Edu_RSS
Miguel Guhlin - Feature - Download a la Mode Series - Around the Corner
It's hard to go wrong with resource, a list of basic educational technology how-to articles varying from how to install an FTP server to how ease concerns abput data theft or loss. Both text-based articles and audio recordings are available. This page is now also available as an ISO, which means it can be burned onto a CD and distributed as a local resource. [
Link] [Tags: ] [
Comment] From
OLDaily on July 10, 2006 at 5:45 p.m..
Wesley Fryer - Intel Supports the WRONG vision of 1:1 in Schools - Moving at the Speed of Creativity
I have to agree with the headline. And I would add that Intel has crossed the line between pandering to fears and giving the customers what they want. The ClassMates PC is apparently an answer to the $100 computer project. But, "Teachers will be able to conduct lessons on laptops while students follow on the Classmates. If students try to surf the Web while class is in session, the computer will block them and warn them politely to pay attention." This is exactly the wrong way to use computers in the classroom. And Intel should know this. [
OLDaily on July 10, 2006 at 5:45 p.m..
Nancy McKeand - Copyright Issues - Random Thoughts
With the assistance of a good media push, the
TeachersPayTeachers concept has been spreading across the internet. So I appreciate this response from Nancy McKeand, who has decided to attach a Creative Commons license to her blog and explains that it is "not because I am worried about anyone stealing abything they find here but rather because I want to make a statement. I believe in Creative Commons licensing. I believe in sharing our thoughts and ideas and our words." Via
OLDaily on July 10, 2006 at 5:45 p.m..
Elia Powers - How to Judge For-Profits - Inside Higher Ed
Interesting. "Many for-profits are pushing for standardization of curriculum across institutions so that it becomes easier to size up comparable programs." One wonders how a Harvard or a Cambridge will adjust its curriculum so it can be compared with, say, Argosy University. Sounds impossible? It is not beyond the pale to imagine the day when the private sector institutions have the clout to push educational standards in the same way they have already pushed things like educational metadata standards. [
Link] [Tags:
OLDaily on July 10, 2006 at 5:45 p.m..
Tim Goral - Higher Ed at the Crossroads - University Business
A "perfect storm" of circumstances is converging to create a crisis in the higher education system that has been in the making for years. High and increasing tutition costs, increasing student loan interest rates, issues over accreditation and articulation - all this against a background of high faculty costs, escalating infrastructure costs, and a private sector that is nipping at the heels of an increasingly embattled (and yet strangely unresponsive) public system. Also, see more from the
July issue of University Business. [
OLDaily on July 10, 2006 at 5:45 p.m..
Various authors - Windows Live - Microsoft
Google has been getting a lot of publicity, but Microsoft has been quietly unveiling its own versions of online applications and services. This page links to beta versions of a dozen or so applications, including Expo, an online social marketplace, and Academic, articles from thousands of academic and research journals. My biggest complaint so far? Microsoft has to do something about its Passport logon system (which was down, rendering the entire system inaccessible, when I tried to log on yesterday). [
Link] [Tags:
OLDaily on July 10, 2006 at 5:45 p.m..
Unattributed - Brazilians With Tiny Orange Laptops - L.A. Times
See, this is just false: "Serious learning will always be boring compared to the entertainment bombarding young people 24/7 these days." But explaining why it's false takes a bit more doing. It's not simply that what
Mill called the "higher pleasures" appeal to more mature minds. But more mature minds are more free and more able to engage in a topic of enquiry of their own choosing and for its own reward. Not that this article, purporting to cover NECC 2006, manages anything close to insight on this. The author tries to make the p From
OLDaily on July 10, 2006 at 5:45 p.m..
Roger Cohen - Congratulations to Italy - International Herald Tribune
Congratulations to Italy on their team's win in an exciting and well-played World Cup, and to their opponents France, who would also have been deserving of a championship. We watched the game on a big screen at the market in downtown Moncton. A great way to spend a Sunday afternoon, watching the best football in the world. [
Link] [Tags:
OLDaily on July 10, 2006 at 5:45 p.m..