The Creative Monopoly - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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He’s talking about doing something so creative that you establish a distinct market, niche and identity. You’ve established a creative monopoly and everybody has to come to you if they want that service, at least for a time.
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Instead of developing a passion for one subject, they’re rewarded for becoming professional students, getting great grades across all subjects, regardless of their intrinsic interests. Instead of wandering across strange domains, they have to prudentially apportion their time, making productive use of each hour.
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Competition has trumped value-creation. In this and other ways, the competitive arena undermines innovation.
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World at Work - 0 views
5 Startups Changing the World With Tech - 0 views
Brain scan: Making data dance | The Economist - 1 views
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that it no longer makes sense to consider the world as divided between developing and industrialised countries; and that people everywhere respond similarly to increasing levels of wealth and health, with higher material aspirations and smaller families. “There is no such thing as a ‘we’ and a ‘they’, with a gap in between,”
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The best measure of political stability of a country, he believes, is whether fertility rates are falling, because that indicates that women are being educated and basic health services are being provided. “
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Innovation in infographics has always been driven by the need to explain difficult things,
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The Yin and the Yang of Corporate Innovation - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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The Google model relies on rapid experimentation and data. The company constantly refines its search, advertising marketplace, e-mail and other services, depending on how people use its online offerings. It takes a bottom-up approach: customers are participants, essentially becoming partners in product design.
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The Apple model is more edited, intuitive and top-down.
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Steve Jobs had a standard answer: none. “It’s not the consumers’ job to know what they want,” he would add.
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How to avoid committing social media gaffes | Community | eSchoolNews.com - 0 views
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Develop guidelines for use and share with your staff. Update your acceptable-use policy as well as personnel policies to reflect the district’s position on appropriate use of social networking sites. For ideas, check out the Social Media Guidelines for Schools wiki (http://socialmediaguidelines.pbworks.com). Many of the ideas presented here are adapted from this resource, which is meant to be shared and expanded as new information becomes available.
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reate an official site for your school or district. To protect others’ privacy, set it up as a fan page so people can post comments or become a fan without giving you access to their personal pages. Commit staff time or resources to daily updates. Keep the tone conversational, but represent your organization and your position respectfully and responsibly. According to Pew Research, “44 percent of online adults have searched for information about someone whose services or advice they seek in a professional capacity.”
Executive Summary | Pew Internet & American Life Project - 2 views
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we find that ownership of a mobile phone and participation in a variety of internet activities are associated with larger and more diverse core discussion networks. (Discussion networks are a key measure of people’s most important social ties.)
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having discussion networks that are more likely to contain people from different backgrounds.
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For instance, frequent internet users, and those who maintain a blog are much more likely to confide in someone who is of another race.
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Cloud Storage: Keep it in the Cloud - 0 views
5 WAYS TO TWEET LIKE A CHAMPION | Angela Maiers Educational Services, Inc. - 0 views
Valibrarian - BYOT (bring your own technology) - 0 views
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How can we help our students embed meaningful purpose into BYOT? 1. As educators and librarians we can model the best practices by balancing innovation with tradition and requiring high standards of critical thinking. 2. We can model our own learning in this new era by showing our own willingness to “learn, unlearn, and relearn ~Toffler” and allowing time to unplug and reflect on the meaning of our learning. 3. We can put people first! Teaching and librarianship are service-oriented professions. We are not books or buildings, we are human beings. We are not robots (yet). Just kidding on that last line. Putting people first requires admitting that they are more important than our tech gadgets which we all turn to throughout the day.
TeachPaperless: I Don't Want More Professional Development - 0 views
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And so we develop ourselves. On blogs. On Twitter. Throughout the PLN. We have used the opportunity of the tools at our disposal to engage in an older and vastly more satisfying form of professional development than the mandatory in-service.
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We've developed a relationship with development. We are engaging with our growth and our communal experience in an open, social, and mutually beneficial way.
Iowa One to One Conference: Web 2.0 Smackdown Resources | Angela Maiers Educational Ser... - 0 views
How Age Restrictions Complicate Digital Media & Learning | DMLcentral - 2 views
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Or should she make sure that they understand how privacy settings work? Where does digital literacy fit in when what children are doing is in violation of websites’ Terms of Service?
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FB is a really difficult one for us... we see tons of abuse of it with our own students.... clearly a tool that many of them do not have the maturity to use safely... and I bigger concern from the article for me is how we deal with the question of honesty with kids... if it is ok to lie about age here... why not lie in other situations... mixed messages about integrity...
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