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Susan Smiley

Collaborative Agenda - @NDI Unconference on #ElecTech - Using Tech in Elections - 0 views

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    I was reading about using tech in elections and I ran across Hackpad. I had never heard of Hackpad, and this is a question for the teaching staff: Might this be a good option to have more of our class conversations in one place? I'd be curious to know how you think it compares as a discussion platform.
Rupangi Sharma

Kids Online: A new research agenda for understanding social networking forums - 0 views

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    A growing number of kids at increasingly younger ages are engaging in online social networking today-a development that is leading to a surge of news stories, media attention, and economic investment. In this paper, produced with the generous support of Cisco Systems and the Digital Media and Learning Hub at the University of California, Irvine, scholars Sara Grimes and Deborah Fields argue that these shifts in usage and public discussion demand a better understanding of the ways that social networking sites mediate kids' socializing and the opportunities and limits they place on kids' participation, particularly for young children.
Tomoko Matsukawa

Ghana's presidential candidates: Battling it out online | The Economist - 0 views

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    Even at a country "With internet penetration ....at only 5-10%," 
Jennifer Bartecchi

EdTechup Conference Agenda - 1 views

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    Here's more information about the conference Ethan & Morgan mentioned - for my 10 Curves fans, Charles Fadel will the be the Keynote Speaker!
Tomoko Matsukawa

Augmented Reality in Information Systems: Setting a Research Agenda - 0 views

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    More research to be conducted in the AR field. 
Andrea Bush

From 'Angry Birds' to multi-player video games, NASA ramps up investment in educational... - 2 views

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    Alas, NASA has almost no funding for the multiplayer game, and there is substantial opposition from internal leadership
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    The article highlighted the different agendas of the administrator (who brings the budget), educator (who is concerned with lesson objectives), and game designer (who wants to create an engaging game). I think that if students are not sufficiently engaged by the game, the educational objectives would probably not be delivered successfully either. If budget cuts ended up taking the fun out of an educational game, perhaps it might be worth rethinking if it should still be a game?
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    Matthew, you raise a good point. Users should be seen as stakeholders who can help improve the game in terms of both engagement and learning.
Maung Nyeu

The Mackinac Center: Outdated thinking stands in the way of online learning | Detroit F... - 3 views

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    In the US, 250000 students are enrolled in full-time public virtual schools in 30 states, according to Susan Patrick of the International Association for K-12 Online Learning, a trade association. Although that's just a fraction of the country's 50 million students, it has grown 30% each year. Some schools in Michigan already shown the advantage of digital learning.
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    This is an interesting article. I am just concerned that it is not unbiased or driven by an agenda other than improving education. I found this information about the Mackinac Center online: http://www.rightwingwatch.org/content/mackinac-center-public-policy I am starting to realize that a lot of the technology in schools rhetoric is driven by corporate and political interests, and as the industry becomes ever more profitable, I'm worried that companies are going to jump in and try to influence policy, rushing through the movement toward the wrong kind of technology in schools- i.e. sacking half of the teaching staff and replacing them with cheap computers. I think one of our most important jobs as Harvard TIE students is to education the public about the right ways to adapt technology in the classroom, and the important role that teachers will continue to play in this movement.
Cameron Paterson

Schooling: The Hidden Agenda - The Natural Child Project - 1 views

  • Wow, just imagine missing school on the day when they were learning blue. You'd spend the rest of your life wondering what color the sky is.
  • Our schools are not failing, they're just succeeding in ways we prefer not to see.
  • the human biological clock is set for two alarms. When the first alarm goes off, at birth, the clock chimes learn, learn, learn, learn, learn. When the second alarm goes off, at the onset of puberty, the clock chimes mate, mate, mate, mate, mate.
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