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daniel rezac

Rival Philosophies, Both Compelling - Room for Debate - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Is there an app for improving America’s educational system? Will watching a PowerPoint presentation about the nation’s educational challenge help to understand the opportunities and difficulties facing the country?
  • Two college dropouts, Steve Jobs (Reed College) and Bill Gates (Harvard University) have articulated theories about education. And their viewpoints are as different as are their companies (Apple and Microsoft, respectively), presenting a contrast in style and philosophy.
  • Gates hopes to analyze and adjust the education system in order to produce a more efficient and effective learning environment.
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  • Jobs is focused more on individual learning and less on systemic education. Technology is his way to get a well-integrated mind flowing in multiple directions. His learning philosophy gives each person the ability to chart his own course.
  • Gates’ recent speech to the nation’s governors stressed assessment, measuring outcomes and tracking students’ progress. Technology and benchmarking are joined at the hip
  • Jobs’ approach allows for individual experimentation to find a unique solution to each person’s quest. It is the symbol of intellectual multi-tasking. This is a more experimental, integrated search for a holistic view of the universe, one that has multiple access points. Each student becomes his or her own teacher.
  • Gates is studying the science of education. Jobs is creating the art of learning. I’m sure there is an app for teaching arithmetic by watching the heavens and counting the stars
James O'Hagan

film music | mobygratis.com - 0 views

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    Excellent music for a student or teacher or presenter to add to their NON-PROFIT presentation. Learn about licensing. Does require a lot of information to register.
James O'Hagan

Fundamentally Reforming Math Curriculum with Computer-Based Math - 0 views

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    This is the response to Khan almost six months earlier.
James O'Hagan

BusinessCard2 | Scott Cleland Mclean VA 22102 - 0 views

  • Scott Cleland left Precursor Group in 2005 to become the President of Precursor LLC, a consulting firm for Fortune 500 companies. Scott Cleland and Precursor LLC provide analyses of the future of the technology sector and identify potential changes in public policy and capital markets. In addition, Scott Cleland serves as the Chairman for NetCompetition.org, which represents broadband interests in the net neutrality debate. Scott Cleland also publishes two websites on Google. A watchdog site, GoogleMonitor.com, strives to make Google more transparent and accountable. Googleopoly.net compiles Precursors world-leading research on Google antitrust issues.
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    Googleopoly.net
James O'Hagan

The Strength of Weak Ties » Badge of Honor? - 0 views

  • A serious question. How much of an accomplishment is it to be a part of these programs? How much better was I than the next biology teacher just because I wrote a more creative lesson plan? They didn’t see me teach. They didn’t ask my kids about me. They didn’t look at a portfolio of accumulated work over many years, they looked at a single lesson plan. Yet I was an Access Excellence Fellow-something to be proud of, but something to examine critically, and take it for what it was worth.
    • James O'Hagan
       
      Compare to a National Board Certified Teacher...
  • Ultimately, a career, and a lifetime in the service of others will not be measured by an accumulation of badges, but by those that you have served over those years, and their accomplishments.
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    An older post, but Jay reminded me of this as the ADE announcements were floating around.
James O'Hagan

Author Asks the Question, Is Google Evil? - FoxNews.com - 0 views

  • Precursor
  • “They are pack rats. They keep everything, and they actually have three copies of everything that goes in there. People have no idea they literally have a mirror of the online world and three copies on Google’s computers,” says Cleland.
  • “They have no respect for other people's valuables. They are a serial scofflaw of copyright policy, of patents, of trademarks, and of confidential information.”
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  • "Is it possible to be quoted shrugging my shoulders?" asks Google spokesman Adam Kovacevich when Fox News requested the company's comment on Cleland's book. "Everyone knows that Mr. Cleland stopped being a neutral analyst years ago and is now paid by Microsoft and AT&T to criticize Google full-time."
  • is a consultant to some of Google's competitors, including Microsoft and AT&T.
  • Cleland refused to confirm it or reveal the names of any of his clients
  • "What happens is that Google is the company that most successfully takes advantage of the Internet," says Levy, who does caution that "there's a real concern because they do have a lot of information about us, and I think Google should be as transparent as possible. In most cases, I think they are pretty transparent about what they have on you and how it works."
  • On Tuesday, South Korean authorities reportedly raided that country's Google offices to investigate if the company "has been illegally collecting private data."
  • "I don't think there's ever been a U.S. corporation that has had so much control," says Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, in Washington, D.C., who also teaches Internet privacy law at Georgetown. "It would be like a company producing automobiles, providing oil, and building the highways ... We're in a similar situation today with the Internet and Google."
  • "Any company with the power of Google has to be watched," says Levy. "But I don’t think Google is a company which is intending to take over the world in some sort of negative sense." But Cleland's version of Google argues that it does. "Google says overtly that they want to change the world," Cleland says, warning that "Google is leading us towards a collectivist society, a planned economy and one world government." "The more you learn about Google, the more troubled you will become."
James O'Hagan

