I have about 15 tabs open in my browser with things I have been meaning to read and/or blog about. I don’t want to spend a lot of time on this now, so here’s a whole bunch of stuff that might be useful and/or interesting later, mostly in terms of teaching but some scholarship, too:
- “The History of Atari, 1971-1977.” Sheesh, it’s 20 pages long though…
- reason.tv,which seems to be Drew Carey’s cause. I wonder if he can get away with promoting medical marijuana and host a CBS game show all at the same time?
- “Children of the Net: An Empirical Exploration Into the Evaluation of Internet Content.”
- “A Classroom Copyright Crisis,” from CHE.
- waterboarding.org I don’t know if this goes here or not, but I thought it was interesting at least.
- “Make the Most of Your Dual Monitors,” from Lifehacker and perhaps mandatory reading over the weekend. And thanks to Johndan for pointing out this excellent Dilbert on the subject.
- “Maximizing the Impact: The Pivotal Role of Technology in a 21st Century Education System.”
- “Seminole school mixes technology, tradition.”
- “Wikipedia becomes a class assignment,” which is a different story about this assignment that I posted the other week.
- “Future Reading: Digitization and its discontents” from The New Yorker.
- “Classroom of the Future is Virutally Anywhere,” from the NYT.
- “Study: Students Want to Learn Online.”
- And finally, “Bill Runs a Marathon,” which is Bill Hart-Davidson’s new blog where he accounts for his training for the big run. I don’t know if that is official or unofficial stuff, but I’ll put it here now.