Trick or treat! Halloween is finally here, and I have a special treat—no tricks—for you.
Ben and Jerry's for everyone! Okay, I can't send you a pint of ice cream, as much as I'd like to.
Instead, you'll have to make do with its "sweet" Halloween Web site. Start by playing some of the fun games. Boogie Bones is my favorite, but that's just because I like to make noise.
Komando.com, Website for The Kim Komando Radio Show?, Kool sites
Blogging is different altogether, providing a wonderful balance between putting work out there and developing the practice. Yes, they get to float their young, sometimes inspired work out in the world and see what comes back. They get to read it on the Web, Google themselves, try the writer's life on for size.
Think blogs are a passing fad? Then consider this: A new blog is created every second. There are more than 900,000 blog posts a day. Some two million blogs are updated every week. At this point, I think it's safe to say that blogs are here to stay. As any journalist, politician, or business executive will tell you, a world inhabited by content-producing ordinary people—also known as bloggers—means big changes. That's soon to be true for educators, as well.
Blog Revolution: Expanding classroom horizons with Web logs.
The keenest sorrow is to recognize ourselves as the sole cause of all our adversities.
Sophocles
On October 12, Blackboard and WebCT announced plans to merge. As we at WebCT have been talking with many customers over the last few days and during EDUCAUSE 2005, a number of important questions have been asked over and over again. We have developed this article as a resource to help ensure that you receive answers to your top-of-mind questions.
Welcome to our Contemporary online teaching case site. It features the work of over 70 Deakin University staff in developing and using new media and online technologies to foster student learning. The site was developed through University strategic teaching and learning innovation funding. It has been designed to help teachers work creatively and productively in their online teaching.
This post by George Siemens really resonated down to my toes. I've gotten to the point where I've started to feel guilty about the way I read these days. My wife gives me grief because I don't spend as much time with books as I used to. And in some ways I miss that. But what I'm finding is that these new reading skills that I'm developing are necessary for the world in which I'm living.
While USD's increased enrollment came primarily from the larger than usual freshman class, the flexibility distance education affords has also helped to raise student numbers. This year, 2,271 students are participating in distance education, increasing enrollment in the program 16 percent.
The subject of what was a good blogging platform for K-12 students was raised during our EdTech Talk brainstorm last night, and James jumped right in and offered to create a safe blogging environment for students.
This new US Census Bureau Internet Use report (16 page PDF) came out this month... it is well written and interesting, but the data is from 2003.
There are many ways to measure improved student achievement, but it is clear that improved achievement can be defined differently from student to student. Below are comments from Cyber School students describing how this alternative method of learning has helped them.
“It has made my school life so much easier and I’m understanding it better through cyber school than when I took it in school for one month.”
“It’s helping to advance the students in their skills with technology. It’s giving students an opportunity to take part in something they want to do, not something they have to do.”
“I find that it makes you more independent and you need to learn the material and you have to keep up to date.”
“It is a new way of learning and introducing people. It also gives people confidence to express their opinions and ask questions because they aren’t being judged by appearance.”
“Cyber School uses the Internet as a medium for education. Students who take cyber classes realize that Internet can be used for more than chatting or banking. Cyber School opens the new ways for students to be involved in the high-tech age. Internet technology opens a new world, gives endless opportunities, and reaffirms what education is about.”
“Cyber School has given students so many opportunities to be involved. Through the Chapel, students are able to indulge in discussions on heated topics in today’s society, as well as discuss issues that hit them close to home. This gives students a way to involve themselves in current events and also gives them an opportunity to voice themselves in a situation when they normally wouldn’t. Through the Student Lounge, students are given an opportunity to meet new people, make friends, and lend a helping hand to those in need. Last year, there was a group of students who decided to really get their hands dirty and organized several social functions such as bowling nights for the students and staff.”
Your most unhappy customers are your greatest source of learning.
Bill Gates, Business @ The Speed of Thought
I am trying to put together a blog roll of which has a list of blog whose focus or authors are from the k-12 Online schools group. These blogs will be listed on the Association of Online K-12 schools. If you know of such a blog let us know via email (cyber@scs.sk.ca) or comment to this posting. There is no charge for this listing, we would just like to add blogs to the list of resources available to our members.
Please feel free to spread the word about this, so we can populate this blog roll.
Association of Online K-12 schools url: http://www.scs.sk.ca/cyber/aok12s/home.htm
I've just been over at Will Richardson's blog - reading his post: What do we do about that? - which is essentially challenging educators or perhaps questioning why we aren't paying more attention to how students are using technology and working with them (not against them) - including guiding them on some of the issues of cheating, copyright, and how to use other peoples' ideas to shape and inform their own!
