ONLINE PLATFORMS FOR ICT CONTENT DEVELOPMENT

1.) Social Media Platforms
Facebook allows you to create not only personal accounts but also pages and groups where you can share content.The only downside of this is that you restricted to the Facebook’s “one-size-fits-all” design.
It is the biggest social network of students, and is gaining ground among professionals too. Facebook application enables you to add new ways for users to interact with each other. On the plus side,Facebook has a lot of users.
Facebook
LinkedIn is a social networking site designed specifically for the business community. The goal of the site is to allow registered members to establish and document networks of people they know and trust professionally. It is another example of social networking site   where  its focus is on business and professional networking.

What is LinkedIn and how can it help you?

  1. LinkedIn is the leading professional network on the web
  2. Connect with classmates, faculty, and family professionally
  3. Find new opportunities for internships and full time positions
  4. Manage what potential employers learn about you from the Internet
  5. Find key contacts at companies that interest you
LinkedIn
Explore more about these sites!!!Here are the links:
 2.) Blogging Platforms
A blogging platform is the software or service that you use to publish your content onto the internet in the form of a blog. A blog platform is a specific form of a content management system.
Websites like WordPress,Tumblr, and Blogger focus on the  content and design. It let you create blog or websites that you can use for different purposes. It typically looks like a newsletter where you are given options to change the design to your liking. The amount of customization in blogs is also unrivaled depending on the  content management system implemented by the provider.
Tumblr
WordPress
Blogger
Explore more about these sites!Here are the links: www.tumblr.com  www.worpress.comwww.blogger.com
CONTENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
It is a computer application (sometimes online or browser-based) that allows you to publish, edit and manipulate, organize and delete web content.

Web Threats

Web-based threats – or online threats – are malware programs that can target you when you’re using the Internet. These browser-based threats include a range of malicious software programs that are designed to infect victims’ computers.

The main tool behind such browser-based infections is the exploit pack – which gives cybercriminals a route to infecting computers that either:

Applications and OSs that are targeted by online threats

Cybercriminals will use almost any vulnerability – within an operating system (OS) or an application – in order to conduct an exploit-based attack. However, most cybercriminals will develop web threats that deliberately target some of the most common OSs and applications, including:

  • Java
    Because Java is installed on over 3 billion devices – that are running under various operating systems – exploits can be created to target specific Java vulnerabilities on several different platforms / OSs.
  • Adobe Reader
    Although Adobe Reader has been targeted by many attacks, Adobe has implemented tools to protect the program against exploit activity – so that it’s getting harder to create effective exploits for the application. However, Adobe Reader was still a common target over the past 18 months.
  • Windows and Internet Explorer
    Active exploits still target vulnerabilities that were detected as far back as 2010 – including MS10-042 in Windows Help and Support Center, and MS04-028 which is associated with incorrect handling of JPEG files.
  • Android
    Cybercriminals use exploits to gain root privileges. Then, they can achieve almost complete control over the targeted device.

Millions of web attacks… every day

In 2012, the number of browser-based attacks was 1,595,587,670. On average, that means Kaspersky Lab products protected users against web threats more than 4.3 million times every day.

Kaspersky’s Internet security experts have identified the most active malicious software programs involved in web threats. The list includes the following types of online threats:

  • Malicious websites
    Kaspersky identifies these websites by using cloud-based heuristic detection methods. Most malicious URL detections are for websites that contain exploits.
  • Malicious scripts
    Hackers inject malicious scripts into the code of legitimate websites that have had their security compromised. Such scripts are used to perform drive-by attacks – in which visitors to the website are unknowingly redirected to malicious online resources.
  • Scripts and executable PE files
    Generally, these either:

    • Download and launch other malicious software programs
    • Carry a payload that steals data from online banking and social network accounts, or steals login and user account details for other services
  • Trojan-Downloaders
    These Trojan viruses deliver various malicious programs to users’ computers.
  • Exploits and exploit packs
    Exploits target vulnerabilities and try to evade the attention of Internet security software.
  • Adware programs
    Often, adware will simultaneously install when a user starts to download a freeware or shareware program.

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Advantages & Disadvantages of Information & Communication Technology

ICTs are a potentially powerful tool for extending educational opportunities, both formal and non-for mal, to previously underserved constituencies—scattered and rural populations, groups traditionally excluded from education due to cultural or social reasons such as ethnic minorities, girls and women, persons with disabilities, and the elderly, as well as all others who for reasons of cost or because of time constraints are unable to enroll on campus.

