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Lisa Eriksen

Mr. China Comes to America - James Fallows - The Atlantic - 1 views

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    Interesting to think how museums could become more involved in design, incubation and the maker movement.
Lisa Eriksen

Maker Cities - 1 views

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    New game project on maker movement by Institute of the Future
Ruth Cuadra

Be Part of the Australasian Coalescing of Placemaking as a Social Movement! - 0 views

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    Placemaking is becoming a major social movement, from big cities to small towns all across the globe
Ileana Maestas

Food Stamps Accepted by Local a Farmers' Market Vendo | The Daily Meal - 0 views

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    I loved this article because it showed how the local food movement is working hard to be accessible to a lower income demographic.  
Ruth Cuadra

Happy Birthday, Futurists! A Movement Turns 104 - Businessweek - 0 views

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    On the 104th anniversary of the movement's founding, here is a look at Futurism 3.0, by the numbers.
Karen Wade

independence today - 0 views

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    A great article about the Missouri History Museum's work in recording the history of the disability rights movement.
Karen Wade

25-Report.indd - education_or_reputation.pdf - 1 views

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    What will the emphasis on STEM, and the movement away from encouraging a liberal arts education (even at liberal arts schools) mean for the future of our culture? This report identifies trends leading us in that direction. So, considering these trends, what roles can museum play in promoting a liberal education?
Ruth Cuadra

World Maker Faire New York 2013 Underscores the Growing Power of the Maker Movement - 0 views

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    75,000 attendees and over 650 makers and presenters! How many of those folks do you think would come to a maker event at your museum?
Ruth Cuadra

The Smart Desk: Exercise While Working « NextNature.net - 0 views

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    Has a touch-screen to control and track movements and can tell exactly how many calories a person burns by standing for part of the working day.
Ruth Cuadra

The complex role of malls: private but sort-of-public spaces - 0 views

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    ...over the last few months, conflicting claims have emerged about how malls fit within Twin Cities society. ("#Itsmymall!" "No, #itsmymall!") The seemingly audacious protest by the #blacklivesmatter movement and subsequent reaction by the Mall of America and the Bloomington prosecutor illuminate the complex relationship that shopping malls have as public and private spaces. Like it or not, they are simultaneously massive private companies and rough, if degraded, facsimiles of Gruen's public sphere.
Ruth Cuadra

BBC Four's Slow TV experiment | The Slow Journalism Magazine - 1 views

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    Shareable infographic from a recent issue of Delayed Gratification
Elizabeth Merritt

People With Dementia Can Work on Farms in Holland - 0 views

  • Paula and most of her fellow farm workers have dementia. Boerderij Op Aarde is one of hundreds of Dutch “care farms” operated by people facing an array of illnesses or challenges, either physical or mental. They provide meaningful work in agricultural settings with a simple philosophy: rather than design care around what people are no longer able to do, design it to leverage and emphasize what they can accomplish.
  • For people with dementia, who are often less physically active and more isolated, farm settings promote movement and social interaction. And care farms can have emotional benefits, too, giving participants a sense of purpose and of making a meaningful contribution.
  • Studies in Norway and the Netherlands found that people with dementia at care farms tended to move more and participate in higher-intensity activities than those in traditional care, which can help with mobility in daily life and have a positive impact on cognition. Dementia is often linked to social isolation, and care farms were found to boost social involvement, especially among those who wouldn’t opt for traditional assistance options. Spending time outdoors in nature, often part of a day on a care farm, can also improve well-being among people with dementia. Farms are not only good for individuals. Their families also benefit: studies find caregivers experience less guilt when their loved ones are supported by services they consider to be nurturing and fulfilling.
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  • The workers get to choose which duties they’ll take on — that’s important, Monteny says, because people with dementia don’t have many opportunities to make decisions in their lives.
  • he continues to live independently in her own house, which Oranje believes is possible because her work at the farm keeps her active.
Elizabeth Merritt

A Texas superintendent ordered school librarians to remove LGBTQ books. Now the federal... - 1 views

  • The U.S. Education Department’s civil rights enforcement arm has launched an investigation into a North Texas school district whose superintendent was secretly recorded ordering librarians to remove LGBTQ-themed library books.
  • accused the district of violating a federal law that prohibits discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender. The ACLU complaint was based largely on an investigation published in March by NBC News, ProPublica and the Tribune that revealed that Granbury’s superintendent, Jeremy Glenn, instructed librarians to remove books dealing with sexual orientation and people who are transgender.
  • An Education Department spokesperson confirmed the investigation and said it was related to Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, which prohibits schools from discriminating on the basis of sex, gender and sexual orientation.
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  • After a volunteer review committee voted to return all but a few of the titles, two disgruntled members of the committee filed a police report in May accusing district employees of providing “pornography” to children, triggering a monthslong criminal investigation by Hood County Constable Chad Jordan, which remained open as of August.
  • The ACLU of Texas made similar legal arguments in another civil rights complaint filed last month against the Keller Independent School District in North Texas in response to a policy banning any books that mention “gender fluidity.” The Education Department has yet to decide whether to open an investigation in Keller,
  • the nonprofit PEN America, which has tracked thousands of school book bans since last year,
  • If the Education Department finds Carroll students’ rights have been violated, experts said, the federal agency could require the district to implement the same types of diversity and inclusion training programs that conservative activists have fought to block in Southlake.
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