Friday, December 24, 2010

Happy Holidays

A bit melancholy during services tonight, as this was my mom's favorite time of year. Can't help but think of Ariana's family, and I'm missing my oldest son (happy in Arizona), but joy nonetheless with those I'm with. Another year with too little peace and too much war,but if we all do a little to make another person's life better then there's hope.
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Thursday, December 23, 2010

Astronomers Find First Evidence Of Other Universes

Not from the National Enquirer or World News Weekly, but from MIT...

"Our cosmos was "bruised" in collisions with other universes. Now astronomers have found the first evidence of these impacts in the cosmic microwave background."

See the full article here.

Isn't science wonderful!

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Sam Smith, '07

Sam Smith, '07, star of a couple of Nora School Photography Class videos, now appears in his own show here. Now studying at the Art Institute of Chicago, he goes by the name of Harvey Moon.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Gettysburg

Walked the Gettysburg battlefield this weekend, camping with some old friends. Yes, it was 14 degrees Friday night, but nonetheless good for my soul (if not my cough). On a quiet Saturday in December it's hard to imagine the scene 147 years ago when thousands fought and died on these fields. The nature of warfare was so different from today, yet young men and women still fight and die so that others may enjoy a better life. If only we civilians living comfortably behind the front lines were willing to make some type of sacrifice in their support. Instead, we fuss about our taxes and the price of gas.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Giving Thanks

From our pre-Thanksgiving alumni/student/faculty dinner today...

May all beings have happiness and the causes of happiness.

May all beings be free from sorrow and the causes of sorrow.

May all never be separated from the sacred happiness which is sorrowless.

May all live in equanimity, without attachment or aversion, believing in the equality of all that lives.

- Traditional Buddhist prayer

I hope that you and your family have a happy and restful Thanksgiving weekend.

Friday, November 19, 2010

The Mirror

Our Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools Accreditation Team is here this week, looking at the self-study we've conducted over the past year and our plans for the next seven years. Looking at ourselves in the mirror has, as always, been invaluable in terms of analyzing our strengths and weaknesses and planning our work on the latter. The team will give us fresh eyes on the work that we do, and will hold up the mirror for us, and help us see ourselves more clearly. We're grateful for their time, thoughtfulness, and hard work.

Friday, November 05, 2010

Mr. Happy

No, not about the election, but about all the kids who made the honor roll this quarter. (I think I'll be focusing closer to home over the next two years.) Almost half our students had all A's and B's, and four of these had all A's. Running an analysis of homework completion vs. GPA for the first quarter, it's notable that of those who completed 90% of their homework (averaged across all classes) all had a GPA above 3.0. Of these, 17 of the 21 had GPA's above 3.5. Conversely, of those who did less than 80% of their homework, all had a GPA lower than 2.5. We're having nice lunches at Vicino Ristourante next door with the honor rollees and their advisors, all of whom worked very hard over the past two months to reach this academic accomplishment.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Dr. Doom

The convergence of today's Washington Post story on BMW's hiring practices with the book I'm currently reading, Robert Reich's Locked In The Cabinet, and an interview with Fareed Zakaria last night, has me feeling pretty blue this rainy Wednesday morning. The Post story describes how the demand for jobs in the US has folks, many of whom had once had salaried positions, lining up to earn $15 an hour at a BMW plant in South Carolina. This is half of what German BMW workers earn, making the US a low cost provider of labor to the automaker. What our corporations did in moving jobs overseas to low wage countries is now happening to us.

Robert Reich's memoir of his time as Secretary of Labor during the Clinton administration is eerily reminiscent of the issues we face today. As Labor Secretary from 1993-96, Reich pushed the administration to invest in education and training as one way of dealing with the increasing income disparity between the top 5% and the bottom 40% of wage earners. With NAFTA, outsourcing and globalization put those bottom 40% of earners in jeapordy of having no jobs at all, never mind minimum wage jobs. Reich's goals were frustrated by the takeover of Congress by the Gingrich forces in 1994 and Clinton's subsequent placing of deficit reduction as a higher priority than workforce investment. Fifteen years later the problem is, if anything, even worse. It's interesting to read Reich's frustration at being called a "socialist" for putting the interests of people ahead of the interests of corporations.

