Only a very small percentage of these images have ever been published. The rest have been sitting in dusty archives in the form of negatives, slides, glass plates, etchings, and prints. We’re digitizing them so that everyone can easily experience these fascinating moments in time
After sitting through a staff development on our new web page, and getting sheets of paper that are clogging up my desk. I read this post from Will Richardson.
This was the kicker for me:
It all reminds me of the time last year when I got to an event and the person in charge had copied, collated, stapled and distributed six paper pages that she had printed of my link-filled wiki online to 50 or so participants.
“It’s a wiki,” I said. “You can’t click the links on paper!”
“I know,” she replied. “I just need to have paper.”
That was the discussion last week when I gave a quiz to the 10th grade global class on imperialism. They had to name one colony and one imperialist country. The colony = Asia or Africa. The imperialist country = Europe. So I threw the same question out to the 11th graders. Too many of them didn’t know it either. That’s one of those basic facts 100% of the students should know. I am not worried about higher order thinking skills. I am worried about basic content.
Granted they don’t use that type of knowledge regularly (what teenager is asked “Is Europe a country or a continent?” regularly?) But it is basic common knowledge that they should know so that they don’t look like a moron regularly.
I was born 20 years too early. I was not a Rhodes scholar by any strech, but I had a good dose of common sense and I paid attention. If you are a high school senior today and have a basic understanding of specific knowledge, you are already head-and-shoulders above many of your peers.
I now have: Personal/Professional, Building, Student Achievement and Department goals. None are the same and all are odd. They don’t directly tie to the content, but they are school related in different ways.
As part of thier “back-to-school” posts, many blogs are listing different tools for students. Lifehacker has this nifty looking tool called StudyRails. Only $5.00 a month.
As someone with a small child and remembering what it was like as a small child, this from The Onion is very appropriate and funny. Hits close to home too.
“6 year old stares downt he bottomless abyss of formal schooling”
Local first-grader Connor Bolduc, 6, experienced the first inkling of a coming lifetime of existential dread Monday upon recognizing his cruel destiny to participate in compulsory education for the better part of the next two decades, sources reported.
I found this new website that allows you to find full magazines on-line. It is called Mygazines.com. You scan images of the pages in your magazine and email them to the site in PDF form. It isn’t every magazine, but there are alot of the regular, common ones like Time and Newsweek. In an era of downward newspaper subscriptions, you had to know this wasn’t too far behind.