This would be amusing if it wasn't so silly: Blogging on the Clock - "Blog this: U.S. workers in 2005 will waste the equivalent of 551,000 years reading blogs."
In related news, workers will continue to waste even more time performing functions such as breathing.
This is Mr. Redknap's Grade 4 homework board at Pierre Elliott Trudeau Public School in Oshawa. This page is a daily list of activities that we have worked on in class, as well as a list of reminders or events that are coming up. Any item on the Grade 4 homework board that was not completed during class time will be considered homework for that night.
Mr. Redknap's Grade 4 Class, Oshawa - Grade 4 Homework Board
E-learning as we know it has been around for ten years or so. During that time, it has emerged from being a radical idea—the effectiveness of which was yet to be proven—to something that is widely regarded as mainstream. It's the core to numerous business plans and a service offered by most colleges and universities.
And now, e-learning is evolving with the World Wide Web as a whole and it's changing to a degree significant enough to warrant a new name: E-learning 2.0.
For about as long as I can remember, the cult of officialdom has grated on my nerves. Why is it that we’re only supposed to accept information, perspectives, and art from experts who bear certain stamps of approval? (Certain degrees, job titles, social position, mainstream media recognition, awards, etc.)
Contentious ? Amateurs Deserve Respect: Evelyn Rodriguez Nails It
People everywhere confuse what they read in newspapers with news.
Freedom of the press is limited to those who own one.
A. J. Liebling
Looking back at the last five years of building a successful cyber school. What has it taught us…
Before you begin…Plan Plan ..then plan some more.
An example.
It is necessary to plan for the future when we are looking at the development of a Cyber school, simple things like the name of the school can caused a real problem due to the fact, Banners, colours, videos and other publications will need to be developed and changing of the school's name can mean a lot of unnecessary work.
Have a common vision
An example.
When planning for a cyber school project it is important to think towards the future and not based your decisions on what would be the easiest. Work toward a common vision and empower the people involved to become part of the process. You have to be willing to fail in order to succeed. A successful cyber school model will require flexibility with some of the traditional routines, policies and perceptions. Research other models, but take the best of each and make them fit your different demographics, technical infrastructures, personal, money and vision. It is natural to try to make the cyber school fit into the traditional model of school administration and teaching. However it is like trying to put a round orange into a square hole. After you have forced it into the space it is no longer an orange.
Strong administration must recognize the needs.
An example
Allowing the cyber school to be all it can be and then build the supports for it to function. A wise man once said that the administration’s job is to support and adapt to the needs of the school, teachers and students and in the cyber school model it definitely applies. Exact quote was “ No matter how strange the request for assistance might be, it is what the person needs at that time and it is the administration’s job to find a way to support that person.”
Support and empower the team
An example
It is essential to have faith in the team that is given the task of developing the school. That does not mean that you do not evaluation of the project. It is still necessary to have a group of people who will try to predict the problems and solve them as they come up. If most of your planning and decision making is governed by making sure that the impact will not be too great if the project fails then you are planning for failure. You must plan for success.
You will make mistakes, embrace it.
An example
The first run will not be perfect but it will get better because of empowered people. On-line teaching is very similar to being a first year teacher. Mistakes will be made and the teachers will learn from them and make it better. But they must be given the freedom to make those mistakes and learn from them.
Just a few hints
I was going through some of my notes from the first couple of years of the Saskatoon Catholic Cyber School and ran across this list of questions.
I thought it might be of interest to some if I tried to answer them now after five years of administrating the school.
How many students do you need in a course before you split it into two sections.
Answer...60 students. An interactive online course will take a teacher two hours to answer the emails and bulletin board questions.
How many students is a full classes?
Answer...30 students is full. More than that stretches the teachers ability to answer all the questions.
Do we have a waiting list?
Answer...Any students over 30 go on a waiting list.
Do we allow full time cyber students?
Answer...Yes but only under special situations...face to face schools still have something to offer students. A combination of online and face to face is the best situation.
School Colours?
Answer...You need to approach the cyber school like you would a face to face school..so yes.
Sports teams?
Answer...When the numbers get high enough it will be necessary to address this question.
Do we have a priority list of which course we should develop next?
Answer...many factors play into this question. It is important to decided what should be the next course(s) developed, I have found a good way to do this is ask the cyber students.
