Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Children's tablet maker suing Toys R Us over Tabeo design

Children's tablet maker suing Toys R Us over Tabeo design

Currently lawsuits are all the rage in the tech industry, however it's somewhat of a sad day when the ill-effects of corporate hardball trickle down to children's toys. Nabi tablet maker Fuhu filed a lawsuit at a San Diego, California federal court claiming that mega retailer Toys R Us stole its product's trade secrets for the development of its forthcoming Tabeo tablet for children. Fuhu alleges that last year Toys R Us agreed to exclusively carry the Nabi tablet in order to gain access to confidential information before launching a tablet of its own. The partnership between the two companies ended in January and Toys R Us has since announced its plans to release its Tabeo tablet this fall. Fuhu is suing for an undisclosed sum and requesting that Toys R Us relinquish its stock of Tabeo tablets. It's too early to tell if this lawsuit will have an impact on the Tabeo's launch plans, but if Fuhu has its way, Toys R Us will receive a lump of coal and a court order this holiday season. Bah, humbug!

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Five-year-olds put to the test as kindergarten exams gain steam

(Reuters) - With school in full swing across the United States, the littlest students are getting used to the blocks table and the dress-up corner - and that staple of American public education, the standardized test.

A national push to make public schools more rigorous and hold teachers more accountable has led to a vast expansion of testing in kindergarten. And more exams are on the way, including a test meant to determine whether 5-year-olds are on track to succeed in college and career.

Paul Weeks, a vice president at test developer ACT Inc., says he knows that particular assessment sounds a bit nutty, especially since many kindergarteners aspire to careers as superheroes. "What skills do you need for that, right? Flying is good. X-ray vision?" he said, laughing.

But ACT will soon roll out college- and career-readiness exams for kids age 8 through 18 and Weeks said developing similar tests for younger ages is "high on our agenda." Asking kids to predict the ending of a story or to suggest a different ending, for instance, can identify the critical thinking skills that employers prize, he said.

"There are skills that we've identified as essential for college and career success, and you can back them down in a grade-appropriate manner," Weeks said. "Even in the early grades, you can find students who may be at risk."

At least 25 states now mandate at least one formal assessment during kindergarten. Many local school districts require their own tests as well, starting just a few weeks into the academic year.

The proliferation of exams for five-year-olds has sparked a fierce debate that echoes a broader national divide over how much standardized testing is appropriate in public schools.

Advocates say it's vital to test early and often because too many kids fall irretrievably behind in their first years of schooling. The most recent national exams for fourth graders found just 34 percent proficient in reading and 40 percent proficient in math.

Opponents counter that testing puts undue stress on 5- and 6-year-olds and cuts into the time they should be spending playing, singing and learning social skills. They also contend that most tests for kindergarteners are unreliable because the children have short attention spans and often find it difficult to demonstrate skills on demand.

'WE SHOULD KNOW BETTER'

Formal tests give a narrow picture of a child's ability, said Samuel Meisels, president of the Erikson Institute, a graduate school in Chicago focused on child development. He urges teachers instead to assess young children by observing them over time, recording skills and deficits and comparing those to benchmarks.

But Meisels fears such observational tests won't seem objective or precise enough in today's data-driven world; he says he too often sees them pushed aside in favor of more formal assessments.

"I am worried, yes," he said. "We should know better."

Kari Knutson, a veteran kindergarten teacher in Minnesota, has seen the shifting attitude toward testing play out in her classroom.

During her first two decades of teaching, Knutson rarely, if ever, gave formal tests; kindergarten was about learning through play, music, art and physical activity.

These days, though, her district mandates a long list of assessments.

Knutson started the year by quizzing each of her 23 students on the alphabet and phonics, through a 111-question oral exam. Last week, she brought the kids to the computer lab for another literacy test. Each kindergartener wore headphones and listened to questions while a menu of possible answers flashed on the screen. They were supposed to respond by clicking on the correct answer, though not all could maneuver the mouse and some gave up in frustration, Knutson said.

