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January 2007

January 11, 2007

http://www.21apples.org/articles/2007/01/10/happy-new-year

Happy new year to all. I had a wonderful time traveling through Spain and Morocco and my christmas present took some unbelievable photos (evidence below). I have been learning so much about photography from the Digital Photography School blog and the Photojojo blog. Never thought I could learn so much about photography by reading blogs. Will my online professional development ever end? Let’s hope not.




This week has been busy with Winterim, a one-week period where teachers get to try out experimental courses with students. I am teaching Internet radio broadcasting to twelve 8th graders. They have put on two great shows and tomorrow is their final show. They are on live at 12:30pm EST (17:30 GMT) tomorrow January 11, 2007. Tune in to the chatroom and channel 1 at Webcast Academy.




I’ll get back to blogging soon. 2007, here we go…




>IMG_0312

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Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

http://21apples.org/articles/2007/01/10/happy-new-year

Happy new year to all. I had a wonderful time traveling through Spain and Morocco and my christmas present took some unbelievable photos (evidence below). I have been learning so much about photography from the Digital Photography School blog and the Photojojo blog. Never thought I could learn so much about photography by reading blogs. Will my online professional development ever end? Let’s hope not.




This week has been busy with Winterim, a one-week period where teachers get to try out experimental courses with students. I am teaching Internet radio broadcasting to twelve 8th graders. They have put on two great shows and tomorrow is their final show. They are on live at 12:30pm EST (17:30 GMT) tomorrow January 11, 2007. Tune in to the chatroom and channel 1 at Webcast Academy.




I’ll get back to blogging soon. 2007, here we go…




>IMG_0312

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Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/21apples/~3/92395209/happy-new-year

Happy new year to all. I had a wonderful time traveling through Spain and Morocco and my christmas present took some unbelievable photos (evidence below). I have been learning so much about photography from the Digital Photography School blog and the Photojojo blog. Never thought I could learn so much about photography by reading blogs. Will my online professional development ever end? Let’s hope not.




This week has been busy with Winterim, a one-week period where teachers get to try out experimental courses with students. I am teaching Internet radio broadcasting to twelve 8th graders. They have put on two great shows and tomorrow is their final show. They are on live at 12:30pm EST (17:30 GMT) tomorrow January 11, 2007. Tune in to the chatroom and channel 1 at Webcast Academy.




I’ll get back to blogging soon. 2007, here we go…




>IMG_0312

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Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

January 20, 2007

http://www.21apples.org/articles/2007/01/19/myspace-sued-by-4-f

Four families with young daughters who were abused, molested or raped by someone they met on MySpace have filed suits against News Corporation (who owns MySpace). These are tragic examples of the real dangers that online communication tools can facilitate. Having had hours of discussions with parents, students, administrators and colleagues about the dangers of social networking sites, these stories make the dangers startlingly real.




Trying to think about this in a balanced way, I wonder how fair it is to hold MySpace responsible for these young women meeting these awful men. Yes, they used MySpace. But didn’t they also use computers, web browsers, phones, cars, the subway, public places like restaurants, parks and more to meet? Are they all to blame? Is this the same as overweight people suing McDonald’s? It is very difficult to understand who is at fault here. Who is liable? In the end does it actually matter, these girls have already suffered, and there is no recovery. On a forum on Slashdot someone suggested the parents be charged with negligence. Is there really anyone to blame other than the criminals?




Most often I tell families that the dangers are real. They must deal with that. It is however much more rare than one might realize. The overwhelming majority of perpetrators of sexual violence against children are victims’ parents. Read this great article highlighting the data from the National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. It’s also important to note that 79% of reported online abuse occurred at home.




The conclusion of the article really summed it up well,
The question is, “Are we going to take a “zero risk” approach to using technology and the tools of the Web?”

We don’t take a “zero risk” approach with our sports programs where the chance of injury, paralysis, and, in rare cases, death, is always present. We don’t take that approach with field trips where students travel to museums and historical sites in locations where they might be touched by crime. We don’t take that approach with recess on our playgrounds, or transporting our kids to and from school.




We can never eliminate all risk; but there are ways to maximize our students’ safety while using these incredibly powerful tools. Each tool needs to be analyzed individually to ascertain its benefits and the specific risks it might present. From there, thoughtful people can find solutions to the student safety issues that may arise.




As educational leaders we need to be safety conscious. We need to be prudent, reasonable; but we won’t live in fear and we won’t act from fear.




It is by opening doors, not closing them that we create new possibilities for our children and new futures for ourselves.




Would love to hear your thoughts, and how your school or home is responding to the sensational media coverage.




p.s. In other conspiracy theories, doesn’t network television have a vested interest in having parents be afraid of the Internet? It keeps the kids watching TV instead of YouTube when the parents take away the computer. I know that one is way out there, but had to toss it in the mix.

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Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

http://21apples.org/articles/2007/01/19/myspace-sued-by-4-f

Four families with young daughters who were abused, molested or raped by someone they met on MySpace have filed suits against News Corporation (who owns MySpace). These are tragic examples of the real dangers that online communication tools can facilitate. Having had hours of discussions with parents, students, administrators and colleagues about the dangers of social networking sites, these stories make the dangers startlingly real.