Do we allow people to audit the course?
Answer...No..to build community within a course it is important that all students participate, students who audit tend not to be active.
Teacher/Parent Interviews...necessary or not?
Answer...Is it necessary no, because of the ability for a parent to always see what, how and when the child is working.
How many courses should a teacher/developer do?
Answer...One until it has been taught for 3-4 years. The work of developing a course is never finished and if a teacher/developer does more than one they tend not to get the first course to as high a level as a person who only has to concentrate on one.
How many courses should a teacher/developer teach?
Answer...as many as they develop.
Do we need a counselor on-line?
Answer...yes as you get more and more student who are becoming involved in the cyber school and do not have access to a counsellor in the face to face schools.
Do we allow students to retake classes...do we charge them twice?
Answer...How and when they drop would factor into this...but yes and yes.
"The kids are posting questions and answers to tests in between periods so kids later in the day know what's coming. What do we do about that?"
When students post their faces, personal diaries and gossip on Web sites like Myspace.com and Xanga.com, it is not simply harmless teen fun, according to one Sussex County Catholic school principal.
It's an open invitation to predators and an activity that Pope John XIII Regional High School in Sparta will no longer tolerate, the Rev. Kieran McHugh told a packed assembly of 900 high school students two weeks ago.
APP.COM v4.0 - Principal curbs kids' Internet activity | Asbury Park Press Online
And I thought I was hard on journalists who don’t yet understand why weblogs are becoming so important to media – and why they should learn how to read blogs, follow them, and search them.
Contentious ? Journalists and Weblogs: Three (No, Four) Basic Attitudes
USA Today has come out with a new survey - apparently, three out of every four people make up 75% of the population.
David Letterman
US comedian & television host (1947 - )
I hope this was done as a joke.
Today I was searching through the list of items that were entered into the search on the cyber school home page. This one made me laugh.
What time is dismissal?
I normally look through the phrases asked and try to make sure our FAQ page contains most of the answers. Being a cyber school made this question funny.
Anyways...I laughed.
Jacob Miller’s gym class isn’t about push-ups or running laps or dodgeball. It’s about computers and Frisbee.
Last year, as the tall, cheerful South High School senior neared graduation, he was finding it hard to complete his physical education requirement while balancing studies, sports and a social life. Then Miller discovered that through a new online class he could fulfill his phys-ed credit after school by playing on the Ultimate Frisbee team.
MSNBC - High school offers online gym class
High school offers online gym class
Not much of what I remember has anything to do with content. I mean I remember some of the assignments and exercises, sure. But what I remember most, and the reason they're still with me today, was their passion for learning, their willingness to go beyond the text or topic, their senses of humor.
My EFL students are repeat victims of institutional violence. When given the opportunity to take control of their learning, they get nervous, confused, and irritable; and like sailors on a sinking ship, they look desperately for rescue. From the very beginning of their formal education, they have rarely been encouraged to think for themselves, take a critical stance, and choose the direction and pace of their learning. They’ve been marginalized, homogenized, standardized, and processed. They sport student numbers and grades like cattle sport brands and bells; and like all domesticated livestock, they are completely dependent on their owners for sustenance.
Not all colleges and universities see online classes as the holy grail.
Back when she earned her master's degree in occupational therapy, Jeanne M. Morin had to travel to New Hampshire every fourth weekend for the course.
Now she has earned a doctorate in the field from Florida, but the course was offered online, so she was able to continue teaching full time at American International College and living in Holyoke.
If self-disclosure between teacher and student can boost learning outcomes, blogging may be its most effective mode.
A sense of humor is part of the art of leadership, of getting along with people, of getting things done.
Dwight D. Eisenhower
It is in french, and it is addictive...so do not go to this link unless you have some time to waste.
Blogs are NOT a valid school subject. Blogs are a sloppy communications technique, rarely containing anything really worth while, and rank just one notch above text messaging on cell phones. We've got kids who can't add, can't read, and can't write in real sentences, and wouldn't know a verb if it bit them. There's where the real education effort needs to be placed. Sure, that's not 'fun', and kids do want to play rather than learn, and teachers seem to go out of their way to avoid being actual teachers.
The Virtual Learning Environment - which also lets parents keep an eye on their children's progress in an online grade book - allows youngsters to log on to do their homework, with teachers marking the work and giving feedback online.
Here's a different type of Auricle post from my normal offering. As well as being a repository of information I've started to gather, the post is also a kind of thought lab I'm using to articulate and test out ideas, issues, and concerns related to benchmarking and e-learning. The post is a work-in-progress and so is pretty unrefined, but it may still be of some use to others contemplating work in this area.
