Skip to main content

Home/ HGSET561/ Group items tagged city

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Amanda Bowen

IBM - Education industry - 1 views

  •  
    In this video, IBM outlines what a smarter school, district, and city would look like. However, I feel that the video fail to say exactly what IBM is doing to hep schools, districts, and cities to become "smarter."As a side note, I find it interesting that IBM uses individuals with different accents - and wonder if this is a marketing tool. 
Maung Nyeu

Telford & Wrekin Council set to achieve 'Learning City' vision through collab... - 0 views

  •  
    "To achieve our vision as a 'learning city', learning must not be defined as a certain task or confined to one place - our learners must have the freedom to learn anytime, anywhere"
Pearl Phaovisaid

Google Fiber is live in Kansas City, real-world speeds at 700 Mbps | Ars Technica - 0 views

  •  
    I'm interested to see where this might lead and whether it'll have any implications for education.
Pearl Phaovisaid

dailywireless.org » Seattle's Gigabit Fiber CityNet - 0 views

  •  
    What do Kansas City, Chicago, and Seattle have in common? Extremely fast internet paving the way for ubiquitous computing.
anonymous

Technology Goes to the Museum - App City - 1 views

  •  
    Several museums in New York City are now incorporating mobile app technology into their exhibits. An interesting exploration on how this technology can play out in a variety of types of museums.
Pearl Phaovisaid

Tech Start-Ups Find a Home on the Prairie - NYTimes.com - 4 views

  •  
    Emerging technology has had a strong geographical component. With Google Fiber up and running in Kansas City and tech start-ups burgeoning in Des Moines, we may see yet another wellspring of innovation in the Midwest. This could have significant implications on rural education and agtech.
  •  
    There were numerous communities in Colorado that tried to lure Google Fiber; it looks like it's paying off for KC. It would be interesting to see the tech start-up numbers in comparison to other US locales. I would like more details as to why only two regions increased their share of angel investors.
  •  
    My guess is that insufficient momentum or critical mass exists in other regions, Danna. The article mentions the Southwest and Great Plains as two regions with an increase in angel investors. The Southwest probably represents spillover from Silicon Valley, while the Great Plains benefits from large metropolitan areas, good universities, and a concentration of young professional residents. I also think that tech start-ups and VC firm naturally promote the growth of one another.
Brandon Pousley

Inside Ingress, Google's new augmented-reality game | Internet & Media - CNET News - 1 views

  •  
    This article describes Google's first large scale attempt at an augmented reality game taking place on City Streets via smartphones. I find it especially interesting to think about the educational value of such a platform.
  •  
    I also saw this earlier. very interesting stuff.
Danna Ortiz

Schools Test Personalized Math Program - WSJ.com - 1 views

  •  
    NY City touting 5 public schools' adoption of School of One curricula in Race to Top application, but the schools' assessment scores show mixed results so far.
Katherine Tarulli

City schools get grant for iPads in Autism Classrooms (And Have Plans for Proper Teache... - 4 views

  •  
    The public school district in St. Louis, Missouri was awarded an Innovative Technology Education Fund grant to buy iPads for all students with autism in six autism-specific classrooms. This seems to be an example of utilizing an emerging technology in an excellent way with proper teacher training, rather than using technology for technology's sake. The schools will be advised on how to implement the iPads by an autism science and advocacy organization and have two full days of professional development planned.
  •  
    This is great news on the autism-rights front! I know a severely autistic 21-year-old who is highly communicative because of the technology he has used since he was young.
Maung Nyeu

NJ Spotlight | 'Hybrid' Charters Will Meld Online Lessons With Conventional Instruction - 2 views

  •  
    New Jersey's hybrid Charter schools test out new model by combining online and classroom instructions in the toughest cities.
Maung Nyeu

Stanford's Online High School Raises the Bar - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  •  
    Elite Universities, like Stanford University, are putting their brand and prestige behind online education and offering diplomas to 30 seniors from "Standford Online High School." Harold O. Levy, a former New York City schools chancellor and founder of Kaplan's online master's of education program, believes Stanford's involvement in this sector could be a watershed.
  •  
    Though it is only 5 years old and Stanford officials are still unsure whether it really compares to a brick and mortar school, the cache of Stanford's name could certainly do a lot to elevate the reputation of online programs. I think it is especially interesting that most students are from remote areas where it is impossible to get a comparable education at a similar private school because of location.
Mirza Ramic

Boss Level: Collaborative Student-Led Learning at Quest to Learn | Edutopia - 0 views