  • Anytime, anywhere.  One defining feature of ICTs is their ability to transcend time and space. ICTs make possible asynchronous learning, or learning characterized by a time lag between the delivery of instruction and its reception by learners. Online course materials, for example, may be accessed 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. ICT-based educational delivery (e.g., educational programming broadcast over radio or television) also dispenses with the need for all learners and the instructor to be in one physical location. Additionally, certain types of ICTs, such as teleconferencing technologies, enable instruction to be received simultaneously by multiple, geographically dispersed learners (i.e., synchronous learning).
  • Access to remote learning resources.  Teachers and learners no longer have to rely solely on printed books and other materials in physical media housed in libraries (and available in limited quantities) for their educational needs. With the Internet and the World Wide Web, a wealth of learning materials in almost every subject and in a variety of media can now be accessed from anywhere at anytime of the day and by an unlimited number of people. This is particularly significant for many schools in developing countries, and even some in developed countries, that have limited and outdated library resources. ICTs also facilitate access to resource persons, mentors, experts, researchers, professionals, business leaders, and peers—all over the world.
  • ICTs help prepare individuals for the workplace.

One of the most commonly cited reasons for using ICTs in the classroom has been to better prepare the current generation of students for a workplace where ICTs, particularly computers, the Internet and related technologies, are becoming more and more ubiquitous. Technological literacy, or the ability to use ICTs effectively and efficiently, is thus seen as representing a competitive edge in an increasingly globalizing job market.

 Benefits/Advantages  of ICT in Education

Here are some of the benefits which ICT brings to education according to recent research findings.

General benefits

  • Greater efficiency throughout the school.
  • Communication channels are increased through email, discussion groups and chat rooms
  • Regular use of ICT across different curriculum subjects can have a beneficial motivational influence on students’ learning.

Benefits for teachers

  • ICT facilitates sharing of resources, expertise and advice
  • Greater flexibility in when and where tasks are carried out
  • Gains in ICT literacy skills, confidence and enthusiasm.
  • Easier planning and preparation of lessons and designing materials
  • Access to up-to-date pupil and school data, any time and anywhere.
  • Enhancement of professional image projected to colleagues.
  • Students are generally more ‘on task’ and express more positive feelings when they use computers than when they are given other tasks to do.
  • Computer use during lessons motivated students to continue using learning outside school hours.

Benefits for students

  • Higher quality lessons through greater collaboration between teachers in planning and preparing resources .
  • More focused teaching, tailored to students’ strengths and weaknesses, through better analysis of attainment data
  • Improved pastoral care and behaviour management through better tracking of students
  • Gains in understanding and analytical skills, including improvements in reading
  • Comprehension.
  • Development of writing skills (including spelling, grammar, punctuation, editing and re-drafting), also fluency, originality and elaboration.
  • Encouragement of independent and active learning, and self-responsibility for learning.
  • Flexibility of ‘anytime, anywhere’ access (Jacobsen and Kremer, 2000)
  • Development of higher level learning styles.
  • Students who used educational technology in school felt more successful in school, were more motivated to learn and have increased self-confidence and self-esteem
  • Students found learning in a technology-enhanced setting more stimulating and student-centred than in a traditional classroom
  • Broadband technology supports the reliable and uninterrupted downloading of web-hosted educational multimedia resources
  • Opportunities to address their work to an external audience
  • Opportunities to collaborate on assignments with people outside or inside school

Benefits for parents

  • Easier communication with teachers
  • Higher quality student reports – more legible, more detailed, better presented
  • Greater access to more accurate attendance and attainment information
  • Increased involvement in education for parents and, in some cases, improved self-esteem
  • Increased knowledge of children’s learning and capabilities, owing to increase in learning activity being situated in the home
  • Parents are more likely to be engaged in the school community
  • You will see that ICT can have a positive impact across a very wide range of aspects of school life.

ICT and Raising Standards

Recent research also points to ICT as a significant contributory factor in the raising of standards of achievement in schools.

  • Schools judged by the school inspectors to have very good ICT resources achieved better results than schools with poor ICT.
  • Schools that made good use of ICT within a subject tended to have better achievement in that subject than other schools.
  • Socio-economic circumstances and prior performance of pupils were not found to be critical.
  • Secondary schools with very good ICT resources achieved, on average, better results in English, Mathematics and Science than those with poor ICT resources.

A range of research indicates the potential of ICT to support improvements in aspects of

literacy, numeracy and science.

  • Improved writing skills: grammar, presentation, spelling, word recognition and volume of work .
  • Age-gains in mental calculations and enhanced number skills, for example the use of decimals .
  • Better data handling skills and increased ability to read, interpret and sketch graphs Improvements in conceptual understanding of Mathematics (particularly problem solving) and Science (particularly through use of simulations)

The use of ICTs help improve the quality of education

ICTs can enhance the quality of education in several ways: by increasing learner motivation and engagement by facilitating the acquisition of basic skills, and by enhancing teacher training. ICTs are also transformational tools which, when used appropriately, can promote the shift to a learner-centered environment.