Teaching is more difficult than learning because what teaching calls for is this: to let learn. The real teacher, in fact, lets nothing else be learned than learning. His conduct, therefore, often produces the impression that we properly learn nothing from him, if by "learning" we now suddenly understand merely the procurement of useful information.
Martin Heidegger
When administrators of virtual schools evaluate a teacher, they can’t walk out of their offices, stroll into the classroom, and take a seat at the back to observe the day’s lesson. But they can go online and get megabytes of vital information about the teacher.
"We have shifted the emphasis from content alone to making use of the content" on the principle that "knowledge can be created in the classroom and doesn't just have to come from the teacher."
This DEST website contains a comprehensive database of information about resources, policies and materials for drug education and incident management.
For kids, technology isn’t just a productivity tool. It’s a way of expressing themselves. If they’re buying a computer, they’re more likely to care about what it looks like on the outside or if it is beefy enough to run the newest computer games.
To improve student health and enhance parent understanding, the Carrollton-Farmers Branch Independent School District (ISD) in Carrollton, Texas, has put $95,000 into developing a program to give parents, students, and other community stakeholders a new way to learn about the foods offered in its schools: a virtual cafeteria.
eSchool News online - 'Virtual cafeteria' teaches good eating habits
One of a weblog's great benefits is that it essentially frees you from "Web design." You write a paragraph, click a button, and it's posted on the Internet. No need for visual design, page design, interaction design, information architecture, or any programming or server maintenance.
Weblogs make having a simple website much easier, and as a result, the number of people who write for the Web has exploded. This is a striking confirmation of the importance of ease of use.
Weblogs' second benefit is that they're a Web-native content genre: they rely on links, and short postings prevail. You don't have to write a full article or conduct original research or reporting. You can simply find something interesting on another site and link to it, possibly with commentary or additional examples. Obviously, this is much easier than running a conventional site, and again indicates the benefits of lowering the barriers to computer use.
Weblog Usability: The Top Ten Design Mistakes (Jakob Nielsen's Alertbox)
Leading change requires courage, vision, and across-the-board buy-in. Transition and change are not easy, even in organizations that trade in change and innovation. Anxiety and tensions abound, and a bureaucratic, "management by committee" approach may cause the organization to flounder. Centralized control is one response to change; radical decentralization is another. In either case, one fairly traditional response to ambiguity is to look for a single charismatic leader to emerge.
E-Learning Queen: Charismatic Leadership in the E-Learning Organization
What are defining characteristics of vision in an e-learning organization? With all the talk about vision and mission, are people really taking the time to speculate on what that might look like?
E-Learning Queen: Vision and Leadership in the E-Learning Organization
"The key inhibitors were the complexity or perceived complexity of computers, a lack of resources, and the amount of time it takes to learn new skills,
Report finds teachers in tech gap - Education News - theage.com.au
Like other teachers bringing blogging into the classroom, he thinks the online journals will spark students' enthusiasm for computers, writing and opining.
"They're learning the technical skills, but they're also learning that they have a voice online," he said. "They may be from a tiny town in the middle of nowhere, but they're writing online, people are commenting on it, and they're learning that they have a voice."
With the merger of WebCT and Blackboard the debate about the best LMS is starting to heat up. It is always interesting to read other peoples comments but I find it hard to separate the crap from the pearls of wisdom. Post secondary institutions are searching for something totally different from secondary institutions. Technical support at the levels differs as well. In comparison, post secondary has lots of techies, which makes open source more of a possibility. While secondary needs to have a supported platform for it to be functional.
Comments differ on each of the platforms from the point of view of:
Students
IT personal
Content experts
Administrators
I think many of the systems that are available today are configurable enough that you could use any of them and be successful.
So...am I happy about the merger...maybe...yes...no…heck, I don't know.
My Cyber glasses need a new prescription.
The concept of the "Professional Learning Community," widely promoted by Richard DuFour and others, has reached the evolutionary stage (as so many good ideas do) where some principals and district administrators are imposing the concept from on high, ignoring the key word "community" as they proclaim, "We're doing PLCs." Here's a tale recently shared in the Teacher Leaders Network discussion group.
TLN Teacher Voices: Why Do Professional Learning Communities Fail to Develop?
On a per capita basis, Canada’s e-learning industry is second to none. Approximately 300 companies offer a wide range of e-learning products and services from coast to coast. E-learning is supported by university research and promoted by government agencies, and is increasingly used by Canadian corporations, governments, and educational organizations.
