When a very rough beta version of what industry insiders are calling the "paper phone" emerged last year, people began to wonder exactly how this new, bendable mobile device could be used in a practical way. In a recent filing with the U.S. Patent Office, Apple may be tipping its hand as to how the tech giant envisions using it in future iPhone models.
The patent shows an iPhone with a 360-degree wrap-around display. From NBC's tech department: "Instead of sharp edges, the curved, wraparound design would allow for a wider selection of items on display, so users could hypothetically view 10 apps on their screen instead of, say, 5, and view photos, videos and text on their screen from all 360 degrees around. Plus, going for a wraparound display would abandon physical buttons, so users would be fully reliant on touch gestures to use their device."
While the patent is a long way from a reality, it shows that paper-phone tech is at least on the minds of those who could bring it to the masses.
I remember the first year I taught gifted kids. Wow, what a shocker! Going from teaching all types of students for several years to teaching 22 identified gifted students opened my eyes. I had a lot of adjusting to do. Accommodating the fast-moving learning pace. Realizing that gifted kiddos are not gifted at every subject. Responding positively to their unique social-emotional needs. Then, accepting a position as a resource teacher presented a whole new set of learning experiences...
Earlier this year, U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan called on each state to identify and implement specific strategies to ensure equitable distribution of our best nation’s best teachers. The thinking was there are real, actionable steps states can take to ensure high-quality teachers are the norm, not the exception, in our high-need schools.
In response to this call, Woodrow Wilson Foundation President Arthur Levine...
By Ann Puntis and Melanie Hilton
Today’s college graduates are looking at the big picture — towards the world of multinational corporations and the lucrative jobs they can offer. According to CNN Money’s 2013 survey of the “World’s Top Employers For New Grads,” firms like Google, Ernst and Young, Goldman Sachs and PWC top students’ rankings. But what does it take to make it in the world of multinational corporations? For one thing, you must show a...
"Effects of socio-economic status on educational outcomes can be mitigated, and this can be done on a whole-school and system-wide basis by the very people and the same schools where low performance was once the norm. It was, in Ontario, the product of attention to research, and committed collaboration by educators focused on improved instruction and precision in meeting student needs."
-- Mary Jean Gallagher
In 2003, the provincial...
Common Core standards. District initiatives. Testing and more testing. Challenging curriculum and enrichment.
In our daily hustle and bustle, when is there time to address the social-emotional aspect of gifted education?
That’s been a question I have struggled with ever since I began teaching gifted children about six years ago.
I’ve read dozens of articles and books on the topic and tried all kinds of clever ways to expose my students to perfectionism, sensitivity,...
Very Cool: Oldest Time Capsule in USA dates back to 1795! (Bell Ringer) 
Perhaps, you can use this in your classrooms:
Using the News as a Bell Ringer Activity:
While fixing a leak,...

"If you simply want to have the most toys at the end of life, you might get away with Bad or Compromised Grit. But if you pursue goals beyond self-aggrandizement, as the aforementioned heroes have done, then you can do well both for yourself and for the world." -- Howard Gardner
...Seems Santa isn't the only one that relies on reindeer to get things done.Police in Siberia are thinking of a new way to fight crime...using reindeer! 
Seems that snowmobiles are no match for chasing crooks in the deep snow and reindeer may be the answer. Reindeer have the ability to see in the dark. Reindeer eyes seen...
By Erik Bean
The main Washington, D.C. Gaylord Convention Center exhibit hall proved to be an effective delivery and visitation mechanism for the various publishing, corporate, scholarship, presentations,...