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C Clausen

educators4technology - 0 views

  •  
    The beginning of an application project of collaboration via wikis
C Clausen

Chris Wright's Blog: My Educational Ideas for Blogs - 0 views

  • Blogs are a very good tool for hooking the digital learner into a subject they may not be very interested in learning about in the traditional manner.
  • Diigo
    • C Clausen
       
      I could see Diigo becoming a tool to use when sending students to a source and then asking them to comment on what you've highlighted.
C Clausen

The End Of Work As You Know It - 0 views

  • They're going to change where we work, how we work, and even the nature of work itself. Already the changes are coming fast and furious.
  • telepresence systems,
  • videoconferencing
  • ...13 more annotations...
  • She fields his calls, rerouted via Cisco's phone system; arranges meetings; and even can overhear his phone conversations to anticipate his needs. "Marthin and I haven't missed a beat," says Hooshmand, who can see into De Beer's office through her own screen in Texas. As she waves down another San Jose (Calif.) colleague walking by, from 1,600 miles away, it's hard not to believe her.
  • "The line between our customers and our staff continues to blur."
  • It's an emerging dynamic variously dubbed mass collaboration, peer production, or crowdsourcing
  • Seriosity, a startup that's beginning to use game psychology in business applications: "Enterprises will steal sensibilities from games and virtual worlds and embed them into business."
  • Amazon is creating an on-demand workforce for companies that can't afford to hire staff for such quick or ephemeral jobs.
  • Turkers
  • b, "this is a more virtual, self-managed ecosystem.
  • digital technology will transform work into a global supply chain of talent to carry out carefully programmed tasks on demand.
    • C Clausen
       
      Much like the industrialization of America turned to mass construction of goods Ford and the idea of the assembly line but this takes it to a whole different level
  • "A job is a bundle of privileges and obligations,"
  • "Digital technology has allowed us to break up that bundle" and reassemble it into "mass-customized jobs," he adds, as they fit our skills, the work to be done, and the goals of the companies we're working for.
  • All that raises a fundamental question about technology's ultimate impact on workers. Will this be a new world of empowered individuals encased in a bubble of time-saving technologies? Or will it be a brave new world of virtual sweatshops, where all but a tech-savvy few are relegated to an always-on world in which keystrokes, contacts, and purchases are tracked and fed into the faceless corporate maw?
    • C Clausen
       
      BINGO... THE SECOND INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
  • it can't change human nature. "A
    • C Clausen
       
      I'm not sure if I agree with that, human nature has already begun to change...
  • "aren't going to be a substitute for face-to-face interaction."
    • C Clausen
       
      Really, hasn't it already?
Sean Wybrant

i-SAFE Inc. - 0 views

shared by Sean Wybrant on 17 Jul 10 - Cached
C Clausen

The Week in Rap - 0 views

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    One week's news in music video form
C Clausen

The Wiki Workplace - BusinessWeek - 0 views

  • New social computing tools such as wikis and blogs put unprecedented communication power in the hands of employees.
  • empowering employees to collaborate in unorthodox ways is all about "unleashing the power of human capital."
    • C Clausen
       
      And shouldn't that be what is in the forefront of people's minds while they are limiting the money put into educaiton? How can we teach students "21st Century Skills," if we don't have the technology to teach, show, and do. You can't get the skills without having the tools.
C Clausen

Education Week: Swine-Flu Preparations Spur E-Learning Plans - 0 views

  • The initiative was a natural fit for Curriki, an online community for educators and a repository of free and open curricular materials, said the organization’s executive director, Barbara “Bobbi” Kurshan. “It’s so in line with what we do that it was easy to pull together the documents and materials and to show districts and states how to create collections of content,” she said. The organization has crafted instructions to help schools, districts, and states make use of the resources on Curriki that could be helpful in the event of school closures. For example, teachers can post content from their curricula or flag curricular materials that already exist in the Web site’s database of resources for student use, said Ms. Kurshan.
  • evaluate what kind of technology infrastructure is in place both at schools and in students’ homes, as well as what kind of training teachers have had in delivering instruction online.
  • extensive cable TV programming to put lessons in a televised format for middle and elementary school students.
  • ...2 more annotations...
    • C Clausen
       
      The comment posted for technology class
  • clausen wrote: The district I work in is the third poorest school district in the state and many of the students with working-class families may not have access to computers with Internet. I realize that an alternative would be to create packets and assignments in hard copy to these students' homes but aside from the technologies discussed in this article and the paper alternative how do we reach those students who are "unplugged," from technology? Is it right for students with technology in his/her home to continue working with interactive lessons, wikis, and blogs that can be structured to accommodate reading and learning differences while other students can't? In turn, isn't this widening the learning gap between students in working-class families and upper-class families? 9/13/2009 12:14 AM EDT on EdWeek
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