Finally, Zakaria made a comment last night that really resonated... that we may have finally found the genetic flaw in democracy, that it is incapable of putting long term interests ahead of immediate gratification. Certainly we have heard this since 1980, that we can have our cake and eat it too! Deficits and spending don't matter when it's corporations getting the breaks, but they do matter when Democrats are in control. The cycle seems to be swinging ever more quickly however, as our Attention Deficit society demands quick solutions to systemic problems, which can only be solved through means that society will not accept or have the patience to see through to completion. Is this what Rome was like at the end? Yup, it's a gloomy Wednesday morning all right!

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Ariana Remembrance

The Nora School Community will hold a Remembrance of Ariana's friendship this Friday at 2:00 pm. Current students, parents, and members of the class of 2010 and their parents are all welcome to attend.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Ariana Kosok, '10

August 7, 1992 - September 18, 2010

A life well lived, but far too short, Ariana passed away yesterday of a blot clot that traveled to her heart. Ariana was a kind and caring member of the Nora community, frequently bringing cupcakes and other home-baked goods for her classmates. She was a gifted photographer and artist, seen here with her award at the Washington School of Photography High School exhibit last December. Please keep Karl and Emily in your thoughts and prayers during this difficult time.

Sunday, September 05, 2010

Why Nora will always remain a non-profit school.

Only one motive... meeting the needs of the student. Does having investors and shareholders, expecting a return, skew things? Watch the video and decide for yourself!

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

When Ideas Have Sex

The payoff really comes at the end, when IQ comes up... some real food for thought as we think about educating those who'll be paying our Social Security in 2040!

Friday, August 20, 2010

Does the Internet make us stoopid?

Or do we accomplish this all by ourselves?

Eighteen-percent of our fellow Americans believe that President Obama is a Muslim according to a report from the Pew Research Center. Not that there would be anything wrong with a Muslim (or a Jew, or a Buddhist, or an atheist) being president, but Obama has publicly proclaimed his Christian faith repeatedly over the past several years. This 18% represents an increase in that belief over the past two years. We also know from the report that beliefs about Obama's religion track people's political assessment of him: 2/3 who think he's a Muslim disapprove of his presidency.

Lest we think stupidity is related to one's political beliefs or the crazy web sites one reads, the Gallup organization polled Americans and came up with the following:
-24% of Americans do not know the country from which America gained independence in 1776;
-18% believe that the sun revolves around the earth (maybe the same 18%?).

Ahhh, this is why we still need schools, with actual sane, smart adults talking with children about history, science, philosophy, thinking, and the evaluation of all the sources of our knowledge.

And why we need small schools in particular, where we have time to talk about these things without worrying about Annual Yearly Progress.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Remember Haiti

From photographer Ryan Booth on Scott Kelby's blog about his current trip in Haiti: "I say all of this only to remind us that in so many parts of the world tonight families will sleep on the ground without shelter. For many, clean water is a rarity at best. Many are hungry. Many are sick. The world is an impossibly beautiful place and photography is such a conduit to truly seeing that beauty. But the truth is that when you really start to see, and I mean really, really open your eyes to the world around you, you find dichotomy. Beauty and suffering seem to co-mingle. I only bring this up so that we may not forget the silent majority in this world that lack even the most basic of elements. Water. Food. Shelter." While Pakistan is in the news, and we've moved on from Haiti, it's important to remember that so many people in the world are suffering even as we deal with our brief (2-3 days) losses of power and suffer only traffic jams caused by flooding.

Dont Forget Haiti: Sidewalks from Ryan Booth on Vimeo.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Good news for those of us 'approaching' middle age...

A new book by science writer Barbara Strauch examines a number of studies that show our brains reaching their peak between our 40's and 60's. In The Secret Life of the Grown Up Brain, Strauch looks at the Seattle Longitudinal Study, among others, which followed 6,000 people since 1956 and tested them every 7 years. It found that the study participants did better on a variety of cognitive tasks in middle age than they did in their 20's, particularly in vocabulary, spatial skills, verbal memory, and solving problems. Alas, we did less well with math and perceptual reflexes.

Strauch is the health and medical science editor and a deputy science editor at The New York Times. She previously wrote about teenage brains in The Primal Teen: What the New Discoveries About the Teenage Brain Tell Us About Our Kids, another good read for parents.

