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Barbara Lindsey

Inspiring Teachers - Tips - How to Involve and Engage Students - Empowering Educators A... - 1 views

  • Give students "clues" to look for items in the classroom that relate to your topic of study. Put students on a "scavenger hunt". Once they find the item, they must explain why it is on the scavenger hunt. Let students go on a road trip. Place different stop signs around the school or classroom with an activity or reading passage. Students must "travel" to each place and complete the activity (idea courtesy of Beaver Elementary). Give students a "passport" that must be stamped at each "stop" on their trip.
    • Barbara Lindsey
       
      Do as a qr code, too.
Barbara Lindsey

Censorship is Not a Solution: Know Your Digital Rights | Think Tank | Big Think - 0 views

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    Fall 2012 syllabus discussion starter, communal reading
Barbara Lindsey

Are LOLCats and Internet Memes Art? | Idea Channel | PBS - YouTube - 0 views

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    fall 2012 syllabus
Barbara Lindsey

How Paranoid Should You Be About Government Surveillance? | IdeaFeed | Big Think - 0 views

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    fall 2012 syllabus
Barbara Lindsey

Rethinking Social Networking | Humanizing Technology | Big Think - 0 views

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    fall 2012 syllabus
Barbara Lindsey

Students' Own Mobile Devices and Celly Provide Peer Feedback « User Generated... - 1 views

  • Peer Feedback in an Interview Activity
    • Barbara Lindsey
       
      Any ideas for using this activity with your students?
Barbara Lindsey

Teachable Moment - plagiarism - 0 views

  • Let's assume you have engaged students in worthwhile class work and it is time for them to involve themselves in an inquiry related to it and of interest to them. Forget about "research," forget about "the term paper,î abandon the often calcified list of "subjects." Here is a proposed series of steps and assignments for the process.
  • * "significant learningî ó that which raises questions and problems whose answers and solutions promote further curiosity and learning that have the potential to develop into a lifelong pursuit.
  • Assignment A: Ask students to prepare three carefully worded questions on a matter related to classwork whose answers they might like to pursue.
    • Barbara Lindsey
       
      I will do this from now on with our moderator questions and blog posts.
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  • If you feel there is no time for such a procedure (and if you are correct in your assessment), then you have the following options: Launch a campaign with other teachers directed at the problems and/or people responsible for making time unavailable so that it can be made available. If that fails, at least eliminate "research" and "term papers" from the curriculum on educational grounds.Use as much of the procedure as you can to promote inquiry and to eliminate as much plagiarism as possible.Continue to teach as in the past.Quit and find a more honorable line of work.
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    A must read for those who are concerned about plagiarism with online students.
Barbara Lindsey

Tokyo Green Space | The Japan Times Online - 0 views

  • In a sense, the blog is the antithesis of my academic training. Universities are about restricted knowledge. We study our own things, keep our research to ourselves so no one will steal our work, and we publish results in journals in a language no one understands. The idea of blogs is all about shared knowledge. I love sharing and getting feedback on my findings, and this blog has introduced me to so many fascinating people from all over the world — students, scholars, urban farmers — and it is really interesting to hear their takes.
  • Tokyo Green Space is a public research project. It involves observing small public green spaces in Tokyo, sharing images and thoughts online in a diary format and connecting with other people online and in person. I've maintained the site for three years out of passion.
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    fall 2012 syllabus
Barbara Lindsey

If San Francisco Crime were Elevation | Doug McCune - 0 views

  • Really nice. Be great to see the two combined – heatmaps and topography or atleast some kind of colour banding added to the topography. That would open up all kinds of possibilities – you could slice horizontally along the bands and create layers of different ranges. In fact mixing colour and topography would also give you a way of showing two sets of data concurrently – topography for prostitution and some kind of colour banding for wealth for example.
  • Makes the numbers come alive. G
  • Brilliant work! Can you cross this data with the physical typography? I’ve always been curious if safer neighborhoods are uphill.
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  • It would be interesting to pull the data in from previous decades and see how the elevation has changed in different areas.
  • @adrian – it’s just raw totals, grouped geographically. These aren’t scientific by any means, I basically took the underlying pattern and extruded it out and smoothed it a bit to make it look “pretty”. But basically each image is the aggregate numbers for a single year of crime data.
  • @richard – yes, there is some smoothing in effect, which means that the ridge along Shotwell St (for the prostitution map) is indeed a bit smoothed between peaks. That’s not to say that there are only two peaks at Shotwell and 19th and Shotwell and 17th. There are incidents in between as well, but the big peaks at those major intersections does mean that the ridge between them appears higher than the actual incidents along those blocks support. A lot of people have commented on the usefulness of maps like these. I want to stress once again: this was done as an art project much more than a useful visualization. My goal was not to provide useful information that one could act on.
  • “one trick pony. these maps add nothing of value to a standard color plot.” I disagree: allowing for a third dimension of elevation makes the reality of concentration clearer – and half the point of crime mapping is to measure concentration, not simply “intensity.”
  • Great idea and nice work on the graphics, but there are at least three improvements you should make to reveal *true* patterns. Forgive me if you already did these. 1) Availability bias – normalize for population density (i.e. per capita activity) 2) Sampling bias – normalize for the number of cops on the beat (geographic and crime type) 2) Frame bias – break it up by daytime and night time
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    Visual representation of various crime stats from San Francisco
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