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Bradford Saron

Welcome | Media Education Lab - 0 views

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    Here is the website for the Media Education Lab at Temple University. 
Bradford Saron

Books and Band Saws: the Future of Libraries | MindShift - 0 views

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    The concept of hackerspaces and fab labs are really taking hold. Neat ideas, but how will NCLB measure the results? (Can you sense the sarcasm?) 
Bradford Saron

The Future of Education is Here » Blog Archive » Innovation? Yes, Please! - 1 views

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    I love the terms, community intelligence cartographers or education sousveyors. Read also about the Media Education Lab and about how twitter can make you smarter!
Bradford Saron

Google Shared Spaces - 0 views

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    This is out of Google Labs and is called shared spaces. It uses the old Google Wave widgets. So for those of you disappointed to hear about Google phasing out Wave, this may be a sound replacement. 
Bradford Saron

School-by-School vs. System Reform: Why Business Leaders Need to Go Back to the Future ... - 0 views

  • Do you remember those days?  Well, they are gone. Over the last 30 years, the dominant American firms have gone global.  Thirty years ago, they weighed in on American education policy because they were scared to death that they would be unable to compete because they would not be able to hire a competitive work force.  Now, they care as much as ever about getting a competitive work force, but they have learned that they can find the people they need at whatever skill level they require all over the globe, and often in greater quantity and at less cost than they can get them in the United States.  If they can't get what they need for their research and development labs or their distribution centers or their factories here in the United States, they can get them in Singapore or India or China or Hungary.
  • They tend to be deep believers in "disruptive change."  They typically distrust government and the "system," and adopt a rather libertarian outlook.  Rather than work within the education system, they tend to support people and entities that work outside the system or work hard to challenge it.  They distrust education professionals and prefer instead to trust young, bright, well-educated people who are willing to take the system on.  In short, they identify with and give their support to people like themselves.  They are big backers of individual charter management organizations and of policies that would strengthen charter schools, which they see as taking on the system.  It is very doubtful whether the charter school movement would have gotten away from the starting gate without these deep pocketed, very committed supporters.
  • I very much hope that, as the new generation of business leaders that has provided so much support to charters and other entrepreneurial efforts in education take pride in their successes, they also recognize the limitations of those efforts, and turn their talents and their influence to another, much more difficult challenge:  How to greatly improve the system that educates all the children in this country.
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    Hat tip: @mcleod
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