Google has released another useful tool. Google Scholar provides a search system for professional journals, conference papers, and other scholarly works. You cannot access the full-text articles, but this service can be useful for locating references. For example, I sometimes need to check a citation and this service will identify the citation in other reference lists.
Google Scholar also provides a way for scholars to see who is referencing their work. Just for kicks, I entered a couple of words from a paper I published based on my dissertation (in 1976) and my last name. Sure enough, the paper was referenced in 2002. This capability may not make sense to most Internet users, but researchers do like to know who is referencing them.
Trent, from Orange County, CA writes:
Hello, I am a high school student and I have served on two school boards. I am a big fan of the No Child Left Behind Act but I have a question about it. My question is; how does the No Child Left Behind Act help schools that are not meeting the the national standard in standardized testing? Thank you for your time.
Margaret Spellings
Thanks for your service on your local school boards and for your support of No Child Left Behind! Across the country, we are seeing positive results and student achievement is rising.
First, No Child Left Behind does not set a national standard for schools. Each state develops its own testing and accountability system that best meets their needs, but that ensures that all students will be proficient in reading and math in twelve years. The annual targets that schools must meet are set by each state according to their state assessments.
Each state, as part of its accountability plan, must also develop a system of sanctions and rewards for schools. When schools do not meet their annual targets for two straight years, the school must develop a school improvement plan and allow parents to transfer their child to a higher-performing public school if they so choose. If the school does not meet their targets for a third straight year, it must offer after-school tutoring to struggling students. Each state is also required to set aside 4% of its total Title I allocation (that would be over $500 million of the Federal 2005 education budget) to assist schools that are identified as needing improvement. This funding goes directly to these schools to assist in improving the school, implementing new curricula, hiring reading instructors, or addressing other needs of the school.
President Bush has also provided significant increases in funding for Title I schools across the country–those schools that serve the neediest students. Including the President’s 2005 budget, Title I funding has increased 52% since 2001, and overall K-12 funding has increased 49%.
The OFFICIAL Roald Dahl web site, animated in Flash, is a great source for educators interested in this author. The site does attempt to sell, but it also offers resources and is quite sophisticated.
FireFox (http://www.mozilla.org/) is pushing its new browser as direct competition for Internet Explorer.
Read the Washington Post analysis of the attempt to stir up user interest and a list of some of the unique FireFox features. The new security features are probably going to attract the most attention.
One of the stranger habits I have developed involves a fascination with the “Cooking Channel.” I do not cook and I do not expect anyone to cook what I might see prepared on these programs. I just enjoy watching. I suppose it could have been worse – I could have become fixated on the gold panning channel or the rodeo channel.
The channel just ran a special series focused on Cooking with your kids. I happen to hear that the channel had a web site and was streaming parts of these programs from the web site. Perhaps this is the future.
One downside – you must view this material on a windows machine. It is time the web site kicks it up a notch and invests in a cross platform format. BAM!
MSN Search(this is a beta version), Microsoft’s challenge to Google, is now available. Unique features include results tailored to a user’s location and answers from its Encarta encyclopedia. The site itself has a similar look to Google – very simple.
Where is searching going. Probably toward greater personalization. It is reported that companies are working on search techniques that adjust priorities based on a record of previous searches.
Try running the same search in Google and the Microsoft Search system.
SimCity is an example I use to explain how a game can be put to educational purposes. For example, with newer versions (SimCity4), you can manipulate aspects of a community such as the commitment to education (city college vs. university, public vs. private schools, library) and explore consequences.
Some may have difficulty conceptualizing the game or how questions related to city management, infrastructure, etc. might be explored. I recently learned that Electronic Arts has made a free online version of the original available (SimCity Classic). You must access this from a Windows machine (ActiveX I guess) and you do have to register, but you might find this a useful way to explore some of the basics of a complex, interactive simulation game.
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