Monday, August 09, 2010

Another Historical Note

Thirty-six year ago today (gulp) Richard Nixon resigned the Presidency. This was the theater that dominated my own high school years, and what we thought was the culmination of years of partisan bickering may have only been the precursor to today's gridlock in Washington. That notwithstanding, Richard Nixon has been a fascinating case in leadership for my generation. Even having achieved his lifelong goal of becoming president was not enough to fill the needs in his psyche, which raises the question, how do our own goals fulfill the needs in our own psyches? Whether material possessions, wealth, grade point averages, college acceptances, advanced degrees, titles, our childrens' success, do we recognize when our own strivings have become fulfilled, or destructive, as Richard Nixon's did? A fascinating character!

Friday, August 06, 2010

Hiroshima Anniversary

“Nothing ever goes away until it has taught us what we need to know.” -Pema Chodron

Sixty-five years ago today 140,000 people were killed in Hiroshima, Japan, a fact little noticed in today's news. Given the state of the world today, one must ask what we've learned as a species. We don't even have the attention span to acknowledge the anniversary of one of the central events of the 20th century.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Not everyone

I'm reminded after shopping for a new cell phone (now much more than a phone) that not everyone was reading books instead of Nooks... my wife was checking her email and surfing the web at the beach. I was just surfing the waves, which was much more relaxing!


Rock Harbor, Cape Cod, at sunset, July 18, 2010.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Keeping up

Just back from vacation on Cape Cod, visiting dad, kind of sad, but not so bad...
with a couple of rounds of golf (9-holes: 42, 51), and a few trips to the beach...
while walking the beach, noticed many folks reading... perhaps not a dying skill...
also noticed zero Kindles, zero Nooks, zero iPads...
it might have been 1965.

Here's Seagull Beach, South Yarmouth, last Friday, in a 1965 sort of way.

Thursday, July 08, 2010

Later start times for high school improve conduct, grades and even save lives.

No news to us here at Nora, but a recent study published in the July issue of the Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine reports that giving adolescents an extra 30 minutes in the morning leads to more alertness, better moods, lower levels of tardiness and healthier eating (at least at breakfast). As part of the study, seven high schools in Minneapolis began classes at 8:40 am (like Nora) instead of at 7:15 am (like MCPS). The University of Minnesota study found that students at these seven schools got more sleep and missed fewer classes among other benefits. They even turned out to be safer drivers! For more on adolescents and sleep, visit the National Sleep Foundation summary.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Congratulations Class of 2010!

You worked hard to get to this day. You are survivors, having not only survived middle and high schools that were big, impersonal, and bureaucratic, but also having survived Nora, which is no easy task. There is often a misconception that being in a small school like Nora is easy, because the teachers know you, and work with you, and give you lots of chances, and all of that is true. But equally true is that going to a small school is hard, because the teachers know you, and work with you, and give you lots of chances. There’s nowhere to hide if you haven’t done the reading, your math homework always gets checked, and when it’s your turn to make a presentation there’s no one to hand it off to. Your parents hear if you missed the trip to the Corcoran and they know when you’re not doing your Pre-Calculus homework. Lorraine notices when you show up late to Physics and Patrick notices when you didn’t turn in your Chemistry lab. It’s tough to stand up to that amount of scrutiny, but you have. You survived not only the classrooms, but also the whitewater rafting of your sophomore year, the high ropes and goal setting of your junior retreat, and writing recommendations and sharing your life stories on the senior retreat. You finished your senior community service (late though it may have been for some of you) and you learned to balance two of the most precious gifts of adulthood: freedom and responsibility. The freedom part is easy, every teenager gets that. The responsibility part is a lot harder. Many adults have yet to figure it out, as witnessed by the various crises on Wall Street and in the Gulf of Mexico. Learning when to have fun and when to work, when to sleep in and when to get up, finding where the boundaries are, and which ones it was safe to cross, these are things that your parents and teachers have to juggle every day. You managed, if imperfectly, the four lessons with which we start every school year.
These same lessons will stand you in good stead as you move forward into your adult lives: Show Up On Time. Do Your Work. Care For Your Health. Treat People Respectfully. These fourteen words are perhaps the most important lesson you take from Nora, because you have to keep living them the rest of your life if you wish to be successful.
Business writer Seth Godin posits that “small is the new big,” and as graduates of one of the smallest schools in the country, you should understand that it’s a big accomplishment to graduate from a small school. While it’s a small accomplishment to find a clique of people you get along with in a big school, it’s a big accomplishment to get along, intimately, with people who annoy you and get on your nerves in a small school. It’s a small accomplishment to hide in the back of a big classroom and avoid the teacher’s radar and do the minimum necessary to get by, but it’s a big accomplishment to push through your resistance and actually do the work. You know that in Chris’s small classroom you’d better have done the reading so you can participate in the discussion. Taking this a bit further, keep in mind that while we all have our daily frustrations, by doing the small kindnesses to others we can, collectively, make a big difference in the world.
Good luck Class of 2010! Your small school made a big difference for you, and in any number of small ways you have made a big difference in your peers and teachers. Now take this out to the world!

