In an effort to boost achievement and better prepare students for the workforce, President Obama is spearheading a program that will bring high-speed Internet access to 99 percent of America's K-12 schools.
Dubbed ConnectED, the program aims to accomplish its goal in the next five years. In addition to bringing Internet speeds of at least 100 Mbps and as high as 1Gbps, the program will provide comprehensive training to teachers so that they are up-to-speed on best practices for using the Web in class.
A particular focus of ConnectED will be rural schools that have difficulty accessing the Internet. In a statement, Obama was clear that getting students connected and teachers trained is a priority. "We are living in a digital age, and to help our students get ahead, we must make sure they have access to cutting-edge technology," he said. "So today, I'm issuing a new challenge for America -- one that families, businesses, school districts and the federal government can rally around together -- to connect virtually every student in America's classrooms to high-speed broadband Internet within five years, and equip them with the tools to make the most of it."
I definitely wasn’t ready to meet the needs of my first-ever self-contained class of gifted fifth-graders. Twenty-something intellectually advanced, highly creative –and often misbehaved—students spending the entire day with me. After teaching middle school in the general classroom for several years, I accepted a position teaching gifted students. I had no formal training in gifted education (something that the students’ parents were quick to point out during open house) but was allowed to...
SNOW FACTOIDS!
by
Gail Skroback Hennessey
One inch of water is about six inches of wet snow or 12 inches of fluffy snow.
The world's largest snowflake was 15 inches wide and...
Teachers: Click here for the complete Freebie (with Extension Activities).
NEW YEAR’S EVE TRADITIONS FROM AROUND THE WORLD
Fun World New Year ’s Factoids!
In Russia, divers place a New Year’s tree...
I was tested for gifted in the first grade and placed in a pull-out program, where the teacher came (maybe once per week, don’t remember) to work with me and another student. According to my parents, shortly after, school officials canceled the program. From that point on, I participated in a general classroom until being placed in honors classes in middle school. I found high school boring and considered my teachers, for the most part, ineffective, boring, and preoccupied with their own...

“Giftedness is a greater awareness, a greater sensitivity, a greater ability to understand and transform perceptions into intellectual and emotional experiences”
Annemarie Roeper, 1982.
The above quote is perhaps my favorite definition of what it means to be “gifted.” There are countless...
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