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Phil Taylor

What Was the Greatest Era for Innovation? A Brief Guided Tour - The New York Times - 1 views

  • the real revolution of recent decades is in the supercomputer most people keep in their pocket
John Evans

Biggest Spike in Traffic Deaths in 50 Years? Blame Apps - The New York Times - 0 views

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    "The messaging app Snapchat allows motorists to post photos that record the speed of the vehicle. The navigation app Waze rewards drivers with points when they report traffic jams and accidents. Even the game Pokémon Go has drivers searching for virtual creatures on the nation's highways. When distracted driving entered the national consciousness a decade ago, the problem was mainly people who made calls or sent texts from their cellphones. The solution then was to introduce new technologies to keep drivers' hands on the wheel. Innovations since then - car Wi-Fi and a host of new apps - have led to a boom in internet use in vehicles that safety experts say is contributing to a surge in highway deaths."
John Evans

The Great A.I. Awakening - The New York Times - 1 views

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    "How Google used artificial intelligence to transform Google Translate, one of its more popular services - and how machine learning is poised to reinvent computing itself."
John Evans

Walk, Jog or Dance: It's All Good for the Aging Brain - The New York Times - 1 views

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    "More people are living longer these days, but the good news comes shadowed by the possible increase in cases of age-related mental decline. By some estimates, the global incidence of dementia will more than triple in the next 35 years. That grim prospect is what makes a study published in March in The Journal of Alzheimer's Disease so encouraging: It turns out that regular walking, cycling, swimming, dancing and even gardening may substantially reduce the risk of Alzheimer's."
John Evans

10 Free (or Cheap) Travel Apps Worth Downloading - The New York Times - 0 views

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    "After a week of downloading and trying out various travel and navigation apps, I reached an unfortunate conclusion: Most of them are worthless - clunky, buggy, seemingly desultory efforts by developers rushing a poor product to market. There are a few, though, that provide elegant solutions to some of travel's more common complications, doing what a good app should do: make life easier. Here are seven free travel apps that are worth your time, and three that are worth your money."
John Evans

10 Intriguing Photographs to Teach Close Reading and Visual Thinking Skills - The New York Times - 3 views

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    "Ever want your students to slow down and notice details when they read - whether they're perusing a book, a poem, a map or a political cartoon? Young people often want to hurry up and make meaning via a quick skim or a cursory glance when a text can demand patience and focus. Closely reading any text, whether written or visual, requires that students proceed more slowly and methodically, noticing details, making connections and asking questions. This takes practice. But it certainly helps when students want to read the text. We've selected 10 photos from The Times that we've used previously in our weekly "What's Going On in This Picture?" and that have already successfully caught students' and teachers' attention. These are some of our most popular images - ones that may make viewers say "huh?" on first glance, but that spark enough curiosity to make them want to dig deeper. (Please Note: You can quickly learn the backstory about any of these photos by clicking the link in each caption that takes you to the original post, then scrolling down to find the "reveal.") Below, we offer ideas from students and teachers who have engaged with these images for ways to use them, or images like them, to teach close reading and visual thinking skills."
John Evans

Learning to Think Like a Computer - The New York Times - 3 views

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    "In "The Beauty and Joy of Computing," the course he helped conceive for nonmajors at the University of California, Berkeley, Daniel Garcia explains an all-important concept in computer science - abstraction - in terms of milkshakes."
John Evans

I'm Not Texting. I'm Taking Notes. - The New York Times - 1 views

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    " Generations are different, and for digital natives, what looks like wasting time may actually be doing research or something else productive."
John Evans

Guide to Free, Quality Higher Education | MindShift - 2 views

  • As the current generation of college graduates wrangles with an unprecedented amount of debt, a sea change is underway in higher education. More and more elite universities are offering free online courses that might characterize the next iteration of the college experience for the forthcoming generation of students.
John Evans

Skills and Strategies | Fake News vs. Real News: Determining the Reliability of Sources - The New York Times - 3 views

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    "How do you know if something you read is true? Why should you care? We pose these questions this week in honor of News Engagement Day on Oct. 6, and try to answer them with resources from The Times as well as from Edutopia, the Center for News Literacy, TEDEd and the Newseum. Although we doubt we need to convince teachers that this skill is important, we like the way Peter Adams from the News Literacy Project frames it in a post for Edutopia. As he points out, every teacher is familiar with "digital natives" and the way they seem to have been born with the ability to use technology. But what about "digital naïveté" - when students trust sources of information that are obviously unreliable?"
John Evans

A Picture on the Wall? Why Not Do the Whole Wall? - 6 views

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    Listing of services to turn your image into much larger sizes!
John Evans

This is Your Brain on Recess | Momlogic - 0 views

  • A recent study found kids who had more than 15 minutes of recess a day showed better behavior in class than those who had little or none.
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