Trying to think about this in a balanced way, I wonder how fair it is to hold MySpace responsible for these young women meeting these awful men. Yes, they used MySpace. But didn’t they also use computers, web browsers, phones, cars, the subway, public places like restaurants, parks and more to meet? Are they all to blame? Is this the same as overweight people suing McDonald’s? It is very difficult to understand who is at fault here. Who is liable? In the end does it actually matter, these girls have already suffered, and there is no recovery. On a forum on Slashdot someone suggested the parents be charged with negligence. Is there really anyone to blame other than the criminals?




Most often I tell families that the dangers are real. They must deal with that. It is however much more rare than one might realize. The overwhelming majority of perpetrators of sexual violence against children are victims’ parents. Read this great article highlighting the data from the National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. It’s also important to note that 79% of reported online abuse occurred at home.




The conclusion of the article really summed it up well,
The question is, “Are we going to take a “zero risk” approach to using technology and the tools of the Web?”

We don’t take a “zero risk” approach with our sports programs where the chance of injury, paralysis, and, in rare cases, death, is always present. We don’t take that approach with field trips where students travel to museums and historical sites in locations where they might be touched by crime. We don’t take that approach with recess on our playgrounds, or transporting our kids to and from school.




We can never eliminate all risk; but there are ways to maximize our students’ safety while using these incredibly powerful tools. Each tool needs to be analyzed individually to ascertain its benefits and the specific risks it might present. From there, thoughtful people can find solutions to the student safety issues that may arise.




As educational leaders we need to be safety conscious. We need to be prudent, reasonable; but we won’t live in fear and we won’t act from fear.




It is by opening doors, not closing them that we create new possibilities for our children and new futures for ourselves.




Would love to hear your thoughts, and how your school or home is responding to the sensational media coverage.




p.s. In other conspiracy theories, doesn’t network television have a vested interest in having parents be afraid of the Internet? It keeps the kids watching TV instead of YouTube when the parents take away the computer. I know that one is way out there, but had to toss it in the mix.

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , ,


Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/21apples/~3/92395208/myspace-sued-by

Four families with young daughters who were abused, molested or raped by someone they met on MySpace have filed suits against News Corporation (who owns MySpace). These are tragic examples of the real dangers that online communication tools can facilitate. Having had hours of discussions with parents, students, administrators and colleagues about the dangers of social networking sites, these stories make the dangers startlingly real.




Trying to think about this in a balanced way, I wonder how fair it is to hold MySpace responsible for these young women meeting these awful men. Yes, they used MySpace. But didn’t they also use computers, web browsers, phones, cars, the subway, public places like restaurants, parks and more to meet? Are they all to blame? Is this the same as overweight people suing McDonald’s? It is very difficult to understand who is at fault here. Who is liable? In the end does it actually matter, these girls have already suffered, and there is no recovery. On a forum on Slashdot someone suggested the parents be charged with negligence. Is there really anyone to blame other than the criminals?




Most often I tell families that the dangers are real. They must deal with that. It is however much more rare than one might realize. The overwhelming majority of perpetrators of sexual violence against children are victims’ parents. Read this great article highlighting the data from the National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. It’s also important to note that 79% of reported online abuse occurred at home.




The conclusion of the article really summed it up well,
The question is, “Are we going to take a “zero risk” approach to using technology and the tools of the Web?”

We don’t take a “zero risk” approach with our sports programs where the chance of injury, paralysis, and, in rare cases, death, is always present. We don’t take that approach with field trips where students travel to museums and historical sites in locations where they might be touched by crime. We don’t take that approach with recess on our playgrounds, or transporting our kids to and from school.




We can never eliminate all risk; but there are ways to maximize our students’ safety while using these incredibly powerful tools. Each tool needs to be analyzed individually to ascertain its benefits and the specific risks it might present. From there, thoughtful people can find solutions to the student safety issues that may arise.




As educational leaders we need to be safety conscious. We need to be prudent, reasonable; but we won’t live in fear and we won’t act from fear.




It is by opening doors, not closing them that we create new possibilities for our children and new futures for ourselves.




Would love to hear your thoughts, and how your school or home is responding to the sensational media coverage.




p.s. In other conspiracy theories, doesn’t network television have a vested interest in having parents be afraid of the Internet? It keeps the kids watching TV instead of YouTube when the parents take away the computer. I know that one is way out there, but had to toss it in the mix.

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Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

January 24, 2007

http://www.21apples.org/articles/2007/01/23/getting-on-the-map

google_earth
So I’m on the map. The Google Earth map. If you don’t have Google Earth, download it now (with a high speed connection). Lets you zoom in with satellite images anywhere on the Earth, amazing. That being said, Alex Ragone tagged me to contribute to the Google Earth Educators Meme started by Lucy Gray. So, I fired up Google Earth and used it to answer two questions:





  1. What has been your most memorable learning experience?

  2. Who is the teacher that has influenced you the most? And why?




They were difficult questions, but I did my best writing them up. Only twist, I wrote them directly onto bookmarks in Google Earth meaning you can view where this experiences occurred. All you have to do is download my KMZ file and open it in Google Earth. A little hard to explain, but just click the KMZ link and try to open it. If you have Google Earth, my answers will pop out of the world, literally. If you teach any kind of history or geography, do yourself a favor and learn how to do this with your students.