Sunday, June 06, 2010

Looking Back

With semester exams ending Friday, we've almost arrived at the end of the school year. Our students have done a fine job this year, and I am very proud of their accomplishments. On Tuesday the members of the Class of 2010 will receive their diplomas and head off to a variety of colleges and Americorps as they begin their adult lives. We wish them the best.

As I look back on the year, I am, as always, amazed at the breadth of activity that goes on here at Nora. Beyond the four quarters of academic classes, the eight days of community service, the soccer, basketball, volleyball, and softball games (the faculty remained undefeated), we had three poetry readings, four parent lectures, college night, the photography festival, the arts festival, the alumni Thanksgiving feast, assemblies on drugs, sexuality, and a host of other topics, the guacamole challenge, and the prom. We've gone rock climbing, camping, hiking, whitewater rafting, ice skating at the Archives, and bowling. We've climbed high ropes, walked the Billy Goat trail and braved the haunted forest. We've had trips to the Newseum, the visionary art museum, the Round House theater, the Portrait Gallery and National Gallery of Art, the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia, and the Vietnam memorials. In addition to our breaks in December and April, we also survived Snowmageddon!

I'm continually amazed by what happens at this small school, where the external activities are matched only by the internal growth that our students experience during their time with us.

I offer a big "Thank You" to the dedicated Nora teachers for the caring, nurturing, and support you offer our students in their journey through adolescence. Have a great summer!

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Fun and Danger

It's ironic that the sophomore class went whitewater rafting without incident (well, a bit of swimming) while after yesterday's softball game two students needed to see a doctor following an outfield collision! The teenage brain seeks excitement, which leads to many risky behaviors. We try to structure some of that thrill-seeking into activities like sports, but far too many kids have no outlets other than drugs, sex, and other, unsupervised, dangerous activities. Whitewater rafting and softball are no cures, but they are alternatives. I wish every kid in high school had the opportunities that our kids have to challenge themselves in ways that are healthy and (relatively) safe.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Budget cuts and tuition.

Prince George's County in Maryland is cutting hundreds of jobs, increasing class size, reducing transportation, and requiring unpaid furloughs. Times are tough, but for all the politicians' lip service to improving education, when it comes to raising taxes to pay for things, the will just isn't there.

I'm sympathetic, as, on a much smaller scale, our Board has to make similar decisions each year. The only way to improve "productivity" (getting more done with the same resources) is to increase class size, as education is a people intensive business. So do we increase class size, cut programs, or increase tuition to what it costs to operate our program? In an independent school, our reason for existing is our program, so while increasing tuition is never ideal, it sure beats cutting our program. Of course, our families have the choice to return to public school if they don't feel that what we're doing is of value. I imagine that the parents in Prince George's County will be looking for safe havens, which is good news for Queen Anne School, Bishop McNamara High School, and other private schools. Not so great for folks who can't afford them.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Social media research

Just stumbled across an interesting lady, danah boyd (spelling is correct, you'll have to see her blog to understand). As we wrestle with kids and social media/web 2.0 it's nice to see some real research going into it's effects. Assignment books being so 20th century, if we put assignments on Google Calendar will kids check their text messages from us? Looking at her research and career also reminds me of why I had no desire to spend my life in academia (at least at that level). Hands on applications are better for many adults as well as adolescents (or perhaps adults who are still a bit adolescent?)!

Wednesday, April 07, 2010

Good news for photographers


Apropos of nothing, the National [U.S.] Park Service has announced that all 392 national parks will have free admission during National Park Week, April 17 to 25. A good week to head off to Great Falls or White Oak Canyon (in Shenandoah) to shoot waterfalls!