This week, it's on to math - and a seven-page, pencil-and-paper test. "It's supposed to show them what they'll be learning in first grade," Knutson said. "Like they really care."

In her view, the kids are far too young to tackle formal exams, especially in their first weeks of what is for many their first school experience. "Half of them are crying because they miss mom and dad. When you tell them to line up, they don't even know what a line is," Knutson said.

Despite her frustration, Knutson acknowledges the tests have some advantages. The results help shape her lesson plans, she said, as she can quickly group kids by ability. Now and then, the exams reveal hidden strengths or unexpected weaknesses in her students.

Plus, when scores rise, both she and her students feel a genuine pride. "At the end of the year, it's like 'Wow, we really improved.' It's cool because you can see it," Knutson said.

ACCOUNTABILITY

Testing young children is not a new concept. In the 1980s, many states assessed children to determine whether they were ready to enter kindergarten or first grade. Experts in child development denounced the practice as unfair and unreliable and it faded out.

In recent years, however, the federal law known as No Child Left Behind has put pressure on schools to raise scores on the standardized reading and math tests given to students starting around age 8. Schools that post poor scores are labeled failing; principals and teachers can lose their jobs.

With the stakes so high, many administrators have decided to start testing in the earlier grades, to give kids practice and to identify students who need help.

The Obama administration accelerated the trend in 2011 with a $500 million competitive grant to bolster early childhood education. States that pledged to assess all kindergarteners earned extra points on their applications.

After all, taxpayers are investing more than $500 billion a year in public education and "we need to know how children are progressing," said Jacqueline Jones, a deputy assistant secretary in the U.S. Department of Education. "There has to be some accountability," she said.

The administration's grant guidelines encouraged states to develop holistic assessments that measure the 5-year-olds' social, emotional and physical development as well as their cognitive skills. About a dozen states, including Georgia and Maryland, have developed such broad assessments, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Others states, though, focus more narrowly on reading and math skills; some are even beginning to evaluate kindergarten teachers in part on how well their students do on those exams.

The format of kindergarten assessment varies widely.

The Iowa Test of Basic Skills, which is used by schools across the United States, runs more than an hour as a teacher reads dozens of questions aloud and kindergarteners mark their response on a multiple-choice answer sheet. A typical question asks kids to pick the picture that illustrates the word 'sharp' from choices including a piggy bank, a glove and a pair of scissors.

On the other end of the spectrum, the Brigance kindergarten screen is set up as a game that students play one-on-one with a teacher, who may ask them to stand on one foot for 10 seconds, to count to 30, or to copy complex shapes like a diamond. The test takes 10 to 15 minutes and costs about $4 per child.

In addition to these comprehensive tests, curriculum writers are now incorporating multiple shorter exams into kindergarten lesson plans.

Consider the 68-page manual recently published by New York City education officials to guide kindergarten teachers through a math unit aligned to the new Common Core academic standards rolling out nationally. The unit, meant to introduce 5-year-olds to algebraic thinking, includes three short pencil-and-paper exams, culminating with a test that asks students to calculate all the ways they could divide six books between two shelves.

Some parents welcome all the tests as an indication that their kids are truly being challenged. If their children spend too much time finger-painting or playing at the sand table, "parents will say, 'This isn't academic enough,'" said Peggy Campbell-Rush, a longtime kindergarten teacher in New Jersey.

But other parents want kindergarten to be the way they remember it, as a time of relaxed exploration.

Dao Tran, a mother in New York City, said her heart sank when she learned that her neighborhood school emphasized standardized testing even in kindergarten. She scoured the city to find an alternative for her daughter. The public school she chose requires a 45-minute commute each way, but Tran says it's worth it.

The kids there, she said, "seemed happy, and that seemed like the most important thing."

(Reporting By Stephanie Simon in Denver; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Claudia Parsons)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/five-olds-put-test-kindergarten-exams-gain-steam-050058507.html

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The WELL's 27-Year-Long Conversation Continues | Social Media ...