And now to tag some other folks. Go!



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Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

http://21apples.org/articles/2007/01/23/getting-on-the-map

google_earth
So I’m on the map. The Google Earth map. If you don’t have Google Earth, download it now (with a high speed connection). Lets you zoom in with satellite images anywhere on the Earth, amazing. That being said, Alex Ragone tagged me to contribute to the Google Earth Educators Meme started by Lucy Gray. So, I fired up Google Earth and used it to answer two questions:





  1. What has been your most memorable learning experience?

  2. Who is the teacher that has influenced you the most? And why?




They were difficult questions, but I did my best writing them up. Only twist, I wrote them directly onto bookmarks in Google Earth meaning you can view where this experiences occurred. All you have to do is download my KMZ file and open it in Google Earth. A little hard to explain, but just click the KMZ link and try to open it. If you have Google Earth, my answers will pop out of the world, literally. If you teach any kind of history or geography, do yourself a favor and learn how to do this with your students.




And now to tag some other folks. Go!



Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/21apples/~3/92395207/getting-on-the-

google_earth
So I’m on the map. The Google Earth map. If you don’t have Google Earth, download it now (with a high speed connection). Lets you zoom in with satellite images anywhere on the Earth, amazing. That being said, Alex Ragone tagged me to contribute to the Google Earth Educators Meme started by Lucy Gray. So, I fired up Google Earth and used it to answer two questions:





  1. What has been your most memorable learning experience?

  2. Who is the teacher that has influenced you the most? And why?




They were difficult questions, but I did my best writing them up. Only twist, I wrote them directly onto bookmarks in Google Earth meaning you can view where this experiences occurred. All you have to do is download my KMZ file and open it in Google Earth. A little hard to explain, but just click the KMZ link and try to open it. If you have Google Earth, my answers will pop out of the world, literally. If you teach any kind of history or geography, do yourself a favor and learn how to do this with your students.




And now to tag some other folks. Go!



Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

January 31, 2007

http://www.21apples.org/articles/2007/01/30/headed-to-david-all

On Thursday I will be attending The RoadMap seminar with organizational superstar David Allen. I have written about his system before (1, 2, 3) and hope this seminar will push me fully into “stress-free productivity” as his book claims it can bring you. I know, I know, the book cover looks so cheezy. Just ignore that and read it. Even if you think you are organized, this book will change you.




Since I will be missing work that day, I was going to check in on e-mail from the hotel until I got a pre-semiar note today. They mention the Internet access at the Marriot Marquis Times Square:
“Wireless internet is available on the Eighth Floor, for a fee of $8 for every fifteen minutes.”
What the???




Anyway, on Feb 6, 2007, 1:30pm EST (GMT -5) we will be covering Getting Things Done on 21st Century Learning (my weekly live webcast). I’ll give plenty of feedback from the seminar, so tune in or catch the podcast.




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Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

http://21apples.org/articles/2007/01/30/headed-to-david-all

On Thursday I will be attending The RoadMap seminar with organizational superstar David Allen. I have written about his system before (1, 2, 3) and hope this seminar will push me fully into “stress-free productivity” as his book claims it can bring you. I know, I know, the book cover looks so cheezy. Just ignore that and read it. Even if you think you are organized, this book will change you.




Since I will be missing work that day, I was going to check in on e-mail from the hotel until I got a pre-semiar note today. They mention the Internet access at the Marriot Marquis Times Square:
“Wireless internet is available on the Eighth Floor, for a fee of $8 for every fifteen minutes.”
What the???




Anyway, on Feb 6, 2007, 1:30pm EST (GMT -5) we will be covering Getting Things Done on 21st Century Learning (my weekly live webcast). I’ll give plenty of feedback from the seminar, so tune in or catch the podcast.




Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , ,


Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/21apples/~3/92395206/headed-to-david

On Thursday I will be attending The RoadMap seminar with organizational superstar David Allen. I have written about his system before (1, 2, 3) and hope this seminar will push me fully into “stress-free productivity” as his book claims it can bring you. I know, I know, the book cover looks so cheezy. Just ignore that and read it. Even if you think you are organized, this book will change you.




Since I will be missing work that day, I was going to check in on e-mail from the hotel until I got a pre-semiar note today. They mention the Internet access at the Marriot Marquis Times Square:
“Wireless internet is available on the Eighth Floor, for a fee of $8 for every fifteen minutes.”
What the???




Anyway, on Feb 6, 2007, 1:30pm EST (GMT -5) we will be covering Getting Things Done on 21st Century Learning (my weekly live webcast). I’ll give plenty of feedback from the seminar, so tune in or catch the podcast.




Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , ,


Posted by arvind s grover | 0 comment(s)