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Sunlei

(22,651 posts)
Sun Jun 9, 2013, 12:50 PM Jun 2013

The President tries to Bring America’s Students into the Digital Age

Today, in Mooresville, North Carolina the President is announcing a bold and transformative education initiative to breathe life into the classroom of the 21st century. The goal of the President’s ConnectED initiative is to bring high-speed Internet connections to 99 percent of America’s students – which he is calling on the FCC to do within five years.

This is not connectivity for connectivity’s sake. It is laying the foundation for a vision of classrooms where students are engaged in individualized digital learning and where teachers can assess progress lesson by lesson and day by day. It’s about creating learning environments where students can both succeed and struggle without embarrassment, where barriers for children with disabilities are removed, and where we can bring the most modern, innovative, and up-to-date content into the classroom.

Yet this national vision of the 21st Century classroom is impossible with the level of connectivity that most schools have today. Only 20 percent of educators feel their classrooms have the connectivity to meet their teaching needs today. In fact, the average school has about the same level of connectivity as the average home, even though the average school has 200 times more people. Thousands of schools don’t even have the bandwidth to stream two videos into their school at the same time - let alone provide the kind of opportunities that can be seen in Mooresville, where students in classroom after classroom are learning on their own individual digital devices.

The President understands that we have to take bold action if we are to offer our young people the best education in the world so they can compete for jobs in the global economy. South Korea, which tops global rankings in reading and math, already has 100 percent of schools with high-speed connectivity – and by 2016, its schools are planning on eliminating textbooks from the classroom altogether. We have to move with force and speed if we are to lead – not follow – on developing the best learning opportunities for our young people.

As Secretary of Education Arne Duncan likes to say, the average school buys textbooks on a seven-year cycle, even though we know that every seven months or even seven weeks there are new and exciting developments in biology and civics. When new educational devices are available at a reasonable cost with greater connectivity, it creates a new market for that dynamic content.

rest of article http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2013/06/06/bringing-america-s-students-digital-age

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The President tries to Bring America’s Students into the Digital Age (Original Post) Sunlei Jun 2013 OP
hard for the NSA to track kids off the internet nt markiv Jun 2013 #1
you do know about your ip and tracking cookies, where every move you make on the internet has been Sunlei Jun 2013 #2
I enjoyed the key underlined quote and repeat it here davidpdx Jun 2013 #3
there is only 1 way sweetapogee Jun 2013 #4

Sunlei

(22,651 posts)
2. you do know about your ip and tracking cookies, where every move you make on the internet has been
Sun Jun 9, 2013, 01:24 PM
Jun 2013

known forever. It's even on your posts, visable to the admin.

I think computers in schools will help our schools save billions and benefit children with a quality education.

besides your kids cellphone will find them using the GPS every cell phone has builtin. teach your kids to carry the cellphone where if abducted they have a chance to be tracked.

davidpdx

(22,000 posts)
3. I enjoyed the key underlined quote and repeat it here
Tue Jun 11, 2013, 08:32 AM
Jun 2013
South Korea, which tops global rankings in reading and math, already has 100 percent of schools with high-speed connectivity – and by 2016, its schools are planning on eliminating textbooks from the classroom altogether.


I live in South Korea and the use of technology in the classrooms is excellent. I worked at a high school where they had an interactive board which I could write on as well as play videos and do a bunch of other stuff that is probably way too complex for me to learn. My niece who is 19 graduated from high school in February and started college three and a half months ago.

sweetapogee

(1,168 posts)
4. there is only 1 way
Wed Jun 12, 2013, 04:49 PM
Jun 2013

to master algebra. You must do many problems by hand. Certainly a TI-84/89 graphing utility is handy. But you still must understand the basic rules of math and how to apply them. The basics have not changed over the years, a digital revolution not withstanding.

Without an understanding of algebra and possibly some of the other maths, forget a science major.

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