ePals, Inc. today
announced its new Learning Pages partner program. The Learning Pages
platform enables educational content providers to engage schools,
parents and students across the entire suite of ePals products with
their own collaborative programming. Organizations including
Kids.NationalGeographic.com, International Reading Association, Common
Sense Media, SnagFilms, and Microsoft Partners in Learning now have
dedicated community areas where they can reach key constituent
audiences. Millions of teachers, students and parents routinely interact
with ePals products to find digital content and collaborate in a safe
social learning environment.
Learning Pages lets school communities access high quality,
subject-based media like educational games, podcasts, and online
exhibits, as well as guided classroom activities, discussion forums, and
links for teachers to collaborate on projects with other classrooms
around the world.
ePals
Learning Pages allows publishers to focus a variety of educational media
and activities on a monthly educational theme and then fuse user
communities around that theme. For example, in support of the ePals
featured topic of weather this month, SnagFilms is using its Learning
Page to explore water sources and natural disasters using videos,
suggested classroom exploration topics, and student discussion forums.
"Content plus context enriches the learning experience," said Rick
Allen, CEO of SnagFilms. "The Learning Pages initiative brings
award-winning films from our library together with the pedagogical
resources and ePals community and technology tools to create a
remarkable resource for teachers and students. We saw its power during
the testing phase, and are delighted to join this broader roll-out."
National Geographic Kids is using the Learning Pages Program to educate
classroom communities on topics like animals, and International Reading
Association is featuring projects and insights on child literacy.
Microsoft Partners in Learning is showcasing InterroBang, its socially
networked online problem solving game, to help teachers connect
service-learning and social responsibility to their classroom
curriculum. InterroBang encourages students to develop 21st century
skills through project- and team-based learning in game-like
environments.
Common Sense Media is using the program to engage parents both at school
and at home on Internet safety and online behavior to help parents make
informed decisions about their children’s use of online media.
“Our ePals Learning Page directly connects our organization with 25
million parents and students worldwide, enabling us to easily share
interactive, media-rich content with our key demographic,” said Jim
Steyer, CEO and founder, Common Sense Media. “Featuring Common Sense
Media in an ePals Learning Page means that parents not only have access
to important resources to help them manage the media and technology in
their kids’ lives – they can also connect with one another, share
thoughts and experiences, and work as a community to make smarter
choices for their families.”
ePals reviews all Learning Pages content for audience appropriateness
before content is published. Learning Pages that receive high content
ratings from users will be selected for featured placement and promotion
throughout the ePals community sites.