Last week, a group of people in love with their online community bought the business interests of that community from their owner by pooling their money and that of investors committed to saving a piece of Internet history. The WELL liberated itself from the friendly ownership tethers to Salon.com and became autonomous. One of the first instances of social media became a member-run entity, some would say, "at last."

There are some conversations on The WELL's subscription-supported conferencing system that have literally been active for decades. To my knowledge, the WELL has been operating for longer than any other Internet-based business. Please correct me if I'm wrong, but I've been keeping track of such things since I left my job as The WELL's Director in 1992.?

Image

Though students, practitioners and leaders of social media are likely to have heard of The WELL, I'm sure that at this time most of them (you, that is) are a bit hazy on what The WELL was, is and has become.

I won't burden this post with historical details, but the fact that a group of people who meet in an online venue daily - many of them having been meeting in that venue for as long as 27 years - have raised the money to buy the entire business from its financially challenged parent/sponsor just to ensure its survival, is a unique and notable event in the social media world.

Though the active population of the WELL is small today, it never did get very big. The people who log in and participate can be numbered in the hundreds, but thousands of people have been active members at one time or another and many of them still think of the community as just that - a true online community that they consider to be their first home in Cyberspace.

The WELL has a distinctive culture of discourse, which is not everyone's cup of tea, but in spite of an interface that is several generations behind the Twitters and Facebooks of today, it serves its primary purpose as a conversational environment. Some members even to this day use The WELL through its raw, text-only interface, driven by commands that have been memorized over the years. Learning to use that interface was a required hurdle to every member until a Web-based version was released in about 1994. That was a testament to the attraction to intelligent conversation and community that The WELL offered.

There are group options in Google, in Facebook, in Yahoo, and in many commercial discussion board systems used in and out of business today, but rarely do you find a place on the Web where the same people converse about such a range of topics, interests and meaning. Communities these days center around more specific notions, and members tend to stick with what used to be called SIGs or Special Interest Groups. The WELL was and continues to be a General Interest Community (a GIC?). And people pay a small fee for the privilege of getting inside of that.

In many ways, The WELL called attention to the social imperative in the early days of the Internet and the Web. It was one of the very first businesses to get an Internet domain name in 1992 - well.sf.ca.us. It inspired early Web developers to design platforms that would support social interaction. In 1996, Wired Magazine put The WELL on its cover, calling it "The World's Most Influential Online Community," and documenting some of the melodrama and technical "exploration" that had made it something more than an online forum.

Though the technology certainly exists today to support the formation and growth of such a social phenomenon, there is little to compare with what The WELL represents - a place where people can get to know each other deeply and carry on relationships day-to-day for years and years. Perhaps such things exist somewhere in the megalopolis of Facebook. I certainly do relate there with many old friends from a pre-WELL community, but Facebook is not a "home."

Many of the early issues that sparked endless discussion on The WELL in the late Eighties are still hot issues today - privacy, security, trust, relationships, Netiquette, listening. There are still no pat answers to how best to deal with these. The WELL was an experiment and its users to this day still treat it as such. It's a wonderful thing that it has found a native community solution for extending its life into the future.

Authored by:

Cliff Figallo

Editor/Moderator of Social Media Today and Smart Data Collective. Online communities and social media veteran, founding director of The WELL, author of Hosting Web Communities ('98) and Building the Knowledge Management Network ('02)

See complete profile

Source: http://socialmediatoday.com/clifffigallo/842486/wells-27-year-long-conversation-continues

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Summer for Chrome Provides Biographical Details for People Mentioned in News Stories [Video]

Summer for Chrome Provides Biographical Details for People Mentioned in News Stories Summer for Chrome Provides Biographical Details for People Mentioned in News Stories Chrome: Keeping track of everyone in the news isn't easy. Summer is an extension for Chrome that provides short, biographical info on everyone mentioned in a news story without having to leave the page you're reading.

