Skip to main content

Home/ Ed Tech Crew/ Group items tagged nytimes

Rss Feed Group items tagged

John Pearce

Sweeping Away a Search History - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  •  
    "YOUR search history contains some of the most personal information you will ever reveal online: your health, mental state, interests, travel locations, fears and shopping habits. And that is information most people would want to keep private. Unfortunately, your web searches are carefully tracked and saved in databases, where the information can be used for almost anything, including highly targeted advertising and price discrimination based on your data profile."
Roland Gesthuizen

Scientists See Advances in Deep Learning, a Part of Artificial Intelligence - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • They offer the promise of machines that converse with humans and perform tasks like driving cars and working in factories, raising the specter of automated robots that could replace human workers.
  •  
    "Using an artificial intelligence technique inspired by theories about how the brain recognizes patterns, technology companies are reporting startling gains in fields as diverse as computer vision, speech recognition and the identification of promising new molecules for designing drugs."
Tom March

Putting Technology in Its Place - Lesson Plans Blog - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • October 11, 2008, 3:00 pm Putting Technology in Its Place By Matthew Kay
    • Tom March
       
      This series has been very insightful. I think teachers who are threatened and against technology don't understand what Matthew Kay eloquently states in this article: it's not about the technology, it's about people and pedagogy.
Roland Gesthuizen

All Radio, All the Time, and Free (for Now) - State of the Art - NYTimes.com - 3 views

  •  
    DAR.fm, a Web site that lists every single radio show on every one of 1,800 AM and FM stations across the country. (It stands for Digital Audio Recorder.) You can search, sort, slice and dice those listings any way you want: by genre, by radio station, by search phrase. It's all here: NPR, Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck. Music shows. Talk shows. Religion, sports, technology. Politics by the pound.
John Pearce

Data Security Is a Classroom Worry, Too - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  •  
    "LIKE many privacy-minded parents of elementary students, Tony Porterfield tries to keep close tabs on the personal information collected about his two sons. So when he heard that their school district in Los Altos, Calif., had adopted Edmodo, an online learning network connecting more than 20 million teachers and students around the world, he decided to check out the program."
Ian Guest

How Different Groups Spend Their Day - Interactive Graphic - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  •  
    "The American Time Use Survey asks thousands of American residents to recall every minute of a day. Here is how people over age 15 spent their time in 2008. "
John Pearce

32 Innovations That Will Change Your Tomorrow - Interactive Feature - NYTimes.com - 13 views

  •  
    We tend to rewrite the histories of technological innovation, making myths about a guy who had a great idea that changed the world. In reality, though, innovation isn't the goal; it's everything that gets you there. It's bad financial decisions and blueprints for machines that weren't built until decades later. It's the important leaps forward that synthesize lots of ideas, and it's the belly-up failures that teach us what not to do. When we ignore how innovation actually works, we make it hard to see what's happening right in front of us today. If you don't know that the incandescent light was a failure before it was a success, it's easy to write off some modern energy innovations - like solar panels - because they haven't hit the big time fast enough. Worse, the fairy-tale view of history implies that innovation has an end. It doesn't. What we want and what we need keeps changing. The incandescent light was a 19th-century failure and a 20th- century success. Now it's a failure again, edged out by new technologies, like LEDs, that were, themselves, failures for many years. That's what this issue is about: all the little failures, trivialities and not-quite-solved mysteries that make the successes possible. This is what innovation looks like. It's messy, and it's awesome.
John Pearce

Digital Skills Can Be Quickly Acquired - NYTimes.com - 8 views

  • “I didn’t have the social media savvy in the way I do in other areas of marketing,
  •  
    For midcareer executives, particularly in the media and related industries, knowing how to use Twitter, update your timeline on Facebook, pin on Pinterest, check in on Foursquare and upload images on Instagram are among the digital skills that some employers expect people to have to land a job or to flourish in a current role.
John Pearce

