User:Bob calder: Difference between revisions

From OLPC
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Bob is a teacher at Dillard High School in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. He teaches what the department of education insists is "Multimedia" but he secretly calls Information Architecture. His students like the idea of subversive learning, albeit constructionist, constructivist and, even meaningful. Shameless plug here: [http://moodle.org Go Moodle!]
Bob is a teacher at Dillard High School in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. He teaches what the department of education insists is "Multimedia" but he secretly calls Information Architecture. His students like the idea of subversive learning, albeit constructionist, constructivist and, even meaningful. Shameless plug here: [http://moodle.org Go Moodle!]


Broward County has the largest fully accredited school district in the U.S. although it is around the fifth or sixth largest student-wise with nearly 300,000 students. Are there one million students in Massachusetts?
Broward County has the largest fully accredited school district in the U.S. although it is around the fifth or sixth largest student-wise with nearly 300,000 (264,000 in 2006-2007) students.


Dillard High School has a few less than 2500 students on average. If you want to find out about the demographics, go to the [http://browardschools.com website] and look around. You can think of it as a little third world country nestled among the palm trees of balmy South Florida.
Dillard High School has a few less than 2500 students on average. If you want to find out about the demographics, go to the [http://browardschools.com website] and look around. You can think of it as a little third world country nestled among the palm trees of balmy South Florida.


Bob always goes to the AAAS annual meeting to stay sane although he doesn't understand much, the drone is comforting. At the last meeting, he met some nice people from Maine. There were five of them from one school district. Bob was the only high school teacher from the Broward County District and only his boss knew where he was going. (Shhhh . . . don't tell.) What is it about Maine? Is it antipodal to Florida, thus more stable? Is it because Maine doesn't have Disney World, or is it the LOBSTER (with claws)?
Bob always goes to the AAAS annual meeting to stay sane although he doesn't understand much, the drone is comforting. In 2007, he met some nice people from Maine. There were five of them from one school district. Bob was the only high school teacher from the Broward County District and only his boss knew where he was going. (Shhhh . . . don't tell.) What is it about Maine? Is it because Maine doesn't have Disney World, or is it their belief in the goals of science? In 2008 the Science and Society SIG ( Go section X! ) got Negroponte to do an evening section on how the project was doing. It brought the entire assembled community of science nerds to their feet.


Abandoning third person and continuing, research on one to one computing programs and why they fail so often is interesting to the extent that reports of failure do not focus on how student learning was managed.
Why dosen't the OLPC get its curriculum from William Bennett and Mike Milikin? Surely they are benefactors of mankind and want little children to succeed?

What will happen when there are more laptops than children?

On a serious note, Bob thinks that access to learning is a matter of adoption. Heck, maybe learning itself is adoptive and we just need to market it better. So the single pencil theory is what sticks in his craw more than anything animal or vegetable.

Latest revision as of 15:03, 27 May 2008

Bob is a teacher at Dillard High School in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. He teaches what the department of education insists is "Multimedia" but he secretly calls Information Architecture. His students like the idea of subversive learning, albeit constructionist, constructivist and, even meaningful. Shameless plug here: Go Moodle!

Broward County has the largest fully accredited school district in the U.S. although it is around the fifth or sixth largest student-wise with nearly 300,000 (264,000 in 2006-2007) students.

Dillard High School has a few less than 2500 students on average. If you want to find out about the demographics, go to the website and look around. You can think of it as a little third world country nestled among the palm trees of balmy South Florida.

Bob always goes to the AAAS annual meeting to stay sane although he doesn't understand much, the drone is comforting. In 2007, he met some nice people from Maine. There were five of them from one school district. Bob was the only high school teacher from the Broward County District and only his boss knew where he was going. (Shhhh . . . don't tell.) What is it about Maine? Is it because Maine doesn't have Disney World, or is it their belief in the goals of science? In 2008 the Science and Society SIG ( Go section X! ) got Negroponte to do an evening section on how the project was doing. It brought the entire assembled community of science nerds to their feet.

Abandoning third person and continuing, research on one to one computing programs and why they fail so often is interesting to the extent that reports of failure do not focus on how student learning was managed.