Motivating to learn. ICTs such as videos, television and multimedia computer software that combine text, sound, and colorful, moving images can be used to provide challenging and authentic content that will engage the student in the learning process. Interactive radio likewise makes use of sound effects, songs, dramatizations, comic skits, and other performance conventions to compel the students to listen and become involved in the lessons being delivered. More so than any other type of ICT, networked computers with Internet connectivity can increase learner motivation as it combines the media richness and interactivity of other ICTs with the opportunity to connect with real people and to participate in real world events.

Facilitating the acquisition of basic skills. The transmission of basic skills and concepts that are the foundation of higher order thinking skills and creativity can be facilitated by ICTs through drill and practice. Educational television programs such as Sesame Street use repetition and reinforcement to teach the alphabet, numbers, colors, shapes and other basic concepts. Most of the early uses of computers were for computer-based learning (also called computer-assisted instruction) that focused on mastery of skills and content through repetition and reinforcement.

Enhancing teacher training. ICTs have also been used to improve access to and the quality of teacher training. For example, At Indira Gandhi National Open University, satellite-based one-way video- and two-way audio-conferencing was held in 1996, supplemented by print-materials and recorded video, to train 910 primaryschool teachers and facilitators from 20 district training institutes in Karnataka State. The teachers interacted with remote lecturers by telephone and fax

Examples of ICT-based activities

What kind of classroom activities are suited to the use of ICT? The following is a brief guide to some of the most common uses of ICT in teaching and learning.

Finding out

Students can use ICT to find out information and to gain new knowledge in several ways. They may find information on the Internet or by using an ICT-based encyclopedia such as Microsoft Encarta. They may find information by extracting it from a document prepared by the teacher and made available to them via ICT, such as document created using Microsoft Word or a Microsoft PowerPoint slideshow. They may find out information by communicating with people elsewhere using email, such as students in a different school or even in a different country.

Processing knowledge

Students can use ICT as part of a creative process where they have to consider more carefully the information which they have about a given subject. They may need to carry out calculations (eg. by using Microsoft Excel), or to check grammar and spelling in a piece of writing (perhaps using Microsoft Word), or they may need to re-sequence a series of events (for example by re-ordering a series of Microsoft PowerPoint slides).

Sharing knowledge

Students can use ICT to present their work in a highly professional format. They can create documents and slideshows to demonstrate what they have learned, and then share this with other students, with their teacher, and even via email with people all around the world.

Computers and the Internet use for teaching and learning

There are three general approaches to the instructional use of computers and the Internet, namely:

1)  Learning about computers and the Internet, in which technological literacy is the end goal;

2) Learning with computers and the Internet, in which the technology facilitates learning across the curriculum; and

3) Learning through computers and the Internet, integrating technological skills development with curriculum applications.

Learn about computers and the Internet

Learning about computers and the Internet focuses on developing technological literacy. It typically includes:

  • Fundamentals: basic terms, concepts and operations
  • Use of the keyboard and mouse
  • Use of productivity tools such as word processing, spreadsheets, data base and graphics programs
  • Use of research and collaboration tools such as search engines and email
  • Basic skills in using programming and authoring applications such as Logo or HyperStudio
  • Developing an awareness of the social impact of technological change.

Learning with computers and the Internet

Learning with the technology means focusing on how the technology can be the means to learning ends across the curriculum. It includes:

  • Presentation, demonstration, and the manipulation of data using productivity tools
  • Use of curriculum-specific applications types such as educational games, drill and practice, simulations, tutorials, virtual laboratories, visualizations and graphical representations of abstract concepts, musical composition, and expert systems
  • Use of information and resources on CD-ROM or online such as encyclopedia, interactive mapsand atlases, electronic journals and other references.

Technological literacy is required for learning with technologies to be possible, implying a two-step process in which students learn about the technologies before they can actually use them to learn.

Learning through computers and the Internet mean

Learning through computers and the Internet combines learning about them with learning with them. It involves learning the technological skills “just-in-time” or when the learner needs to learn them as he or she engages in a curriculum-related activity.

Computers and the Internet used in distance education

Many higher educational institutions offering distance education courses have started to leverage the Internet to improve their programme’s reach and quality.

