Episode #36, NextVista.org and Rushton Hurley
1) Introducing TEDbooks
We're thrilled to announce the launch of TEDBooks, an imprint of short nonfiction works designed for digital distribution. Shorter than traditional books, TEDBooks run less than 20,000 words each -- long enough to explain a powerful idea, but short enough to be read in a single sitting. … Does this mean the dumbing down of reading? Actually, we suspect people reading TEDBooks will be trading up rather than down. They'll be reading a short, compelling book instead of browsing a magazine or doing crossword puzzles. Our goal is to make ideas accessible in a way that matches modern attention spans. … TEDBooks are available from Amazon.com as Kindle Singles. They can be purchased for $2.99 each, and can be read on any device equipped with the Kindle app: iPad, Mac, PC, Android, iPhone, Blackberry and Windows 7 smartphones.
Gunn High School in Palo Alto
http://gunnlibrary.tumblr.com/
2) New A.P. Bio Ready to Roll but US History Isn’t - NYT
3) Future Shock 2.2 Alvin Toffler was “spot on” in his prescient disquisition of 1966. Now his associates have offered another rubric for thinking about what may well be coming down the pike. They offer these thoughts free on line at http://www.toffler.com/docs/40%20for%20the%20Next%2040%20101011%20FINAL.pdf
4) Study Finds Social-Skills Teaching Boosts Academics - EdWeek
Social and emotional education seeks to provide a foundation for academic instruction by teaching students skills in self-awareness and management, getting along with others and decision-making.
5) Apple patents an iPad stylus... For students? - NYT
Bill Gates, founder of Microsoft, made this observation last year when he said students need a pen to be able to interact with a tablet in a school setting. Mr. Gates said that the iPad is good for reading, but not necessarily creating.
Others are thinking about it. What if Apple were to make a stylus for the iPad that also was a recording device like the Livescribe pen?Or better, imagine your professor talks and it’s all auto-transcribed to your iPad.
6) Technology and Schools: Should We Add More or Pull the Plug? - HuffPost - Laurie David is the author of The Family Dinner. Susan Stiffelman is the author of Parenting Without Power Struggles
It is time to engage in a purposeful, reasoned debate about where we're headed with the use of digital devices in the classroom. We recognize that there is tremendous value in technology and learning, and are by no means advocating abstinence. But we need to be cautious about plugging our kids in more, pushing them into an even greater dependence on electronics. We need balance that stems from understanding that more isn't necessarily better.
7) Tree octopus exposes internet illiteracy mySA
Most students “simply have very little in the way of critical evaluation skills,” Leu said. “They may tell you they don’t believe everything they read on the Internet, but they do.”
Main Topic: Rushton Hurley from NextVista.org
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1) Introducing TEDbooks
We're thrilled to announce the launch of TEDBooks, an imprint of short nonfiction works designed for digital distribution. Shorter than traditional books, TEDBooks run less than 20,000 words each -- long enough to explain a powerful idea, but short enough to be read in a single sitting. … Does this mean the dumbing down of reading? Actually, we suspect people reading TEDBooks will be trading up rather than down. They'll be reading a short, compelling book instead of browsing a magazine or doing crossword puzzles. Our goal is to make ideas accessible in a way that matches modern attention spans. … TEDBooks are available from Amazon.com as Kindle Singles. They can be purchased for $2.99 each, and can be read on any device equipped with the Kindle app: iPad, Mac, PC, Android, iPhone, Blackberry and Windows 7 smartphones.
Gunn High School in Palo Alto
http://gunnlibrary.tumblr.com/
2) New A.P. Bio Ready to Roll but US History Isn’t - NYT
3) Future Shock 2.2 Alvin Toffler was “spot on” in his prescient disquisition of 1966. Now his associates have offered another rubric for thinking about what may well be coming down the pike. They offer these thoughts free on line at http://www.toffler.com/docs/40%20for%20the%20Next%2040%20101011%20FINAL.pdf
4) Study Finds Social-Skills Teaching Boosts Academics - EdWeek
Social and emotional education seeks to provide a foundation for academic instruction by teaching students skills in self-awareness and management, getting along with others and decision-making.
5) Apple patents an iPad stylus... For students? - NYT
Bill Gates, founder of Microsoft, made this observation last year when he said students need a pen to be able to interact with a tablet in a school setting. Mr. Gates said that the iPad is good for reading, but not necessarily creating.
Others are thinking about it. What if Apple were to make a stylus for the iPad that also was a recording device like the Livescribe pen?Or better, imagine your professor talks and it’s all auto-transcribed to your iPad.
6) Technology and Schools: Should We Add More or Pull the Plug? - HuffPost - Laurie David is the author of The Family Dinner. Susan Stiffelman is the author of Parenting Without Power Struggles
It is time to engage in a purposeful, reasoned debate about where we're headed with the use of digital devices in the classroom. We recognize that there is tremendous value in technology and learning, and are by no means advocating abstinence. But we need to be cautious about plugging our kids in more, pushing them into an even greater dependence on electronics. We need balance that stems from understanding that more isn't necessarily better.
7) Tree octopus exposes internet illiteracy mySA
Most students “simply have very little in the way of critical evaluation skills,” Leu said. “They may tell you they don’t believe everything they read on the Internet, but they do.”
Main Topic: Rushton Hurley from NextVista.org
Permalink