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Bradford Saron

Clay Shirky - 2 views

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    This is Clay Shirky's first blog post since April of last year. As the author of Here Comes Everyone and Cognitive Surplus (and a number of TED talks), he's one of the leading experts on the digital age and how its affecting society. Here, he looks at the death of the print industry. 
Bradford Saron

Cultivating a Learning Environment: Six Suggestions : 2¢ Worth - 2 views

  • We are preparing our children for a future of frightening uncertainty, but astounding opportunity, and to prosper within that future, our children must become skilled, resourceful, and habitual learners — not just lifelong learners but adopting a learning lifestyle.
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    Observant, witty, and predictive in nature, Warlick is always worth the read. 
Bradford Saron

Web 2.0 Expo SF 2008: Clay Shirky - 2 views

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    For all you Clay Shirky fans out there (from whom the name of this social bookmark group originates), another video--this time from blip.tv--on his observations about technology and society. 
Bradford Saron

Cognitive Interfund Transfer: Cashton Featured for our Tech Integration - 2 views

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    New blog post. 
Bradford Saron

ISTE | NETS for Students Essential Conditions to Leverage Technology - 2 views

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    This is powerful; I've just discovered this approach, and I love it. The "conditions" part suggest that deliberate leadership can structure an environment where people are able to succeed somewhat independently. 
Bradford Saron

The Conversation Prism by Brian Solis and JESS3 - 2 views

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    Could be the curriculum map for an immersion course for superintendents!
Bradford Saron

The 21st Century Principal: 5 Considerations for Allowing Students to Use Personal Comp... - 2 views

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    Ok, this post is big-time. I'm not only socially bookmarking this, but it's going into my Chrome web browser too. I'm also emailing this guy for the policies. I agree with him in that none of us have a sustainable way to instate 1 to1 environments. Yes, we have projects, and yes we could do a one-time investment for one to one. But, sustainably? No. The only way to go one to one in a sustainable way that does not place too much burden on the tech department is to allow students to bring their own computers into school. We are already seriously considering cell phones.
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    Agreed. One question: how will you deal with the limited access students have to the Internet? Will students who bring their laptops to school have more access? For example, I know that I cannot show TED talks unless I arrange with the tech folks to grant access. Same issue with 3G, I think. I admit I don't completely understand how all of this works, but it seems that if I am using my cell phone, I can access sites the school computers can't access. I am concerned about the way schools currently limit access to the Internet. I know we are trying to ensure our students don't access troubling sites, and at the same time we are limiting them from finding good stuff, like TED.
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    It's ridiculous that we block TED talks, I know. But that may be a bandwidth issue, not a content issue. Streaming video takes up an inordinate amount of bandwidth, and at times slows down other internet-based programming. As access increases (3G and bandwidth), we will have to embrace filters and firewalls that are more pedagogically constructivist calibrated. McLeod does a great bit on the absurdness of how we block content on the internet. He did this at the WASDA fall conference. The link for all the stuff he did at the fall conference is http://dangerouslyirrelevant.org/wasda
Bradford Saron

Cognitive Interfund Transfer: Creating Personal Learning Networks For District Administ... - 2 views

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    New blog post. 
Bradford Saron

The future of Ed Tech is "Bring Your Own Device" … BYOD | EdReach - 2 views

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    Those of you that know me have heard this before. This is another must read!
Bradford Saron

Mozilla Manifesto (Because the Open Web Does Not Have Tenure) | HASTAC - 2 views

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    This post has dual significance. First, the actual post is by a humanities anthropologist interested in technology. Second, she is posting about the recent Drumbeat conference from Mozilla, the maker of firefox. The content of the post is significant because they are truly looking at proactively protecting the web for the purpose of innovation and learning. 
Bradford Saron

William Skilling: Five Things I've Learned - 2 views

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    From the unbelievable William Skilling in Oxford, MI. 
dennis dervetski

Gmail - Inbox - dervetski@gmail.com - 2 views

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    Taking Flight?
Bradford Saron

A Principal's Reflections: Why Blog? - 2 views

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    A great argument: Do you display your best thinking to others? Do you have a format to condense your best thinking for peer review and dialogue? 
Mike Beighley

Does giving teachers bonuses improve student performance? | Daniel Pink - 2 views

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    this is a good article on pay for performance
  • ...2 more comments...
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    This is a good article on pay for performance
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    Pay for teacher performance article by Daniel Pink
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    Pay for performance
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    This is a great article on par for performance.
Bradford Saron

Top 10 Tips for Effective Strategic Planning « Excellence in Governance and S... - 2 views

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    There are not many blogs on school boards, much less governance. 
Bradford Saron

Resistance is Futile - 2 views

  • You can click on the document to the right to read a more detailed examination of each of these qualities of the ‘Native’ information
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    Here David Warlick reflects on his presentation at a Virtual Conference. One of the most interesting parts of the blog post is the detailed examination of the digital "Native," a document into which you may click. See highlight. 
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    Warlick's blog hooked me. Got me fired up cause of the misspellings and understatements. So I read the document on "Native" information. Yeah, I get it, like figuring the Rubik's Cube without directions. Make up your own directions or map already. So, kudos to Warlick. However, "Responsive" seems limiting. How about a venn diagram with an additional word: vigilant? And learning includes more than experience. Otherwise foresight counts for nothing. Enjoy.
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    Go Murphy!
Bradford Saron

K12 Guide to going Google - 2 views

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    Neat resource. 
Bradford Saron

Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice - 2 views

  • A steady diet of pundit Thomas Friedman, publisher Rupert Murdoch, and press releases from the Business Roundtable would convince most readers that CEO decisions in managing their businesses, technological choices, swings in financial markets, and global boom-and-bust cycles had little to do with the U.S. economy. While putting onto public schools the solution for economic downturns, rather than business executives, is a loony non-sequitur, it is a victory in shifting blame from corporate leaders’ flawed decisions to the shoulders of educators
    • Bradford Saron
       
      Wow. What a powerful comment.
  • It is also a myth that all U.S. schools are broken. Surely,most urban schools are low-performing and in many cases have earned the label of “dropout factories.” Washington, D.C, for example, would be a poster child for such districts. Moreover, although islands of excellence in urban districts do exist (including D.C.), they are seldom stable over time. Where the myth-making enters is when urban schools are conflated with all U.S. schools. Not only I but many others have pointed out that the U.S. has a three-tiered system of schooling where the top two tiers have mostly “successful” schools by current standards. The bottom tier contains failing urban schools. Thus, all U.S. schools are not failures by any standard.
    • Bradford Saron
       
      I have been looking for a good way to say this for two years. Cuban just did. 
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    One could add that public education got no credit during the boom times of the 1990s.
Bradford Saron

Back to School: 10 Privacy Tips for the Connected Student - 2 views

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    You don't often see this type of article, with students as the audience. Works for everyone!
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