Disadvantages of ICT

                One of the major barriers for the cause of ICT not reaching its full potential in the foundation stage is teacher’s attitude. According to Hara (2004), within the early years education attitudes towards ICT can vary considerably. Some see it as a potential tool to aid learning whereas others seem to disagree with the use of technology in early year settings. Blatchford and Whitebread (2003:16), suggests that the use of ICT in the foundation stage is “unhealthy and hinders learning”. Other early years educators who are opposed to offering ICT experiences within the educational settings take a less extreme view than this and suggest that ICT is fine, but there are other more vital experiences that young children will benefit from, (Blatchford and Whitebread, 2003). In theory some people may have the opinion that the teachers who had not experienced ICT throughout their learning tend to have a negative attitude towards it, as they may lack the training in that area of the curriculum.

Construction Technology

This is the study of advanced methods and equipment used to build basic and advanced structures. One type includes buildings and heavy engineering structures like bridges. Construction methods use various technological products to erect a structure. The use of construction technology tools like heavy tractors to prepare the land, computer-aided design software to create digital designs for structures in 2D and3D format. These tools along with many others help builders to efficiently complete a project on time, within budget and with minimum accidents.

Example Of Construction Technology

Milwaukee M18 Fuel 2-Tool Combo Kit

Equipped with the best of Milwaukee’s technology these tools are prepared for any job you can through at it. Supported by the best brushless motors available and a powerful M18 Battery Pack.

Communication Technology

This is a system that uses technical means to transmit information or data from one place to another or from one person to another.  Communication is a daily essential for all; it is used to convey ideas, exchange information, and express emotions. Humans use communication technology tools like phones, computers, emails, fax or messaging tools to stay in touch with friends and family. Businesses use communication technology tools to facilitate the flow of information in a workplace, to help in decision making, to serve customers needs and requests, to promote new products or services to targeted consumers and so much more.

Example Of Communication Technology

Plantronics M165 Marque 2 Ultralight Wireless Bluetooth Headset

This simple elegant device allows for a hands-free conversation on any mobile device, it is completely compatible with Android or IOS. It features dual microphones to reduce noise and wind interference for crystal clear call quality. Also, it boasts over 7 hours talk time.

Advancing Technology

Technology is dynamic; it keeps on improving because our needs and demands for technology keep on changing.  We have moved from the industrial age (industrial revolution) to an information age. During the industrial age, companies with large sums of capital had the potential of employing expensive technological tools to gain the competitive advantage; small businesses had less potential because they could not afford expensive manufacturing or processing technology tools. However, advancement in technology has created a new economic environment which depends on information, and that is what we call the ‘INFORMATION AGE’’. The information age provides a different work environment, and this has helped small businesses gain position in highly competitive markets.

WHAT IS TECHNOLOGY – MEANING OF TECHNOLOGY AND ITS USE

Definition Of Technology

What Is Technology? Technology is a body of knowledge devoted to creating tools, processing actions and the extracting of materials. The term ‘Technology” is wide, and everyone has their way of understanding its meaning. We use technology to accomplish various tasks in our daily lives, in brief; we can describe technology as products and processes used to simplify our daily lives. We use technology to extend our abilities, making people the most crucial part of any technological system.

Technology is also an application of science used to solve problems. But it is vital to know that technology and science are different subjects which work hand-in-hand to accomplish specific tasks or solve problems.

We apply technology in almost everything we do in our daily lives; we use technology at work, we use technology for communication, transportation, learning, manufacturing, securing data, scaling businesses and so much more.  Technology is human knowledge which involves tools, materials, and systems. The application of technology typically results in products. If technology is well applied, it benefits humans, but the opposite is true, if used for malicious reasons.

Many businesses are using technology to stay competitive, they create new products and services using technology, and they also use technology to deliver those products and services to their customers on time and within budget. A good example is mobile phones companies like Apple & Samsung, these mobile empires, use high-end technology to create new smartphones and other electronic devices to stay competitive. This competitive edge is gained through employing advanced technology.

 

The Importance of Technology in My Life

Technology is an integral and important part of my life. Like most I use technology such as computers and the Internet to complete schoolwork, projects, and to conduct research. Technology helps to speed up the learning process for students like myself because it creates a more efficient learning environment in many ways. For example I can write this blog post much faster than I could if I were to hand-write it. And of course without the Internet I wouldn’t be able to view my peers posts until I attended class on Wednesday. But technology is also an important part of my life for reasons other than just education. Technology is also important to me for enjoyment purposes. As a musician I use technology to create and record music. I enjoy experimenting with electronic keyboards and synthesizers to create new and interesting sounds and I use my computer to record and edit these tracks. Technology is also important to me for communication purposes. Moving six hours away from home as an eighteen-year-old is certainly a daunting experience, but with cell phones and built in video cameras on computers my family and friends are just a click away. For all these reasons technology is invaluable to me and without it my life would unquestionably be very different.Related image