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Rita Hennessey

Free Technology for Teachers: Read & Write - An Accessibility App for Google Docs - 0 views

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    "Read & Write is a free Google Chrome Web App that increases the accessibility of the text of documents in your Google Drive account. After installing the app you will see a Read & Write tab appear at the top of your browser window whenever you have a document open in Google Drive. Clicking that Read & Write tab will open a menu of accessibility options"
Rita Hennessey

The 90-9-1 Principle | Ant's Eye View - 1 views

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    "90% of users are the "audience", or lurkers. The people tend to read or observe, but don't actively contribute. 9% of users are "editors", sometimes modifying content or adding to an existing thread, but rarely create content from scratch. 1% of users are "creators", driving large amounts of the social group's activity. More often than not, these people are driving a vast percentage of the site's new content, threads, and activity."
Rita Hennessey

worst-days-to-drive-1.jpg (JPEG Image, 1006x4578 pixels) - Scaled (11%) - 0 views

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    various stats about driving, accidents
Rita Hennessey

The Story of Stuff - 2 views

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    "The Film The Story of Stuff is a 20-minute film that takes viewers on a provocative and eye-opening tour of the real costs of our consumer driven culture-from resource extraction to iPod incineration. Annie Leonard, an activist who has spent the past 10 years traveling the globe fighting environmental threats, narrates the Story of Stuff, delivering a rapid-fire, often humorous and always engaging story about "all our stuff-where it comes from and where it goes when we throw it away." Leonard examines the real costs of extraction, production, distribution, consumption and disposal, and she isolates the moment in history where she says the trend of consumption mania began. The Story of Stuff examines how economic policies of the post-World War II era ushered in notions of "planned obsolescence" and "perceived obsolescence" -and how these notions are still driving much of the U.S. and global economies today. Leonard's inspiration for the film began as a personal musing over the question, "Where does all the stuff we buy come from, and where does it go when we throw it out?" She traveled the world in pursuit of the answer to this seemingly innocent question, and what she found along the way were some very guilty participants and their unfortunate victims. "
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