It's official, I'm finally a published author!!!
(Phys.org) âWhen NASA's Juno spacecraft flew past Earth on Oct. 9, 2013, it received a boost in speed of more than 8,800 mph (about 7.3 kilometer per second), which set it on course for a July 4, 2016, rendezvous with Jupiter, the largest planet in our solar system. One of Juno's sensors, a special ...
Gotta check out the animated gif at the top of the page, #awesomeness
I need to collect all of the Bernie Sanders images/quotes I’ve collected from FB and turn them into an animated gif... #project
I’m still skeptical... but out of all of the politicians he sounds like the best bet....
some links
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/h-a-goodman/bernie-sanders-can-become-president-has-replaced-i-like-him-but-he-cant-win_b_7733476.html
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/h-a-goodman/almost-every-major-poll-shows-bernie-sanders_b_7937906.html?ncid=fcbklnkushpmg00000063
There was a great post in my FB stream on Eugenie Clark-- a marine biologist who was an advocate for sharks and science. I can remember reading her biography “Shark Lady” in 2nd grade, not only was it the book that got me fascinated by sharks but also inspired me to think maybe one day I could be a scientist too.
Nat Geo had a great article on Eugenie back in February: 'Shark Lady' Eugenie Clark, Famed Marine Biologist, Has Died
Also see my previous post on Sharks
When His Project Was Canceled, an Unemployed Programmer Kept Sneaking Into Apple to Finish the Job via Mental Floss
The Graphing Calculator Story by Ron Avitzur
Why did Greg and I do something so ludicrous as sneaking into an eight-billion-dollar corporation to do volunteer work? Apple was having financial troubles then, so we joked that we were volunteering for a nonprofit organization. In reality, our motivation was complex. Partly, the PowerPC was an awesome machine, and we wanted to show off what could be done with it; in the Spinal Tap idiom, we said, "OK, this one goes to eleven." Partly, we were thinking of the storytelling value. Partly, it was a macho computer guy thing - we had never shipped a million copies of software before. Mostly, Greg and I felt that creating quality educational software was a public service. We were doing it to help kids learn math. Public schools are too poor to buy software, so the most effective way to deliver it is to install it at the factory.
Amazing video, this guy has serious editing skills!
New US Spy Satellite Features World Devouring Octopus
If you're on Amazon, check out Amazon smile where you can support your favorite charity everytime you shop.
Foodies, turn your pictures into donations with this app: We the Feedies
A couple of other great links to check out:
Giving What We Can
What is the Greatest Good?
Holiday Giving: 7 Children’s Charities You Should Know About
Image used under Creative Commons license (BY) by John-Morgan
Decided to splurge and buy Galaxy Quest (Amazon) for $2- I had a $3 credit and the sale price was $5. Good deal either way! It’s a fun movie!
Zoom Projects
I’m working on a couple of projects. One of them is to organize some zoom lunches, dinners, netflixparties, art nights, and other fun social activities on zoom. I need to fix the survey on the new page of my website, stay tuned.
Zoom Art Night: 4-5 people, 60 minutes, theme #1 Collage Night Collect papers you like, or magazines More directions to follow
Some thoughts
If you write it down you are more likely to do it
Community, Care, and Communication
New workshops coming in April
Working on an AI bot to support scalable, effective online learning
Teachers touch tomorrow today
Wikipedia updates soon
#WOL
The night before, I reflect on what are my top three goals the next day, and before starting to work, take 10 minutes to reflect on what I need to do and when I need to do it by. Work in order of priorities.
Fake it until you make it
These are difficult times, but in time of crisis is also a time of great opportunity. The field of education, and of education technology, has a lot of change in a short amount of time through the ages.
link to full size map by Vicky Earl
link to full size image from tweet by @justintarte
And here is a timeline I created based off of an article on EDUCAUSE that highlights one new technology or trend.
link to full size image from Flickr
I have a set of slides I use at the beginning of most of my presentations. It starts with a timeline that gives an overview of the information ages, and puts into context, just how new the age of the Internet is. This is the Wild, Wild West. As an instructional technologist I help guide faculty through their own explorations of leveraging tech.
link to larger image from Flickr
Note, I plan to use this and other updated graphics in the sequel to the Tech Trends talk (fordham.edu/techtrends) I gave last year. Working title: A New Information Age.
I’ll also be talking about things like growing your PLN, using curation tools, the history of online learning at Fordham, effective pedagogy, hybrid/online learning, and more.
One more teaser.... YouTube channel launch coming soon...
Recent Recipe
I made during the last Zoom Dinner I had and it was delicious! Can’t wait to make it again.
Fish, adobo light, cracked lemon pepper, garlic olive oil spray, garlic powder in the nuwave Toasted, with a little melted butter Light mayo/sour cream + lots of relish Lemon juice
Optional: With a raw pepper in place of cheese
Some of what I come across on the web... Also check out my Content & Curation site: kristentreglia.com
242 posts