"The object of education is to prepare the young to educate themselves throughout their lives". Robert Maynard Hutchins
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Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Thursday, November 6, 2008
Saturday, September 13, 2008
Two great articles from EdWeekly
There are two blogs here that are both worthy of reading
“MUST read EdWeek article by Alfie Kohn - It not about the teaching-it about the learning! http://tinyurl.com/596osp”2:16 pm - Comment“Teachers helping teachers integrate technology into their classrooms - http://tinyurl.com/6hk3ns”
“MUST read EdWeek article by Alfie Kohn - It not about the teaching-it about the learning! http://tinyurl.com/596osp”2:16 pm - Comment“Teachers helping teachers integrate technology into their classrooms - http://tinyurl.com/6hk3ns”
Saturday, August 23, 2008
From the LibraryTechNZ website
12 Tools That Will Soon Go the Way of Fax and CDs
From Stephen Abram's blog
A list devised while discussing how the "information behaviours" of Generation Millennium differs from those of previous generations, and what that means for the tools they (and the rest of us -- they outnumber even the boomers) will and won't be using in the future. Out of the research on this has come a list of tools, technologies and other artifacts that will probably disappear within the next generation, just as Fax essentially disappeared less than 20 years after it first became popular, and just as CDs, which are disappearing even faster.
1. Hard Drives
2. "Wall of Text" Reports & Documents
3. "Best Practices"
4. Email and Groupware
5. Corporate Websites
6. Corporate Intranets
7. Corporate Libraries and Purchased Content
8. Cell Phones
9. Classrooms
10. Meetings
11. Job Titles
12. Offices
From Stephen Abram's blog
A list devised while discussing how the "information behaviours" of Generation Millennium differs from those of previous generations, and what that means for the tools they (and the rest of us -- they outnumber even the boomers) will and won't be using in the future. Out of the research on this has come a list of tools, technologies and other artifacts that will probably disappear within the next generation, just as Fax essentially disappeared less than 20 years after it first became popular, and just as CDs, which are disappearing even faster.
1. Hard Drives
2. "Wall of Text" Reports & Documents
3. "Best Practices"
4. Email and Groupware
5. Corporate Websites
6. Corporate Intranets
7. Corporate Libraries and Purchased Content
8. Cell Phones
9. Classrooms
10. Meetings
11. Job Titles
12. Offices
Posted by Maria Nagelkerke at 10:00 AM 0 comments Tags: mash-ups, social media, technology, TheSourceNLNZ
And here's a link to a great wiki with lots of thought provoking ideas for 21st Century educators
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