Currently, Summer works with about 60 different news outlets, including The New York Times, Forbes, ESPN, and more. When you're reading a news story on one of these sites, Summer shows a small tab on the right side of the screen that you can expand and learn more about the people mentioned in the story. When you select a person, you get a short bio, a recent YouTube clip, and a Twitter account (if they have one). For the most part, Summer is unobtrusive, but it's handy when you need it.

Summer | via The Next Web

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/5QG3Z-8ND2g/summer-provides-biographical-details-for-people-mentioned-in-news-stories

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Monday, September 24, 2012

Teachers unions will pay a price for the Chicago strike : Union rolls already projected to drop

The total link site for the news and information junkie: Libertarianism. Property Rights. Government Corruption. Chicago Mob. Struggle Against Socialism. Union Corruption. Pension Meltdown. Blacked Out History. New York Mob. Higher Education rip-offs. Housing Crash. Rent-seeking. Obama-Chicago Democratic Machine. Gun Control Monopolists. The Ron Paul Revolution. Organized Crime...Other Politically Incorrect matters of interest.

Source: http://nalert.blogspot.com/2012/09/teachers-unions-will-pay-price-for.html

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Colorado football coach Jon Embree gave his players some hard chest bumps at the end of Saturdays 3534 win over Washington Sta...

SbB LIVE FROM LA (Sep 23, 2012 @ 5:16pm ET)

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Sunday, September 23, 2012

5:15 PM: The Kansas City Chiefs came back from a 24-6 deficit to defeat the New Orleans Saints 27-24 in OT, leaving the Saints at 0-3.

5:00 PM: Darius Reynaud set a new Tennessee Titans franchise record with a 105-yard kickoff return TD against the Detroit Lions.

4:45 PM: New York Jets QB Mark Sanchez throws a pass to fellow QB Tim Tebow - only to have the pass bounce off Tebow's helmet.

4:15 PM: San Francisco 49ers QB Alex Smith ended his franchise record streak by tossing his first interception after 249 attempts during Sunday's game against the Minnesota Vikings.

4:15 PM: Colorado football coach Jon Embree gave his players some hard chest bumps at the end of Saturday's 35-34 win over Washington State.

4:00 PM: Indianapolis Colts receiver T.Y. Hilton became the first player from Florida International to score an NFL TD during Sunday's game against the Jacksonville Jaguars.

3:45 PM: After sacking New York Jets QB Mark Sanchez, Miami Dolphins DE Jared Odrick celebrates by doing a Pee-Wee Herman dance.

3:30 PM: During Sunday's game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Dallas Cowboys receiver Kevin Ogletree slipped on an official's hat that was tossed into the end zone.

3:15 PM: A woman attending Saturday's New Mexico State-New Mexico football game in Las Cruces suffered a gunshot wound. Police believe the woman was hit by a bullet fired by someone outside of the stadium who was shooting into the air.

3:00 PM: The Cincinnati Bengals began Sunday's game against the Washington Redskins with receiver Mohamed Sanu throwing a TD pass to A.J. Green on the game's first play. Sanu became the first non-QB Bengal to throw a TD pass since punter Lee Johnson in 1994.

2:45 PM: Chicago Bears cornerback D.J. Moore told WBBM radio during Sunday's pre-game show: ""If I could have babies, I would want Jay Cutler to be my baby father."

2:30 PM: The Tennessee Titans do a redo of the Music City Miracle during Sunday's game against the Detroit Lions.

2:15 PM: New Orleans Saints QB Drew Brees has now thrown a TD pass in 46 straight games, one away from tying the NFL record set by Johnny Unitas.

2:00 PM: Buffalo Bills RB C.J. Spiller left Sunday's game against the Cleveland Browns after suffering a shoulder injury.

1:45 PM: USC safety T.J. McDonald said the Trojans were a "mad team" in Saturday's 27-9 win over Cal: "We did not want to just execute, but execute violently."

? previous entries

Source: http://www.sportsbybrooks.com/sbblive?eid=42467

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How To Choose The Right Banner Advertising Sources ? WP ...

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