Global Learning FachNews: Infos und News zu E-Learning Markt, Bildungspolitik und Weiterbildung
News, blogger reaction and more on the Blackboard acquisition of WebCT - your one-stop source for all the reaction
Stephen's Web ~ by Stephen Downes ~ Blackboard Acquisition of WebCT
It will be surprising if there is anything much more than a few bug fix releases of WebCT CE6 before the new behemoth platform emerges.
EdTechPost: More on the new behemoth - Timing, Open Source and Interoperability
Home computers are being called upon to perform many new functions, including the consumption of homework formerly eaten by the dog.
Doug Larson
Blackboard and WebCT, leading providers of enterprise software and services to the education industry have announced plans to merge. The announcement was made at October 12th at 4 pm EST in a news release posted on PR News wire.
"I have had experience with both companies and view this merger as combining excellence with excellence to advance the e-Learning industry, I also see this combination as a way to break down barriers across the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and to open the door to new opportunities for collaboration among institutions using different e-learning platforms." - Jack Wilson, President of The University of Massachusetts and current WebCT Vista client.
Many young academics who are thinking about blogging share Black's dilemma. Is it a good idea to blog if you're on the job market or have a nontenured position? Tenured academics who blog face relatively little risk when they express controversial opinions -- they have job protection. It's a different story for academics without tenure who want to blog.
Print: The Chronicle: 10/7/2005: The Blogosphere as a Carnival of Ideas
For some time, I've wondered just how comprehensive that changes in the way that we receive, handle, publish, assess and archive information will be, in terms of the future of universities. Stephen Downes, among others, sometimes seems to suggest that the rationale for higher learning will simply move away from universities, as learning increasing occurs and even is accredited elsewhere.
Abject Learning: A musing with a big hole in the middle of it...
Imagine if every Thursday your shoes exploded if you tied them the usual way. This happens to us all the time with computers, and nobody thinks of complaining.
Jef Raskin, interviewed in Doctor Dobb's Journal
Does it mean we have to leave some of the student control that we had in the face to face environment at the virtual door. In a classroom you have a “control” which allows you as a teacher to enforce some rules that you cannot in an asynchronous virtual classroom.
Statements like:
“Do not search the internet for your answers”
“Do the work by yourself.”
“Work in a silent environment.”
“Make sure you use at least one source of research from a library.”
“This is not an open book test.”
"Do not search the internet for your answer." Will online students follow these instructions and would the teacher know if they did. Could the student go to the library to look up the answers? Most teachers would applaud a student for being so studious.
Do the work yourself, don't ask anyone for help. Would a teacher refuse to help one of their students who asked for help? Why are we threatened if a parent or a friend who has already taken a course sits down beside the students and assists them in completing an assignment? A student who is helped by a teacher should produce a better assignment and learn more; a student who is helped by a parent or a friend should produce a better assignment and learn more. The result is the same, so as teachers why are we more comfortable with the one approach but not with the other?
In the information age it is important for us as teachers to encourage students to utilize as many tools as they can to access the information in the world. The days of memorization and knowing content is an old concept, the ability to find the answer is the new necessary knowledge. As teachers we need to recognize this in the way you design your online courses, if you are making statements like...do not search the internet...do not ask anyone for help... do not search back into your notes while doing this test...you are going to find yourself very frustrated and trying to guess who is following these instructions.
In the online asynchronous virtual classroom only make rules that you as a teacher are capable of enforcing, this means you will have to do some things different than you would in a face to face environment. If you are not doing things differently, then you need to ask yourself; are you really an online line teacher in the information age and are you really preparing your students for the world they are entering?
This podcast addresses the concept of the the inherent technological weaknesses in distributed education.Our programs and courses depend on the reliability of technology that is beyond our reach and out of our control. How reliable is the Internet as an institutional platform? How can new models of distributed education portend better curricula and more flexible courses?
Will video games change the way we learn? We argue here for a particular view of games—and of learning—as activities that are most powerful when they are personally meaningful, experiential, social, and epistemological all at the same time.
One of the oft-cited disadvantages of podcasts is that you can’t really “skim” them – that is, it generally takes 30 minutes of your precious time to listen to a 30-minute podcast.
