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Chris Dede

Students lobby to use smart phones in classrooms :: CHICAGO SUN-TIMES :: Education - 4 views

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    Since not all kids can afford a smart phone, I don't like giving those who can the advantage ... but ... what I am excited about are the low cost tablets, such as Marvell's Moby ($99 !) coming down the pike ...
Margaret O'Connell

Use Diigo To Help Write Your Next College Essay or Term Paper - 0 views

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    Makes sense
Margaret O'Connell

App Inventor - Visual IDE which makes programming for Android very accessible - 0 views

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    If you have any experience using or teaching Scratch (a visual IDE for teaching basic programming), along comes App Inventor from Google to allow anyone to program apps for the Android operating system. Includes a simulator. I have put in my request for App Inventor but, alas, I am still waiting - can't wait to try it! Put in your request!
Britt Harris

http://techcrunch.com/2010/08/05/women-labs-entrepreneurship-founder/ - 0 views

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    This is a group based in Silicon Valley, CA.
Eric Kattwinkel

Does Your Language Shape How You Think? - NYTimes.com - 1 views

    • Eric Kattwinkel
       
      Old ideas about language affecting thinking have been discredited, but more recent research has revived the idea, with important differences.
    • Eric Kattwinkel
       
      It's not that features of our language prevent or allow certain kinds of thinking; it's that they "oblige" us to consider some things and not others, thereby causing us to develop certain "habits" in how we think.
    • Eric Kattwinkel
       
      Compare different language requirements of making a simple statement ("I had dinner with a neighbor last night"): in French you have to reveal the gender of the neighbor, but in English  you don't; in English you have to reveal when the dinner happened; not so in Chinese.
  • ...6 more annotations...
    • Eric Kattwinkel
       
      Research shows that when languages have different genders for the same objects, speakers of those language think differently about those same objects -- and this can affect their ability to remember those objects. (no reference?)
    • Eric Kattwinkel
       
      How would the habits of mind of a speaker of a geographic-based language be manifest in the way that person learns/remembers/teaches? How do speakers of egocentric languages learn/teach/remember differently?
    • Eric Kattwinkel
       
      Language even affects our perception and experience of color: "Our experience of a Chagall painting actually depends to some extent on whether our language has a word for blue."
    • Eric Kattwinkel
       
      Does an avid user of social media, who makes subtle distinctions among different ways to post something (comment, like, message, poke, etc.), have different habits of mind that affect how he/she relates to other people and/or incoming information?
    • Eric Kattwinkel
       
      Area for potential study?: how to measure the ways habits of mind affect our intuitive/emotional/impulse behavior.
    • Eric Kattwinkel
       
      Very intesting article about how our language affects the way we think. People who speak different languages adopt different "habits of mind" from an early age, and those habits can affect they way they experience the world. Especially fascinating is the discussion (2/3 of the way down) of languages that use a geographical, rather than egotistical, method for describing direction and relative position. (For example, the cup is resting on the north side of the west table in the southern room of the house.) How would a person with this type of view of the world experience a virtual environment? Also interesting implications for kids growing up with social media. Do new technologies impart habits of mind that affect the way kids learn?
Cameron Paterson

#more-57492#more-57492 - 2 views

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    Here comes a new wristwatch!
Cameron Paterson

Creativity or Conformity Conference 2007 - 0 views

  • Our teaching and learning habits are useful but they can also be deadly. They are useful when the conditions in which they work are predictable and stable. They are deadly if and when the bottom falls out of the stable social world in and for which we learn. According to Zigmunt Bauman (2004), this is not merely a future possibility – it is the contemporary social reality.
Cameron Paterson

AAUP: New-Media Literacies - 0 views

  • the instructor’s role is to be a guide, not a technical
  • expert
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    Jason Ohler writes about digital storytelling
Cameron Paterson

2010 Horizon Report » Executive Summary - 0 views

  • that are likely to enter mainstream use on campuses within three adoption horizons spread over the next one to five years
  • The format of the main section closely reflects the focus of the Horizon Project itself, centering on the applications of emerging technologies to teaching, learning, and creative inquiry.
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    Emerging edtech trends
Allison Gevarter

Touchable Gadgets Win Over Users - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • touching screens has seeped into people’s day-to-day existence more quickly and completely than other technological behaviors because it is so natural, intimate and intuitive.
  • natural user interface uses ingrained human movements that do not have to be learned.
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    Interesting article on why touch screens are dominating in new technologies--and the basis for why they're more attractive to us.
Garron Hillaire

Writer Neal Stephenson Unveils His Digital Novel The Mongoliad - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  • The company, based in Seattle and San Francisco, has developed what it calls the PULP platform for creating digital novels
  • aterial like background articles, images, music, and video. There are also social features that allow readers to create the
  • There are also social features that allow readers to create their own profiles, earn badges for activity on the site or in the application, and interact with other readers.
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  • Stephenson isn’t writing the book alone. There’s a team led by a writer Mark Teppo; it also includes Greg Bear, author of Blood Music and other science fiction novels. Stephenson compared the experience to writing a TV show, and not just because it’s a team of writers.
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    The PULP platform is an example of a writer trying to respond to people wanting more than traditional publishing. If this platform, or something like it, was widely accepted by people it might build a better case for alternative forms of publishing in education
Andi Tepper

In mine's confines, survival instincts prevail - CNN.com - 1 views

  • Despite such adversity, humans are remarkably resilient and adaptable, health experts said.
quintintanderson

Excellent resource for those interested in learning Flash, Python, Maya, Etc... - 0 views

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    Digital tutors is a fairly robust tutorial website that gives members (yeah, ya gotta pay) access to a variety of platforms, based on your interests!
Liz Huttner

Have a Free Flight to Mexico With Your Taco? - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    These location based programs are a mixture of awesome and scary.
Britt Harris

When K-12 Moves to the Cloud - ReadWriteCloud - 2 views

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    How will the Cloud Disrupt Education?
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