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Chris Dede

Girls and Games: What's the Attraction? | MindShift - 0 views

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    Ensuring games are engaging for both genders
Brandon Pousley

Disney 'Connected Learning' Aims To Infuse Games with Learning - 0 views

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    Disney's Connected Learning program has been developing games for 6 years now, the most popular title being Club Penguin. They are currently planning to roll out several pre-school titles and are also capturing data on the games effects on learning outcomes. Interesting to see Disney attracting top talent from the gaming industry to help develop games and also not shying away from doing the research to investigate educational outcomes.
Tom Keffer

Recruiting New Teachers With Loan Repayments - Metropolis - WSJ - 0 views

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    Here is the latest volley from NYC in its maneuvering with the teachers' union. No particular relevance to technology, except that I guess this loan repayment offer would attract young teachers with loans hanging over them.
Aradhana Mudambi

Mind Movies - New technology to engage Law of Attraction - Free-Press-Release.com - 0 views

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    For those of you who watched the Secret, I thought this was really interesting.
Soomi Hong

A virtual farm turns new ground for game developers | Reuters - 0 views

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    A virtual farm attracting up to 83 million aspiring farmers monthly has a video game developers scrambling to find ways to plough the booming popularity of games on the social networks.
Lin Pang

Violence in Videogames: It's All Part of Growing Up - 1 views

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    An article that talks about how to view violence in games from a new angle. Violence in videogames can help kids gain practical skills. The mystique of violent and scary themes draws children's natural curiosity, and dealing with it is a part of normal child development. It's not the violence itself that is attractive to kids. It's the opportunity to develop and master skills and have the freedom to make choices in the game universe. Also, the violent games happen to have the most emotional appeal to kids.
Kasthuri Gopalaratnam

F.T.C. Finds Privacy Problems With Apps for Children - NYTimes.com - 2 views

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    Makers and users of mobile apps for children, take note!
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    The actual report itself is excellent, "Mobile Apps for Kids: Current Privacy Disclosures Are Disappointing." [The link is embedded in the article.] Improvement in this area is critical. When apps came on the market, they were like "valet parking"... where a user could get directly to a software without roaming the web. This was an attractive feature (and avoided unwanted advertising, a plus for parents.). Now, not only are apps collecting data that we are unaware of (PRIVACY!), but many are engaged in advertising, some that we are aware of and some that we are not (click through to a website, etc.) "Staff found that about 7% of the 400 app store promotion pages indicated that the app contained advertising. As above, this number is likely to understate the number of apps containing advertising because app stores do not appear to require developers to disclose in-app advertising on their promotion pages, and because advertising is a common way to monetize apps." Free? Not so much.
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