sites so that all the iPads
have the same things on them.”
Warner’s students made instructional videos
about using the iPads for the lower grades. In addition,
she invites them to find new apps to use. Three
students conduct peer reviews; if it’s approved, the
app is loaded. “When they direct their own learning
in this way, it’s quite powerful,” Warner says.
John Malloy, who teaches third and fourth grades
at East Elementary, is enjoying integrating the iPads
into curricular units. “Students are creating podcasts
and putting them on the iPads,” he says.
Malloy gives a weekly half-hour lesson to his
colleagues before school starts and says teachers
seem excited about the iPads.
Already the district says that student engagement
(measured by time on task with iPads versus that
with regular worksheets) has doubled. “The iPads
make teachers more efficient because we are reaching
kids in more ways and delivering hands-on learning,”
Warner says. “It’s very powerful.”