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karen sipe

ReadKiddoRead - 1 views

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    This site is sponsored by best selling author, James Patterson. In previewing the site it looks fantastic. The goal is to get kids to be readers for life. There are lots of resources, lessons, book suggestions by age level. There is a tool that teachers and parents can use to help a child find a book that would interest them. There is a link about getting boys to read. There are interview with authors and famous people. There is a blog.
Michelle Krill

YouTube - Introducing the book - 0 views

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    Video about the introduction of books.
Michelle Krill

Game-Based Learning: How to Delight and Instruct in the 21st Century (EDUCAUSE Review) ... - 0 views

  • videogames (arguably one of the most sophisticated forms of information technology to date)
  • five leading-edge thinkers in the field: James Paul Gee, J. C. Herz, Randy Hinrichs, Marc Prensky, and Ben Sawyer.
  • power-performanced learning
  • ...10 more annotations...
  • In summary, up to this point, education has been based on a model of scarcity because it was very hard to get good academic material. It was hard to get the right kinds of books. It was hard to get access to the teachers. So naturally, school formed a solution, an economical way of delivering information, using the classroom model, using the teacher model. What you basically got is a really constrained environment. Today, it’s about abundance: what do the models for learning look like now?
  • But it’s not about the technology. It’s about the way that your culture is organized.
  • College is becoming, for many undergraduates, a social experience.
  • But absent a one-on-one tutorial, it’s very difficult to do that. You get into small groups, and you have active discussions, but once you scale the group up, it becomes very difficult because you can’t push sixty people individually to the limits of their knowledge.
  • you can create an online environment where those sixty people can push against the limits of their knowledge. And that becomes something different and very important. That’s what simulations are good for.
  • © 2004
  • Because one of the most effective uses of simulation is as a mechanism to surface assumptions. You put the simulation up there, and people play it out, and in the course of playing it out, they question the underlying rules of the game.
  • One of the hallmarks of a good game is that it creates a game community. In order to play this game, players have to get information from other sources. They have to explore. They have to communicate. They have to post.
  • They are handing off and reinforcing each other’s learning. You don’t get that in a classroom. Not often.
  • You really have to think in terms of how to bring learning to networks of people, to groups of people.
Chris Champion

Read/download samples | Everyware: The dawning age of ubiquitous computing | A book by ... - 0 views

  • paradigm of interaction that I call everyware.
    • Michelle Krill
       
      Almost sounds like science fiction.
  • and is delivered in a manner appropriate to our location and context.
    • Chris Champion
       
      delivered in context to what we are doing
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • We will have to accept that privacy as we have heretofore understood it may be a thing of the past:
    • Chris Champion
       
      open source in life?
  • We will have to accept that privacy as we have heretofore understood it may be a thing of the past: that people will be presented with a bargain where access to the most intimate details of their lives is traded away in return for increased convenience, and that many will accept.
  • We hear about RFID tags being integrated into employee ID cards, a new modular sensor grid on the architectural market, a networking scheme proposing to use the body's own electrical field to carry information - and this in the general press, not the specialist journals.
    • Chris Champion
       
      RFID = radio frequency ID, its those white badges you wave in front of the black pad to get in the door. it is ALSO every box that gets aboard a Wal-Mart truck.
  • t is coming - and as yet, the people who will be most affected by it, the overwhelming majority of whom are nontechnical, nonspecialist, ordinary citizens of the developed world, barely know it even exists.
  • It is coming because something like it effectively became inevitable, the moment each of the tools, products and services we're interested started communicating in ones and zeroes.
  • But the technology we're discussing here - ambient, ubiquitous, insinuative into all the apertures everyday life affords it - will be environment-forming in a way neither of those are.
    • Chris Champion
       
      we cant' shut these off
  • ubiquitous computing is; establish that it is a very real concern for all of us,
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