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Ruth Cuadra

The promise and peril of 'Big Data' - latimes.com - 1 views

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    Interesting take on thinking beyond privacy issues when considering regulations about recording information about Internet usage. "Regulators need to take care not to treat the analysis of anonymized information as if it were an ominous new form of surveillance."
Ruth Cuadra

FEMA Strategic Foresight Initiative: Putting Foresight Into Practice - 0 views

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    The SFI report Crisis and Disaster Resilience 2030 focused on a deep analysis of future emergency management needs. The more recent document Toward More Resilient Futures: Putting Foresight Into Practice shifts the focus from theory towards practice.
Ruth Cuadra

Video analysis: Detecting text every which way - 0 views

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    Software that detects and extracts text from within video frames, making it searchable, is set to make a vast resource even more valuable
Ruth Cuadra

Smithsonian aims to change its brand - The Washington Post - 0 views

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    From "America's attic" to "Seriously Amazing".  One commenter noted that the Smithsonian seems unfocused and exhibits/museums lack analysis--in danger of becoming just a basement.
Ruth Cuadra

[1206.3933] Prediction of Emerging Technologies Based on Analysis of the U.S. Patent Ci... - 1 views

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    Spotting trends by tracking patent citing A patent citing another implies that the cited patent reflects a piece of previously existing knowledge that the citing patent builds upon.
Rahul Sharma

Quantitative Filter Papers Manufacturer and Supplier - Axiva - 0 views

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    Axiva Sichem Pvt Ltd specialized manufacturer and supplier of quantitative filters papers and export in worldwide. This filters papers used for analytical applications and gravimetric analysis.
Carol Tang

Critical thinking not used | Museums Association - 3 views

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    Looks like an Onion headline?! ;-(
Ruth Cuadra

Apple patent points to platform for wearable sensors, internet of things - Tech News an... - 0 views

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    "Personal items network"
Ariane Karakalos

Museums and the ageing population - LEM Project - 0 views

  • Today, there are many individual examples of museums and other heritage learning institutions providing learning activities for senior citizens. But as of yet, there has not been any aggregate analysis on how cultural heritage institutions in Europe deal with these issues. The research group on museums and the ageing population will be dedicated to find good examples, analyse them and spread the results through the LEM-network to the inspiration of others. The group will start by creating an overview of experience: what has been done and what has been fruitful (and perhaps not so fruitful) in the different national contexts. The overview will be based on ideas, examples, practices etc, collected by the research group members respectively.
Ariane Karakalos

California's changing face, through centuries of books | California Watch - 0 views

  • "The browser is designed to enable you to examine the frequency of words (banana) or phrases ('United States of America') in books over time,"
  • 5.2 million books – about 4 percent of all published books.
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    Google's Ngram Viewer
Ileana Maestas

Alternative to Traditional School Funding - Walt Gardner's Reality Check - Education Week - 0 views

  • Budget shortfalls are forcing states to come up with novel solutions for the wide disparities between poor and affluent school districts. The latest reminder was a New Jersey Supreme Court ruling in May that ordered the Legislature to increase spending for only the 31 poorest urban districts ("Court Orders New Jersey to Increase Aid to Schools," The New York Times, May 24). Not surprisingly, the decision did not please the other districts in the state. In light of the problem in New Jersey and in other states as well, perhaps it's time to consider what is known as weighted student funding. The Summer 2011 issue of the Journal of Policy Analysis and Management contains a study by Helen F. Ladd and Edward B. Fiske titled "Weighted Student Funding in the Netherlands: A Model for the U.S.?" For the past quarter of a century, the Netherlands has been using a version of WSF for all its elementary schools serving children from ages 4 to 12.
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    Alternative funding for traditional schools
Lisa Eriksen

DIY science MOOC seeks funding on Kickstarter to conduct brain experiments at home - Te... - 1 views

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    I still wonder about the ethical issues of people having these devices and what they could do to living creatures.......
Lisa Eriksen

Design thinking & its pioneers, the Kelley brothers, keep on truckin' - Tech News and A... - 1 views

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    My next read.
Garry Golden

Creative Networking Workshops - 1 views

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    garry can explain this later.. very cool and interesting way to look at museum releationships
Elizabeth Merritt

What the research says about 4-day school weeks - MindShift - 0 views

  • (City students were excluded from the analysis because no city schools had adopted four-day weeks. Only rural, small town and suburban students were included.)
  • The switch seemed to hurt reading achievement more than math achievement.
  • Rural schools accounted for seven out of 10 schools on the four-day schedule in this study.
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • Rural four-day students generally learned as much as rural five-day day students. Statistically, both groups’ test scores rose by about the same amount every year.
  • small town and suburban students who switched to four-day weeks were far worse off than other students in the state
  • One possible explanation, Morton says, is sports. Many rural athletes and young student fans leave school early on Fridays or skip school altogether because of the great distances to travel to away games. In effect, many five-day students are only getting four-days of instruction in rural America.
  • The four-day work week is an attractive work perk in rural America that may lure better teachers.
  • By this theory, four-day schools may make it easier to hire better teachers, who could accomplish in four days what a less skilled teacher accomplishes in five days.
  • five-day weeks have their own drawbacks in rural America: hidden absences, skipped lessons and lower quality teachers.
  • Hispanic students, who accounted for one out of every six rural students in this study, suffered much more from four-day weeks than white students did. (Native American students, who made up one of every 10 rural students, did relatively better with the four-day week.)
  • biggest surprise to me in this review of the research is how tiny the cost savings are: 1 to 2 percent.  It does save some money not to run the heat or buses one day a week, but the largest expenses, teacher salaries, stay the same.
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