Idaho Teachers Fight a Reliance on Computers - NYTimes.com - 0 views

    • James O'Hagan
       
      UNGH! Tool for Teacher use?
daniel rezac

Sources: Google-branded Chrome OS netbook to launch on December 7th -- Engadget - 0 views

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    The Google Crome Netbook! Could a Cloud based OS be the answer to the school's 1-1 initiative?  Technically - a school could create their own version of Chrome OS and control the atmosphere for students. This way students could bring in their own devices that are running Chrome OS for your school. 
daniel rezac

Moving at the Speed of Creativity - 0 views

  • Scratch, a free iconic programming language and active learning community provided by MIT, is a learning platform EVERYONE involved in education should know how to use. This is a bold claim, but I'm ready to defend it more than ever after spending four weeks working with Scratch this past semester with my UNT pre-service education students. Together, we learned about the primary Scratch project types (Animations, Games, Simulations, Music, Art, and Stories) as well as other possibilities. Teaching about Scratch and with Scratch enabled me to model project-based learning for my students, and enabled them to learn first-hand the power (as well as challenges) of discovery learning. Scratch challenged all of us, since it took everyone outside our comfort zones. When you ask students to create a word processing document, a spreadsheet, or a presentation, there's a VERY high likelihood they have past experiences with those activities. None of my students had ever used Scratch prior to our class, and many had never tried any kind of computer programming previously. Scratch is a very open environment, so it is ripe for creativity and creative expression. Our schools are too often devoid of opportunities for creative expression, and the invitation for students to demonstrate their learning with Scratch can change this. Few things made me happier this semester than my students discovering how THEY could be successful using Scratch to communicate with others, and resolving to share it with their own students when they begin teaching. This is one example from a student's blog reflection about Scratch and Chris Betcher's 2010 K-12 Online Conference presentation, "Teaching Kids To Think Using Scratch."
    • daniel rezac
       
      a VERY Bold claim.
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    Scratch, a free iconic programming language and active learning community provided by MIT, is a learning platform EVERYONE involved in education should know how to use. This is a bold claim, but I'm ready to defend it more than ever after spending four weeks working with Scratch this past semester with my UNT pre-service education students.
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    I will be attempting to use Scratch with my high school sped class. I think I can scaffold this appropriately.
anonymous

Why Our Kids Don't Get Math - THE DAILY RIFF - Be Smarter. About Education. - 0 views

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    The comment comparing rigor with difficulty is very important.
judith epcke

Product: Ignite! Stick-Made for SMART - 0 views

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    Is this thing a good idea? Whether you like IWBs or not, I'm not entirely clear what this "stick" is all about.
judith epcke

'Smurf's Village' In-App Charges Can Add Up - 0 views

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    Are parents justified in being angry about a feature they didn't know existed even though it is easily disabled in their settings? Interesting article on how an unsupervised 4 year old racked up over $80 of "in-app" purchases within a free app.
judith epcke

730 U.S. schools trying to reinvent themselves | Funding | eSchoolNews.com - 0 views

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    Another "where do you stand on this issue?" thought. Might make for interesting discussion.
judith epcke

How to spur more technology use in the classroom | Curriculum | eSchoolNews.com - 0 views

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    Just wondering how others felt about this. Is a tech integration specialist the best answer? What about the comment about getting teachers to use it themselves? What do YOU think is the best way to spur more technology use in the classroom?
anonymous

Dump Technology - 0 views

shared by anonymous on 13 Dec 10 - No Cached
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    Blog entry for 12/15/2010
James O'Hagan

With iPads, Olympia students have world at their fingertips - Olympia School District -... - 0 views

  • “Textbooks have really great things, but they’re also very limiting,” said Underwood, who is in her 24th year of teaching at Olympia High. “Our kids are digital kids. They respond very well to this kind of tactile environment, where they can get immediate feedback.”
    • James O'Hagan
       