Monday, March 29, 2010

Monday, March 22, 2010

Thank goodness, it's finally passed!

For anyone who thinks that having health insurance isn't necessary, take a look at my healthy 18-year-old son's bill for an appendectomy. Even less pretty than his scars!

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Perspective

We live around the little red dot labeled "Sol." This chart was created by Harvard academic Samuel Arbesman. But we should still do our homework, so that someday we can be as smart as Dr. Arbesman! Want more? Read his blog here.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

A new useful tool for school!

Getting caught up on my online reading last weekend, I came across this David Pogue New York Times blog entry on Microsoft's Skydrive service. This is a free 25 GB server share somewhere in the "cloud" where one can store files. This is the perfect solution for Digital Art and Photography classes where large files are created. Rather than save work on a flash drive to bring home, students can save their work on their Skydrive. A related program, SDexplorer, allows one to treat the Skydrive just like a flash drive or a floppy disk, dragging and dropping files from the school or home computer to the Skydrive. A nifty, free, solution to a longtime problem. How nice!

Sunday, March 07, 2010

What the...

In yesterday's Washington Post we learn that Virginia's Attorney General wants state universities to allow discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. "It is my advice that the law and public policy of the Commonwealth of Virginia prohibit a college or university from including 'sexual orientation,' 'gender identity,' 'gender expression,' or like classification as a protected class within its non-discrimination policy absent specific authorization from the General Assembly" says Ken Cuccinelli. Perhaps voters in Virginia deserve the same "information," and Cuccinelli and members of the State Assembly can outline their sexual practices prior to the next election so that everyone is fully informed!

Friday, March 05, 2010

Film

My photography class has been shooting Tri-X the past couple of weeks, getting their hands wet in the darkroom and learning to slowwww down the process of creating photographs. Though several years have gone by since I spent significant (any?) time in the darkroom, I still love the quiet, the smells, the anticipation, the pace, and the unique vision that is part of the experience. So as I wind down from what has been a tough week, I stumble across this, perhaps the best costume ever for a photographic subject. No, it's not Photoshopped. Just don't shoot it on Tri-X!

Monday, March 01, 2010

Because life is a multiple choice test.

There's an interesting article in last week's Washington Post about the Commonwealth of Virginia curtailing the use of portfolio assessments in lieu of the multiple choice Standards of Learning test. But what is the real issue? One quote gives a clue: "Portfolios can be valuable assessment tools within classrooms, but they are problematic for a large-scale accountability program, in which cost-effectiveness, consistency and validity are paramount, Wright said. Teachers spend many hours compiling portfolios, and local school systems are responsible for scoring the tests." The emphases are mine. Scoring the SOL multiple choice test takes seconds, and requires a machine rather than a teacher. So the implication is that the multiple choice test is more valid, because so much of life is like a multiple choice test (sarcasm mine). Cost effectiveness rates only a passing mention. Perhaps the Virginia legislature should have their effectiveness measured by a multiple choice assessment rather than by an evaluation of the body of their work. It might raise their scores.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Stuck. Twice.

So two weeks ago we were stuck in a hospital room in
Miami (see previous entry), and this week we're stuck at home. Our personal teenager, not allowed to do any heavy lifting, cannot help shovel the worst snowstorm in DC history. Does a picture truly speak a thousand words? What a difference two weeks makes!


More snowpics at my Flickr Snow Gallery.

Saturday, January 30, 2010

The first forty years of parenting are always the hardest.

My wife and I, having shepherding two kids through visits to various colleges throughout the northeast (cold, damp, gray), finally have one who wants to go someplace interesting. His application filed, he now needs to audition at the Frost School of Music at the University of Miami. Great! we think, a long weekend trip to visit the school, audition, and see a part of the country we've not yet toured. What could be better than Miami in January? Our itinerary set, we're headed for "the U", South Beach, and the Everglades on our latest 2-1/2 day ADD tour. Jeff auditions at the college, and we have a nice dinner after walking around South Beach and dipping our toes in the ocean. Then...

... the phone rings at 10:45 pm, with our college sophomore daughter bringing news that she's broken down outside Gettysburg with a flat tire, a dead battery, no cell phone, no AAA card, and only her laptop with Skype with which to communicate. Then...

