27 Feb Chromebook Keyboard Considerations for Kindergarten
My oldest daughter is in Kindergarten this year. Recently, she started using a Chromebook in her classroom. The Chromebook that she uses at school is different from the one we have at home. The difference is minor for most of us, but it’s huge for kids her age. That difference is found on the keyboard.
The Chromebook that my daughter uses at school has all of the letters appearing as capitalized letters on the keyboard. For example, the letter a appears as “A” and the letter q appears as “Q.” That is accomplished through the use of a Chromebook keyboard overlay. The Chromebook that we have at home doesn’t have an overlay and therefore the keys appear in all lowercase letters.
The trouble with a keyboard that appears in all lowercase letters is that the letters “a” and “q” don’t appear to a Kindergarten student in the same way that they do when handwritten. I only noticed this last week when my daughter wanted to practice typing her full name which includes the letters a and q. She initially struggled because she couldn’t find the a and q keys until I showed them to her. At which point she argued with me that “a” wasn’t “written the right way.”
My daughter now recognizes all “a” as an a on the keyboard, but it wasn’t without a bit of struggle.
Are you a tech coach or media specialist looking for some new ideas to share with your colleagues? If so, 50 Tech Tuesday Tips is an eBook you need. You can get it right here.
My oldest daughter is in Kindergarten this year. Recently, she started using a Chromebook in her classroom. The Chromebook that she uses at school is different from the one we have at home. The difference is minor for most of us, but it’s huge for kids her age. That difference is found on the keyboard. The Chromebook that my daughter uses at school has all of the letters appearing as capitalized letters on the keyboard. For example, the letter a appears as “A” and the letter q appears as “Q.” That is accomplished through the use of a Chromebook keyboard overlay. The Chromebook that we have at home doesn’t have an overlay and therefore the keys appear in all lowercase letters. The trouble with a keyboard that appears in all lowercase letters is that the letters “a” and “q” don’t appear to a Kindergarten student in the same way that they do when handwritten. I only noticed this last week when my daughter wanted to practice typing her full name which includes the letters a and q. She initially struggled because she couldn’t find the a and q keys until I showed them to her. At which point she argued with me that “a” wasn’t “written the right way.” My daughter now recognizes all “a” as an a on the keyboard, but it wasn’t without a bit of struggle.
Are you a tech coach or media specialist looking for some new ideas to share with your colleagues? If so, 50 Tech Tuesday Tips is an eBook you need. You can get it right here.Chromebooks, Free Technology For Teachers, Keyboard, typingRead More
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