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Teachers Without Borders

How Blogs, Social Media, and Video Games Improve Education - Brookings Institution - 2 views

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    The appearance of collaboration tools such as blogs, wikis, social media, and video games has altered the way individuals and organizations relate to one another.[i] There is no longer any need to wait on professionals to share material and report on new developments.  Today, people communicate directly in an unmediated and unfiltered manner.
Emily Vickery

News Overview Inline Listing - MacArthur Foundation - 0 views

  • Major New Study Shatters Stereotypes About Teens and Video Games Game playing is universal, diverse, often involves social interaction, and can cultivate teen civic engagement
Teachers Without Borders

Researchers Push to Import Top Anti-bullying Program to U.S. Schools - Kansas City, Mis... - 0 views

  • An interdisciplinary team of researchers at the University of Kansas plan to bring a highly successful anti-bullying effort, the KiVa program, to American schools. Starting as early as the 2012-13 school year, a pilot program could kick off in selected classrooms in Lawrence, Kan. If shown to be successful there, soon afterward the model could expand nationally. KiVa, implemented in Finland in 2007, has impressed researchers with its proven reduction in bullying incidents.
  • The program takes a holistic approach to the bullying problem, including a rigorous classroom curriculum, videos, posters, a computer game and role-play exercises that are designed to make schools inhospitable to bullying.
  • “The KiVa program targets the peer environment, trying to create an ecology where bullying is no longer tolerated,” said Anne Williford, assistant professor of social welfare at KU. “Instead of targeting only a bully and victim for intervention, it targets the whole class, including kids who are uninvolved in bullying behavior.
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