... Jeff is having cramps and pain in our hotel room. First we think it's gas, but after a couple of hours we realize that we need professional treatment, so off to the emergency room we go. Chris, meanwhile, has gotten our AAA number, and used Skype to get a tow truck to get her back to Carlisle, PA. After five hours in the emergency room, Jeff is diagnosed with acute appendicitis, which will require immediate surgery. Then...

... after the surgery, which took a bit longer than normal because his appendix was tucked up high, touching his liver, his temperature shoots up, as does his white blood cell count. No trip to the Everglades today! Then...

...we wait, day after day, for some information from a doctor. The surgeon drops by once each day sometime between 11 am to 11 pm, while the infectious disease doctor makes her visit between 9am and 2am! Communication is difficult, and there seems to be little sense of urgency. As one IV after another is hooked up, we have little knowledge of what progress is being made.
Finally, on Friday, a week after arriving, Jeff is released, and we can try to figure out how to get home before the snowstorm hits and has us diverted to Newark!

A few lessons here: hire good people so you don't have to be at work for the place to run well, be flexible, the DC area is blessed with great medical care compared to some other parts of the country, a good health insurance plan is critical (come on, Barak), and paradise isn't so great if you're spending it in a hospital room.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

More bad electronic news

Our kids' brains are turning to mush! Well, not exactly, but from a story in The New York Times:

"The average young American now spends practically every waking minute — except for the time in school — using a smart phone, computer, television or other electronic device, according to a new study from the Kaiser Family Foundation... And because so many of them are multitasking — say, surfing the Internet while listening to music — they pack on average nearly 11 hours of media content into that seven and a half hours.

"While most of the young people in the study got good grades, 47 percent of the heaviest media users — those who consumed at least 16 hours a day — had mostly C’s or lower, compared with 23 percent of those who typically consumed media three hours a day or less. The heaviest media users were also more likely than the lightest users to report that they were bored or sad, or that they got into trouble, did not get along well with their parents and were not happy at school.

"The report is based on a survey of more than 2,000 students in grades 3 to 12 that was conducted from October 2008 to May 2009.

"On average, young people spend about two hours a day consuming media on a mobile device, the study found. They spend almost another hour on “old” content like television or music delivered through newer pathways like the Web site Hulu or iTunes. Youths now spend more time listening to or watching media on their cellphones, or playing games, than talking on them."

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

We've got ours, too bad for you!

The election results in my home state of Massachusetts yesterday seem to bode ill for the passage of health care reform. Of course, Massachusetts went through this exercise half a decade ago, and all state residents are now covered by a plan similar to the one pending in Congress. If I seem to have a couple of dogs in this fight, I do. At the Nora School, our health plan costs have been going up 20% each year, necessitating benefit cuts on our teachers to maintain reasonable costs. My adult son, the genetic inheritor of a pre-existing condition (type 1 diabetes), cannot get health insurance unless he works for an employer who offers it. Or moves to Massachusetts.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

In case there was any doubt that our future is electronic.

Here's a 13-minute video by Alex Roman created almost entirely in a computer. There are a few digital photos used as part of it (the Milwaukee Art Museum has those cool wings), but the music and almost all the architecture and creatures were created in a computer. One photographer referred to it as a "soak," and I'd agree. Watch it full screen with the TV off and the lights out!

The Third & The Seventh from Alex Roman on Vimeo.

Homework help

A couple of new websites have crossed my browser recently which may be of use to students and teachers. The New York City Library has set up a deep website with lots of resources and live help between 4:30pm and 6:30pm every day. It includes an interactive whiteboard where students can draw their geometry or algebra problems and get live help. My understanding is that the service is not limited to students in New York City.
A second site requires payment, but tutor.com promises immediate and live help in almost any subject. It might be just the thing at 10pm when that quadratic equation won't fall into place! The pricing is reasonable (I've paid 3x this amount for a live tutor), but the 24/7 aspect is what really sells it.
I'd love feedback from anyone who uses either of these sites.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

A new generation gap

The New York Times described on Saturday a new generation gap, between people born in '80s, '90s, and Oughts. Those in their twenties spend more time talking on the phone and using email, while their younger siblings (our current students) spend more time texting, and instant messaging. The author describes young children referring to the Amazon Kindle as "daddys' book" and drawing a finger across a computer screen expecting a response like the iPhone. All of which points up the importance of us Digital Immigrants to remain curious and keep on learning. Though I'm still not ready to tweet!