Contentious ? What Sounds Interesting? Podcasting and Learning Styles
I am ready for real 'news' about the Digital Divide...the same studies from the Pew Internet and American Life Project keep popping up in newspapers (as filler, I suppose). One of the more recent comes from IndyStar.com: "Many hurt by digital divide want to be there, study says". If we depend solely upon the Pew statistics, "32% of american adults remain unconnected from the Internet (narrowly defining what digital divide means)."
Chasing the Dragon's Tale: Is one third of a 'divide' still a 'divide'?
"Kids are bombarded by media," says Blake. "They're completely high tech, and they don't know a different way. When you hand them a book, they're going to say, 'Is this all there is?'"
We're no longer the only teachers our students can have on any particular subject. We're not the only audience for our students' work. We're no longer limited by the four walls of our classrooms. And we're moving toward a time when collaboration will be central to our practice. All of this requires that we cede much of the control over learning to our students, that we act more as connectors to relevant information than distributors of it, that we model the effective consumption and creation of content, and that we focus on the basic skills and ideas of our disciplines in the context of a more individualized, inquiry based model that develops passionate, or as Alan calls them "fearless" learners.
Google wants to connect all of San Francisco to the internet with a free wireless service, creating a springboard for the online search engine leader to leap into the telecommunications industry
Given "hot off the presses" copy of a new Yahoo! study done with Ipsos Insight whose headline conclusion is that 27 percent of the people use RSS but don't know that they're using it.
People Don't Know They're Using RSS. Rebuilding Media: The fate of media
An expert is a person who has made all the mistakes that can be made in a very narrow field.
Niels Bohr
Danish physicist (1885 - 1962)
"The oldies continue to be goodies -- or rather, baddies -- in the list of design stupidities that irked users the most in 2005." Jakob Nielsen, Alertbox, 3 October 2005
What's New at the e-Learning Centre: Top Ten Web Design Mistakes of 2005
Due to the tremendous amount of content and knowledge nearly every company generates, employees often depend on meta data and various search functionality, such as full-text search and retrieval, to find desired information across a variety of content repositories.
The statistics on sanity are that one out of every four Americans is suffering from some form of mental illness. Think of your three best friends. If they're okay, then it's you.
Rita Mae Brown
US author and social activist
We've heard that a million monkeys at a million keyboards could produce the complete works of Shakespeare; now, thanks to the Internet, we know that is not true.
Robert Wilensky, speech at a 1996 conference
commandN is a weekly web news video show that covers technology trends online and offline. We started the show on a Toronto waterfront rock with a PowerBook, an iSight, and Quicktime Broadcaster (and Le Tigre's "Tell you now" as our musical inspiration).
Amber Mac and Mike Lazazzera host the show with Jeff MacArthur (Halifax, NS) as a guest segment producer. Brian McKechnie is our cameraman, post-production editor, and all-around chief rendering champ.
http://commandn.typepad.com/
Students of almost every age are far ahead of their teachers in computer literacy. This is especially true of younger kids with younger parents. So how is this digital revolution affecting education? A binary answer: Not enough. According to a federal study, most schools are essentially unchanged today despite reforms and increased investment in computers.
USNews.com: Mortimer B. Zuckerman: Classroom revolution (10/10/05)
This creates a weather forcast for your home that can be added to your website.TrafficZap Free Traffic Tools
Dr. Watson is a free service to analyze your web page on the Internet. You give it the URL of your page and Watson will get a copy of it directly from the web server. Watson can also check out many other aspects of your site, including link validity, download speed, search engine compatibility, and link popularity.
Logo Maker - Logo Creator - Logo Generator - Create a free logo for your business or website
When I heard that advocates of “Intelligent Design” were urging schools to “teach the controversy” between their view and Darwinian evolution, I was dismayed.
Inside Higher Ed :: To Debate or Not to Debate Intelligent Design?
The Internet can be a lot of fun for your children. It can be a source of homework help, games and music. It can also be a place to make friends in other states or other countries.
With so many people online, a lot of different communities and social sites have flourished. But not all groups or trends on the Internet are good fun or good influences. In fact, some are dangerous.
Parents should be aware of dangerous influences on the Internet. Here are some of the types of sites I think may be dangerous for your children--the dark side of the Internet.
Komando.com, Website for The Kim Komando Radio Show?, Tip of the Day
There's nothing like cracking open the box of a brand new computer. But don't be so quick to just connect it all up and hop right on the Internet. According to the SANS Institute's Internet Storm Center, the average computer on the Internet is attacked every 20 minutes. And tricky pharming sites and Web mail attachments also await you online.
Komando.com, Website for The Kim Komando Radio Show?, Tip of the Day