Tag Archive for 'literacy'

Bill Moyers throws it down on media reform

Speaking at the National Conference on Media Reform, Bill Moyers outlines the dismal landscape that is mainstream media today, while encouraging all viewers, listeners and readers to demand that the media tells “what we need to know.”

More at alternet.org

Added: Just got back from stumbling on Antonio Lopez’s Mediacology blog where he’s posted a video of Bill Moyers schooling a Fox reporter on how real journalism is done at the NCMR 2008. Check out the video:

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Doodle 4 Google continues in-school branding campaign

A few months ago, I asked if I was the only one troubled by Doodle 4 Google, the in-school marketing campaign art competition put on by the good folks at Google. Since then, over 16, 000 K – 12 students across the United States have spent valuable class time helping Google redesign their logo, just like Dennis Hwang does for special occasions and holidays. Unlike Mr. Hwang, the thousands of students working to “re-design” Google’s logo aren’t paid employees of the corporation. They’re just unpaid labour in Google’s latest marketing campaign to establish brand loyalty in young students, take over the learning and become the curriculum.

Check out the classroom product placement and unquestioning student/teacher adoration for the Google logo in the video below.

Continue reading ‘Doodle 4 Google continues in-school branding campaign’

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Advancing learning in a digital age

Yesterday was the Joan Ganz Cooney Center Inaugural Symposium, Logging Into the Playground: How Digital Media Are Shaping Children’s Learning, in New York City and thanks to the wonders of streaming media and virtual worlds like Second Life, I was able to take part in the action.

The site’s blurb described the event as:

Key leaders from the fields of research, industry, policy, philanthropy, and education will convene to examine how recent research and experimentation with interactive media such as games, mobile technologies, and other platforms can accelerate children’s literacy learning. We will also be releasing recent research and reports from the Center, including a national survey conducted with Common Sense Media that examines parents’ and educators’ attitudes regarding digital media use in young children. Another highlight is the early release of a white paper by noted games expert, James Paul Gee.

The whole day was packed with great speakers, from PBS, EA Games and many NGOs, each outlining their plans for engaging learners with digital technology from virtual worlds to talking books and everything in between.

For me, however, the most important part of the day was release of some great papers on digital learning, including James Paul Gee’s “Getting Over the Slump: Innovation Strategies to Promote Children’s Learning.” [pdf]

In the paper, Gee calls for the American education system to wake up and start some serious action to engage learners and prepare them for the digital future. In addition to calling for more funding of school programs and a revamping of how kids are assessed, Gee outlines a vision for “Digital Teacher’s Corp”, where teachers are “trained to help students learn to transform information for discovery and problem solving, not leave it inert in storage.” Gee also sees a role for the community in the learning of students through centres not unlike the Boys & Girls Club, where children can go to learn and build on their digital literacy skills. Personally, I see these centres working like the literacy tutoring centres, Once Upon a School Dave Eggers has helped create (and outlines in this fantastic TED Talk), but instead of magazine editors and writers, the place is filled with game designers who take the afternoon off to teach kids how to make video games.

Although the conference and the reports are all from US educators and based in the current education climate in the states, Canadian educators have the same lessons to learn. As our education system begins to move toward standardized testing, now is the time for provinces and school boards across the country to increase their funding of technology in schools and create innovative programming that is rooted in sound pedagogical theory but also designed for the future and the learners who will make that future.

Check out more about the symposium here.

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Liking PowerUp, IBM’s multiplayer game for teens

I’ll admit that I’ve haven’t even finished downloading PowerUp, IBM’s new multiplayer game about the environment and alternative energy, but so far I like what I see. Check out their launch/promo video below and see for yourself:




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A quick read of the teacher guides and lesson plans, shows lessons focused on inquiry-based learning, so it’s clear that the purpose of the game is to foster real innovative thinking in today’s high schoolers and not just meet provincial or state standards. And this is a good thing. Continue reading ‘Liking PowerUp, IBM’s multiplayer game for teens’

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Am I the only one troubled by Doodle 4 Google?

From a search of the web on Doodle 4 Google, it looks like I might be. Is anyone wondering about how elementary students and high schoolers spending valuable, publicly funded, class time helping Google redraw their logo benefits students’ learning? Not that I can find.

Google and all its apps are great learning tools that definitely improve student learning. But tools are meant to be used. Through Doodle 4 Google, it’s the students and schools that are being used.

Continue reading ‘Am I the only one troubled by Doodle 4 Google?’

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Friday night with Y! Live

y02938nd.gifY! Live, Yahoo’s new streaming video service, launched last night and thanks to my resident early adopter, I was there to watch it all unfold. As I watched hundreds of people from around the world broadcast their own live video streams and chat to each other, I realized that something very important was happening.

Y! Live isn’t the first live videostreaming chat site, but with the reach of Yahoo to back it up, it will definitely be the one to grab the Facebook crowd. But first it’s got some serious privacy and user control issues to deal with.

Continue reading ‘Friday night with Y! Live’

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