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1) How Kinect Got an Autistic Kid Gaming (from Gizmodo)
GamingNexus editor John Yan has a four-year-old son with a mild form of autism. The little guy's tried to play 360 and PS3 but has trouble getting a hold on the controllers. With Kinect, though, he was an instant pro.
2) Electrical Brain Stimulation Improves Math Skills - New Scientist
3) Teacher’s Death Exposes Tensions in Los Angeles - NYT
When The Los Angeles Times released a database of “value-added analysis” of every teacher in the Los Angeles Unified School District in August, Mr. [Rigoberto ] Ruelas was rated “less effective than average.” Colleagues said he became noticeably depressed, and family members have guessed that the rating contributed to his death.
A moderate voice of reason? - “Not including value-added measures is not acceptable,” said Yolie Flores, a board member of the Los Angeles Unified School District. “But it also has to be part of a more comprehensive system of evaluation.” - or the contrary view - Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, argued that reliance on value-added assessments actually hindered efforts to carry out comprehensive teacher evaluations.
4) from eSchoolNews
-- Study: Teacher bonuses failed to raise test scores
-- School of One Boosts Individual learning
Main Topic: 2010 National Education Technology Plan
U.S. Announces National Ed-Tech Plan Education Week
The U.S. Department of Education intends to pay for research to study online professional-collaboration communities for teachers and other educators, according to the action plan in the final version of the Obama administration’s National Education Technology Plan.
The final version of the plan, unveiled Tuesday by U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, also pledges to finance development of open-source educational resources and launch an initiative dedicated to defining and increasing educational productivity. Mr. Duncan spotlighted the plan in a speech at a conference of the State Educational Technology Directors Association, held at the National Harbor complex in Prince George’s County, Md., just outside Washington.
Tim's Tech Tidbit: Testing your Connection Speed
http://www.broadband.gov/qualitytest/about/
http://www.dslreports.com/speedtest
aiming for DSL of 2-4 MBs, cable 2-6MBs, “burst capabilities” 10-20
direct connections = T-1 1.2 MBs fixed, T-3 much higher
Endorsements:
Cammy: 16: Moments (short YouTube clip by creators of RadioLab - powerful model of digital storytelling using only 50 or so words)
Kevin: California Dreaming a Creative Commons Dutch film on California’s Economic Crisis.
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1) How Kinect Got an Autistic Kid Gaming (from Gizmodo)
GamingNexus editor John Yan has a four-year-old son with a mild form of autism. The little guy's tried to play 360 and PS3 but has trouble getting a hold on the controllers. With Kinect, though, he was an instant pro.
2) Electrical Brain Stimulation Improves Math Skills - New Scientist
3) Teacher’s Death Exposes Tensions in Los Angeles - NYT
When The Los Angeles Times released a database of “value-added analysis” of every teacher in the Los Angeles Unified School District in August, Mr. [Rigoberto ] Ruelas was rated “less effective than average.” Colleagues said he became noticeably depressed, and family members have guessed that the rating contributed to his death.
A moderate voice of reason? - “Not including value-added measures is not acceptable,” said Yolie Flores, a board member of the Los Angeles Unified School District. “But it also has to be part of a more comprehensive system of evaluation.” - or the contrary view - Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, argued that reliance on value-added assessments actually hindered efforts to carry out comprehensive teacher evaluations.
4) from eSchoolNews
-- Study: Teacher bonuses failed to raise test scores
-- School of One Boosts Individual learning
Main Topic: 2010 National Education Technology Plan
U.S. Announces National Ed-Tech Plan Education Week
The U.S. Department of Education intends to pay for research to study online professional-collaboration communities for teachers and other educators, according to the action plan in the final version of the Obama administration’s National Education Technology Plan.
The final version of the plan, unveiled Tuesday by U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, also pledges to finance development of open-source educational resources and launch an initiative dedicated to defining and increasing educational productivity. Mr. Duncan spotlighted the plan in a speech at a conference of the State Educational Technology Directors Association, held at the National Harbor complex in Prince George’s County, Md., just outside Washington.
Tim's Tech Tidbit: Testing your Connection Speed
http://www.broadband.gov/qualitytest/about/
http://www.dslreports.com/speedtest
aiming for DSL of 2-4 MBs, cable 2-6MBs, “burst capabilities” 10-20
direct connections = T-1 1.2 MBs fixed, T-3 much higher
Endorsements:
Cammy: 16: Moments (short YouTube clip by creators of RadioLab - powerful model of digital storytelling using only 50 or so words)
Kevin: California Dreaming a Creative Commons Dutch film on California’s Economic Crisis.
Permalink