Spring Cleaning Who Has Access to Your Data - NYTimes.com - 3 views

  •  
    "Whether you realize it or not, dozens - if not hundreds - of apps and services have access to your social accounts and can see everything you're doing online. Tweets, Likes, your location, are all there for the taking. What's worse, there's a pretty good chance you unwittingly gave them permission."
John Pearce

No Child Left Untableted - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  •  
    "In a sixth-grade classroom in Greensboro, N.C., a dozen middle-school social-studies teachers were getting their second of three days of training on tablets that had been presented to them as a transformative educational tool. Every student and teacher in 18 of Guilford County's 24 middle schools would receive one, 15,450 in all, to be used for class work, homework, educational games - just about everything, eventually." This article from the New York TImes looks at the Amplify Tablet
Darrel Branson

Google Makes the iPhone YouTube App Obsolete - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com - 4 views

  •  
    What's the difference between the new version of YouTube's mobile Web site and the Apple-created YouTube application that is installed on every iPhone? The Web site is a lot better.
Roland Gesthuizen

Economic Scene - Study Rethinks Importance of Kindergarten Teachers - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • By junior high and high school, children who had excellent early schooling do little better on tests than similar children who did not — which raises the demoralizing question of how much of a difference schools and teachers can make.
  • “We don’t really care about test scores. We care about adult outcomes.”
  • Classes with 13 to 17 students did better than classes with 22 to 25. Peers also seem to matter.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Good early education can impart skills that last a lifetime — patience, discipline, manners, perseverance
  • teachers. Some are highly effective. Some are not. And the differences can affect students for years to come.
  • Schools can also make sure standardized tests are measuring real student skills and teacher quality, as teachers’ unions have urged.
  •  
    "A Tennessee experiment found that some teachers were able to help students learn vastly more than other teachers. The effect largely disappeared by junior high, based on test scores. Yet for the the students in adulthood, it was discovered that the legacy of kindergarten had re-emerged. Students who had learned much more in kindergarten were more likely to go to college than students with otherwise similar backgrounds."
  •  
    Kindergardten teachers should be proud to read this report.
Dianne Rees

The New York Times > Books > Interactive Feature > A Literary Map of Manhattan - 3 views

  •  
    An interactive literary map
Reynold Redekopp

Part II: Answers to Questions About Video Games and Learning - NYTimes.com - 2 views

  •  
    James Paul Gee Answers questions about games in education
Roland Gesthuizen

5 iPad Apps That Changed My Mind - NYTimes.com - 12 views

  •  
    "But what convinced me that I truly was wrong about the iPad and its prospects for the future weren't the reports coming in about its tremendous retail success. That could still be accounted for by initial fervor for a new product by Apple, which, few will argue, has become the "it" company of late. No, it was a few select apps that convinced me that the iPad was here to stay, and that that was a good thing. Below are those apps, along with why I think they're serious game-changers. "
  •  
    Air Video is great, this is an awesome app. I have used it to share videos off my laptop for students to view on the iPad. Nice summary of cool iPad Apps that are serious game-changers.
  •  
    Good article, I also love air video for the ipad although I am a big fan of Zumocast, too :)
John Pearce

The Twitter Trap - NYTimes.com - 9 views

  •  
    "Last week my wife and I told our 13-year-old daughter she could join Facebook. Within a few hours she had accumulated 171 friends, and I felt a little as if I had passed my child a pipe of crystal meth. I don't mean to be a spoilsport, and I don't think I'm a Luddite. I edit a newspaper that has embraced new media with creative, prizewinning gusto. I get that the Web reaches and engages a vast, global audience, that it invites participation and facilitates - up to a point - newsgathering. But before we succumb to digital idolatry, we should consider that innovation often comes at a price. And sometimes I wonder if the price is a piece of ourselves. "
  •  
    An excellent read! I've been looking for more stuff on the whole Native/Immigrants nonsense, and there are some very thought provoking ideas contained in here.
1 - 20 of 27 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page