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Milwaukee

Technology Literacy

Some US high schools are beginning Technology Literacy testing to measure student communication skills using computers and digital devices. The American Library Association has defined the process:

“To be information literate, a person must be able to recognize when information is needed and the ability to locate, evaluate and use effectively the needed information…”

Testing is to be conducted by the nonprofit Educational Testing Service which designs and implements the SAT. A short demonstration of the test (Flash required) is available. Core components measure the following student abilities: Define, Access, Manage, Integrate, Evaluate, Create and Communicate.

This will prove difficult because we are already living in a world of information overload. As the internet provides resources (webpages, wikis and blogs) accurate and accessible communication has placed our wired society in a unique learning environment. Its changing faster than any testing service can study and implement. Two such examples:

Wikipedia vs. Britannica
This debate began when the journal Nature tested the accuracy of articles posted to both online sites. The results: both had accurate and misleading information. Credibility for Wikipedia, the new grassroots “everybody” contributes for free solution and some embarrassment for Britannica. Nature’s results had two additional outcomes. Global citizens seem to accept data that contributed by anyone around the world for free. And Britannica has damaged its ability to transfer their reputation from analog books to digital pages. Although Wikipedia proved you can literally write your own encyclopedia articles, they are not without controversial topics – edited daily by the expression of political opinion rather than fact.

Slashdot and Digg
Both sites are examples of how speed impacts not only popularity but also the process of rapid updating. Digg’s immense popularity has frustrated contributors and readers alike. When your page is listed at Digg (known as the “Digg effect”) monthly bandwidth quotas are quickly overrun, temporality shutting down access to the data. Most sites caught in this overrun are not back online until the “Digg effect” trails off. In tech circles the Digg effect is a point of pride but ultimately access data is denied.

Issues also impacting testing: an unequal playing field. High schools cannot provided every student access to equal technology and literacy instruction. My classroom experiences (as a professional) in Toledo, Detroit, Chicago and Milwaukee may not only prove unfair tests, but funding to pay for administering tests in large metropolitan school districts is not easily available. An important non-issue: student expectations to score well when their own teachers are not technology literate.

The Torino Winter Olympics open this week. Today competition for jobs is just as fierce (and global) as your favorite Olympic event. Not only is it uneasy to see no American students on the medal platform, its alarming they don’t even qualify for the finals in math and science.

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Design Milwaukee Rich media Smartphone

Nikon and Nokia

Nikon announced it will actually stop manufacturing most 35mm SLR bodies. Moving forward the company will concentrate on building digital cameras and accessories.

In the UK alone 95% of their business is digital.  Which makes the statement of Nokia being the largest supplier of cameras no surprise…Nokia builds camers into most of their phones.  This should be a trend of where the image capture market is moving towards for consumers.

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Categories
Design Education

Slideware (PowerPoint) corruption

PowerPoint in education. Oxymoron?

We may have slipped into accepting the output of student work with 20 bullets per slide? Why do we allow students to think and speak in bullets? Maybe because they watch their teachers do the same? A friend teaches at an elementary school in Germantown Wisconsin where students learn PowerPoint in 4th grade. Are we hoping little Timmy will become a successful insurance salesmen?

Another misuse of a digital tool.

Ever stop to think why we have so many visually offensive websites cluttering our internet? Teaching students color theory is just as important as teaching them CSS. The world has changed, and the internet has fueled (good or bad) this change. With the over abundance of computers in elementary schools we now understand that PowerPoint reduces verbal communication and misleads analysis.

Many students pass basic communication by using PowerPoint as a crutch.

Please read this essay by Edward Tufte before it’s too late.

I caught myself in this mess. Now I deliver bullet free presentations and the feedback is stronger than ever before…and no more than six words per slide.

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Categories
Education Technology

Classroom lecture hall gets hacked

How smart are the college lectures of the future…HD projectors, wireless cameras and smart podiums? Take a look here for a peek. Enjoy.

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Categories
Education

Women on the Edge of Culture

An exhibition opening Friday January 20th at MIAD features the work of four female artists blending cultures. Fahimeh Vahdat’s work is a strong, powerful exhibition entitled “What Will Befall Her” depicting two years of research on the physical and psychological violence against women around the world today. Her large-scale powerfully moving drawings documents the world we live in today…not 500 years ago.

You can read a hilight of Milwaukee’s Winter Gallery night via The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel here and watch a seven minute video overview and commentary of MIAD’s exhibition here.

Friday Fahimeh will write stories in her exhibition space beginning at 7:00pm and invite those to contribute their own stories.

Fahimeh’s blog is here
Fahimeh’s Faculty Gallery is here

On Thursday February 2nd MIAD will host a panel discussion with reception. Look for an upcoming Podcast if your outside Milwaukee….and if your in town….Join Us.

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