Table of Contents
News From The Edtech Ticker
1/1/0001 By:
Projector reviews for education
ProjectorReviews.com
has released The
Classroom Projector
Report, a free report
that examines digital
projectors for the K-12
education market.
Comparing more than
60 projectors, the
report offers reviews,
discussion of classroom
defining features, and extensive full feature-benefit comparison
chart. To read the full report, visit www.projectorreviews.com/classroom-projector/index.php
HP buys Palm
On April 28th, 2010, HP announced that they would buy Palm,
the maker of webOS and the Pre/Pre+ and Pixi/Pixi+ smartphones.
HP is planning on keeping webOS and most of Palm’s
team and running them as separate business units. They are
planning to scale webOS across multiple platforms, and in
interviews have discussed a webOS-powered tablet and slate.
This could be good news for education, since Palm’s webOS is
easy to develop apps for, has a solid Web browser, supports
Flash, supports 3D graphics, and already has thousands of
apps (many a good fit for education).
Guidelines for educational technology
research
The Software & Information Industry Association released a
new report: “Conducting and Reporting Product Evaluation
Research: Guidelines and Considerations for Educational
Technology Publishers and Developers.” Available for free
online, the Guidelines provide best practices for publishers and
developers of educational software and other instructional
technologies. To read the Guidelines, visit http://siia.net/presentations/education.
Photo contest:
Where’s the Bear?
The International Society for Technology in
Education is kicking off its 2010 conference
season with a “Where’s the Bear?” contest
featuring the Colorado Convention
Center’s mascot, I See What You Mean,
designed by Denver artist Lawrence
Argent. The winner from each category
will receive his or her choice of an iPod
Touch or digital camera. Submit photos by
June 15, 2010, to be eligible for Round 1 of the
contest. For contest details or to view entries,
visit www.iste.org>
Survey: Estimated 275,000 education
jobs at risk
School administrators across the nation are faced with the
possibility of eliminating an unprecedented number of
teaching jobs for the 2010-11 school year, according to a
new snapshot survey of school superintendents released
by the American Association of School Administrators. The
new study finds that 82 percent of districts will cut or eliminate
27,516 education jobs in 2010-11 and 53 percent will
freeze hiring. Download the one-page survey report at
http://budurl.com/JobSurveyPDF.
Virtual travel focuses on energy use
General Motors Education uses Google Earth to allow students
and teachers to travel the world and discover the types
of energy people use to fuel their cars, homes, and electronics.
Includes lesson plans by grades and a blog for teachers,
“Teach Green.”