  •  
    'Quest to Learn' is a New York City public middle and high school, supporting collaborative student-led learning: "Quest to Learn has used research in game-based learning to create a rigorous and engaging collaborative learning space where students feel safe taking risks and using their successes and failures to create and apply new knowledge." "Nurturing social and emotional learning (SEL) and 21st century skills like inventiveness, risk taking and collaboration."
Parisa Rouhani

THE QUEST for Innovation - Join THE QUEST! - 0 views

  • Participating teams will compete in a high-tech, city-wide scavenger hunt that will take place through downtown Boston on the afternoon of Friday, October 9th.
  • The hunt will be played entirely over your mobile device (yes, any phone can play). Our unique gameboard will challenge your wits, skills and stamina as you trek across the city, deciphering clues and solving challenges.
  • Each company fielding a team must represent themselves with a senior member of the organization.
  •  
    This sounds interesting. An interactive game right here in Boston. Would you consider this augmented reality? Anyone want to get a group together and play? It says we "must represent [ourselves] with a senior member of the organization." Would you be interested, professor/TFs? (Post a reply to this link if you do and send me an email just in case - jhnsn.c@gmail.com)
  •  
    this sounds like it will be fun!
  •  
    That would be a fun adventure. Keep me posted.
Cameron Paterson

Learning from the Extremes - 0 views

  •  
    Meeting Hope In the next few decades, hundreds of millions of young, poor families will migrate to cities in the developing world in search of work and opportunity. Education provides them with a shared sense of hope. Many will be the first generation in their families to go to school. It is vital that the hopes they invest are not disappointed.
Devon Dickau

News Corp Buys Education Tech Company 'Wireless Generation' For $360 Million - 3 views

  • he acquisition of Wireless Generation is News Corp's first major foray into the education industry since it hired New York City Education Chancellor Joel Klein earlier this month. The New York City School System is a client of Wireless Generation.
  • Education in the U.S. is a $500 billion sector “waiting desperately to be transformed by big breakthroughs that extend the reach of great teaching,” said Murdoch in a statement, and Wireless Generation is at the “forefront” of individualized, tech-based learning.
Jennifer Lavalle

Mobile Gaming is Stationary - 0 views

  •  
    In light of our conversation of mobile learning, this article provides insight as to the stationary nature of the use of mobile technology. Shadow Cities - a game that prizes 'on the go', 'real world' scenarios within the game, found that most people play mobile games in the spaces where they spend the majority of their time - especially the home, which means mobile games compete with traditional gaming devices. Anyway, some food for thought...
  •  
    Jennifer, Thanks for sharing this. In this push for mobile, I guess it makes sense if you step back and realize that most of the gaming systems that people started using (PS3, Xbox, Wii) were not built for mobility or portability and perhaps they haven't realized they can "transfer" the gaming experience to anyWHERE? Or maybe it is that gamers are creatures of habit? or superstition (like baseball players who don't shave their face throughout the playoffs so as to not mess with the karma or mojo?) and don't want to upset the environment that they consider the best for their particular performance of the game? The commercial that Prof Dede showed with the Augmented Reality spin and where Shadow Cities is headed really is a whole new way of approaching gaming and I wonder if the same type of gamers who are traditionalists (sit at home and play) would be interested in this new type of mobile gaming or if it might just open up a whole new set of gamers - who despise the sedentary nature of traditional gaming systems - and push them to get involved?
David Chen

City Gets $17 Million Gmail Account | NBC Los Angeles - 1 views

  •  
    Relating to in-class discussion last week about colleges outsourcing e-mail to Google....
Katherine Tarulli

Cellphone Ban Is a Tale of Two City Schools - 3 views

  •  
    Cell phones are banned in NYC public schools, but it is the norm for students who attend schools without metal detectors to bring their phones anyway. If caught teachers are confiscating phones for up to a week, or longer, at their discretion. At schools with metal detectors small businesses have popped up around schools, storing students' phones for the school day for a small fee, similar to a coat check system. Instead of harnessing the power of mobile phones that almost every student already has, they are punishing them and/or causing them to pay money to keep them stored for the school day so that they can have them before and after school. I think this is a missed opportunity for the NYC school system not only because they are missing out on mobile learning opportunities with technology the district doesn't have to buy, but they could also be teaching the students responsible and appropriate use of mobile phones in public spaces.
Chris Dede

BBC News - World of Warcraft cities hacked - 1 views

  •  
    trouble at WoW
1 - 20 of 36 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page