A podcast by Daleen, Dakota, Grace & Shae
Episode 1: Scott Bailey
Episode 2: Ana Pakenhaim
Episode 3: The lost episode with Martha King
Episode 4: The finale
unsplashed photographer: Photo by Ahmed Hirsi on Unsplash
āOf all the paths you take in life, make sure a few of them are dirt.ā ā John Muir.
This is the category to apply to your Educational Technology Presentation project work.
A podcast by Daleen, Dakota, Grace & Shae
Episode 1: Scott Bailey
Episode 2: Ana Pakenhaim
Episode 3: The lost episode with Martha King
Episode 4: The finale
unsplashed photographer: Photo by Ahmed Hirsi on Unsplash
Letās Talk About Our ED Tech Presentations!
From Virtual Reality adventures to screencasts, website building, our podcast findings, security systems in schools, and even a look at high-tech, low-tech, and no-tech classrooms, our class projects covered a ton. Each project opened up a totally different corner of what technology can look like in education.. Lets dive in!

High Tech, Low Tech, No Tech:
Ella, Lela and Benny kicked us off and shared what they explored in different classrooms that look high tech, low tech, or no tech at all.
My favorite line from them:
āInstead of relying on one tool, teachers use what is availableātech or notāto meet students needs where they are at.ā
High Tech
Low Tech
No Tech
And the funniest part?
The QR code activity results⦠were basically all low tech for our class, and the school results. This
Totally surprised me, because I thought there would be way more high-tech or no tech classrooms. I also thought Iād be no tech, but now that I understand more about technology, I can totally see myself as a low-tech teacher.

Our Podcast, Grace, Shae, Daleen, Dakota
Next we presented our groupās podcast findings, which you can find and listen to our podcasts on my blog (posted under Educational Technology Presentations)
VR Field Trips: Passport Not Required
Next we had the “Alt-ternative Cowgirls” Makayla, Sophie and Chloe take us through the possibilities and benefits with Virtual Reality field trips.
When the budget isnāt there, VR field trips can help you make field trips happen. Suddenly you’re at the zoo, in Europe, in a museum, underwater, wherever, all from your classroom. This means there is less administrative work, safety risks, and funding required.
No permission slips. No fundraising. No āsorry, the bus is full.ā
Just safe, fun, accessible learning for every student.
VR offers:
Honestly? Virtual field trips are a great alternative when real field trips arenāt a possibility. Think like Ms. Frizzle, and take students places they never dreamed of going!

Too Much Tech = Tired Brains? Balance Matters
Next up, Danika, Sarah and Liah talked about something we donāt always think about: the balance between tech and actual cognitive development.
Their key message:
āTechnology should enhance cognitive growth, not compete with it.ā
They talked about how overusing tech affects:
We need some technology in classrooms, but we also need handwriting, reading real books, face-to-face communication, and problem solving without just saying āeh, ask Google.ā
Tech balance isnāt just a school issue, itās a life issue.
Students need to think critically, not become passive consumers. Using tech intentionally, having a blended approach, and managing cognitive load⦠are all huge parts of balancing technology in classrooms.
In short: use tech, enjoy tech, learn from tech, but donāt let it replace thinking or learning.

Security Systems in Schools: Helpful or Prison Like?
And finally, the āSiren Sistersā Breanna, Amanda, Alexndra and Hannah took us into the world of school security systems, and honestly, itās more complicated than I expected.
Pros:
Cons:
My favorite quote they shared:
āProtecting a childās tomorrow before their fear ever reaches today.ā
Powerful stuff.
This presentation made me think about the balance between safety and trust, yet again another form of ātech balance.ā

Final Thoughts
Our presentations showed me that there is no one right way to use technology in education. VR can open the world. Podcasts can build student voice. Security systems can protect but also complicate. And sometimes the simplest tools are the most effective. It all depends on how you use technology.
The theme across everything?
Balance. Intentionality. And meeting students where theyāre at.
Pretty good takeaways!
Photo by iuliu illes on Unsplash
Photo by Museums Victoria on Unsplash
Photo by Boston Public Library on Unsplash
Photo by National Museum of Denmark on Unsplash
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