Mathtrain Marcos Blog & Purposeful Technology: Google Certified Teacher: Purposeful Tec... - 0 views
Grassroots Innovation: Yesterday's Innovation - 0 views
Beware the computer lab solution - 0 views
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A few suggestions are to:Schedule your class(es) as much as possible Prepare you class(es) for the lab visit just like you would prepare them for a field trip (that's what this lab visit is) Use the lab time as a portion of a collaborative group project rather than as an individual typing assignment Prepare rubrics, and prepare your class(es) before arriving at the lab Provide all instructions about the assignment before arriving at the lab Develop an online presence of your own, and allows students to access the project resources from home Test the lab and work through the processes first, alone Plan on reusing the same rules, rubrics, strategy, or project method for every lab visit for the year Make the original assignment generic Build the assignment or project in a modular fashion Train students at every step of the project Check each student to ensure that they know what to do before you arrive at the lab Assign helpers, partners, buddies for each student. These are the first line helpers that students will turn to before seeking their teacher's help.Plan on a strategy where every student is doing something different while your class is using the lab.
Case Against Open Source - 0 views
The OLPC Wiki - OLPC - 0 views
OLPC Learning Club DC: - 0 views
OLPC News Forum: OLPC Canada - 0 views
telecentre.org - 0 views
Change Agency - 0 views
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Dr. Wagner shared with us his “Seven Survival Skills for the New Economy” which he discusses in length (with examples from interviews with business leaders and from his weekly classroom observations): Critical thinking and problem-solving Collaboration across networks (across distance, time, space) and leadership by influence (as opposed to “by position”) Adaptability and agility Initiative and entrepreneurialship Effective oral and written communication skills Accessing and analyzing information — information is constantly changing & growing exponentially (here he really criticized our current testing curriculum and gave examples of countries who outperform us on exams, but who use performance assessment or portfolios or oral/written exams rather than multiple choice.) Curiosity and imagination — innovation and creativity — we can’t continue to produce innovators randomly or by chance, we must produce them intentionally (AMEN!)
Japan Visitor Blog - Tokyo Osaka Nagoya Kyoto: Dunno much about history… - 0 views
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Most revealing was the percentage of Tokyo pupils who thought education was necessary "to live a happy and fulfilled life": only 40%, compared with over 50% in Seoul and Beijing, and almost 75% in London and Washington DC. Also, only 25% of Tokyo pupils believed they would be happy "if I graduate from a good university (40% in Beijing, 60% in Seoul, 80% in London, 85% in Washington DC.) It was also revealed that a whopping 87% of Japanese pupils say they "talk with my family a lot," compared with about 75% of pupils in the other cities.
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Most revealing was the percentage of Tokyo pupils who thought education was necessary "to live a happy and fulfilled life": only 40%, compared with over 50% in Seoul and Beijing, and almost 75% in London and Washington DC. Also, only 25% of Tokyo pupils believed they would be happy "if I graduate from a good university (40% in Beijing, 60% in Seoul, 80% in London, 85% in Washington DC.) It was also revealed that a whopping 87% of Japanese pupils say they "talk with my family a lot," compared with about 75% of pupils in the other cities.
FRONTLINE: growing up online | PBS - 0 views
Short Message Service / SMS Tutorial - 0 views
100 Helpful Web Tools for Every Kind of Learner | College@Home - 0 views
Audioblogging by Mobile Phone? Round 2: Nigerian Election Blog Blueprint at saidia.org - 0 views
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audioblogging by telephone, is compelling. In fact, it's so compelling that I'm surprised it has not caught on already.. especially in Africa. Why should it not be possible for activists and election monitors - and indeed citizens - to call a number and leave a message about problems they are experiencing or issues dear to them, and be able to expect their message to be immediately made available for listening on a blog?
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