      Again, the focus is on the stuff. Not the pedagogy, or the changes in teaching. Really?
  • hasn’t used iPads because they don’t work with the district’s technology system
    • James O'Hagan
       
      And this technology system is some proprietary POJ from Albania?
  • as well as a pilot program at Olympia High where students in an intensive college readiness course known as AVID were issued district-owned iPads to use throughout the year for note-taking, research and organization.
    • James O'Hagan
       
      And what has been done with teacher training? Shifts in pedagogy?
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  • The district is still training many teachers on how to incorporate the use of mobile devices in their classrooms,
    • James O'Hagan
       
      GOOD!
  • “They put them back where they’re supposed to,” she added. “They never put French books back where they’re supposed to.
  • We have a French Blog where the students' class projects (videos, comics, writing, etc... all created on the iPads) are posted. This allows for students from different class periods to observe and interact not only with what their other peers are doing but also what the other levels of the language are working on. Another really useful hands-on learing experience.
    • James O'Hagan
       
      Glad to see the students getting in on making this the story it should have been.
James O'Hagan

The Feeling of Power - 0 views

  • "Well," said the President, considering, "it's an interesting parlor game, but what is the use of it?" "What is the use of a newborn baby, Mr. President? At the moment there is not use, but don't you see that this points the way toward liberation from the machine? Consider, Mr. President," the congressman rose and his deep voice automatically took on some of the cadences he used in public debate, "that the Denebian war is a war of computer against computer. Their computers forge an impenetrable shield of counter-missiles against our missiles, and ours forge one against theirs. If we advance the efficiency of our computers, so do they theirs, and for five years a precarious balance has existed.
  • "Yes. Well, Dr. Shuman tells me that in theory there is nothing the computer can do that the human mind cannot do. The computer merely takes a finite amount of data and performs a finite number of operations upon them. Then human mind can duplicate the process."
  • "Well, Mr. President, I asked the same question. It seems that at one time computers were designed directly by human beings. Those were simple computers, of course, this being before the time of the rational use of computers to design more advanced computers had been established.
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  • The congressman coughed gently. "If I may make another point, Mr. President - the further we can develop this thing, the more we can divert our federal effort from computer production and computer maintenance. As the human brain takes over, more of our energy can be directed into peacetime pursuits and the impingement of war on the ordinary man will be less. This will be most advantageous for the party in power, of course."
  • I've gone over your ingenious demonstration that the mind can duplicate the computer
    • James O'Hagan
       
      We are wowed by the opposite today.
  • The general was saying, "Our goal is a simple one, gentlemen: the replacement of the computer. A ship that can navigate space without a computer on board can be constructed in one-fifth the time and at one-tenth the expense of a computer-laden ship. We could build fleets five times, ten times, as great as Deneb could if we could but eliminate the computer."
  • "And I see something even beyond this. It may be fantastic now, a mere dream, but in the future I see the manned missile!" There was an instant murmur from the audience. The general drove on. "At the present time, our chief bottleneck is the fact that missiles are limited in intelligence. The computer controlling them can only be so large, and for that reason they can meet the changing nature of antimissile defenses in an unsatisfactory way. Few missiles, if any, accomplish their goal, and missile warfare is coming to a dead end; for the enemy , fortunately as well as for ourselves.
  • "On the other hand, a missile with a man or two within, controlling flight by graphitics, would be lighter, more mobile, more intelligent. It would give us a lead that might well mean the margin of victory. Besides which, gentlemen, the exigencies of war compel us to remember one thing. A man is much more dispensable than a computer. Manned missiles could be launched in numbers and under circumstances that no good general would care to undertake as far as computer-directed missiles are concerned-"
anonymous

StudentsFirst.org - 0 views

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    I see some good ideas with Michelle Rhee's work here but I have to say it appears to me to be more of a political ploy tool than anything. Why not join pre-exisiting resources / movements? Why does it have to be something created by her?
anonymous

sitconference.org | February 12, 2011 | The Students Involved with Technology Conferenc... - 0 views

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    Great opportunity in Illinois for students.
daniel rezac

Green Change : I want my five hours back: the case against homework - 0 views

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    There are 24 hours in each day. Between school and sleep, I have five hours to spend with my school-aged kids. One would think that those are five hours in which we could decide to play a game, go to a sporting event, read books, cook dinner together, do our family chores, go to a movie, attend religious education classes, play a pick-up game with friends or even (gasp!) watch television. One might think five hours is a long time. One would be wrong.
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