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Dell Targets Schools With Chromebook

Dell is launching its first Chromebook, which will be the company's first specifically targeted at education institutions. The Chromebook was built to meet the needs of schools and districts looking to deploy affordable and comprehensive one-to-one computing initiatives.

Dell is the leading end-to-end technology provider in the U.S. education market, with presence in 60% of U.S. classrooms. The new Chromebook will wrap into Dell’s portfolio of solutions that empower personalized learning in schools and districts around the country.

According to Google, Chromebooks are currently being used in 22% of U.S. school districts. Dell and Google are working together to provide districts with powerful 1:1 computing options. The partnership will deliver an optimal combination of content, technology, efficiency and services that schools need to improve student outcomes.

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The Global Search For Education: A...

“In places like Malawi where we have a large number of learners, while inadequate teachers and resources, it helps a lot to let some children be taken care of by a digital teacher.”  – Saili Mwale

How can poor children in developing countries acquire reading, writing, and counting skills when there are...

The Global Search for Education: Are We...

“If we are talking primary school, AI is probably moving too fast currently for it to make sense to try to integrate specific hot new ideas into the curriculum.  But providing a broader base of computer science education and some opportunity to try programming sounds like a good idea.” — Nick Bostrom 

In nearly...

Gifted Student Identification: The...

I think some parallels can be drawn between identifying gifted students in the classroom and scouting for talents in sports.

For instance, baseball scouts operate on various levels (e.g. high school, college, minor league) when looking to recruit.  Baseball scouts also spend ample lengths of time observing players in their natural environment; they don’t base decisions generally on one occurrence but base their selections on repeated observations and gathering much data. Also,...

The Global Search for Education:...

What is tolerance? Voltaire describes it as “the consequence of humanity. We are all formed of frailty and error; let us pardon reciprocally each other’s folly – that is the first law of nature.”

As the world becomes increasingly global, solutions to fighting bias because of an individual’s race, religion, sexual...

The Global Search for Education:...

“Is it possible to study martial arts every day and know how to play the piano by adapting the data and skills we learned in martial arts to the piano? Or what about adapting the skills learned from ballet to cooking?  The answer is yes we can.” — Opher Brayer

We’ve seen the big data. The future of work is all about imagination, given that...

A New School Year Is Starting: A...

With the new year about to begin, I’d like to share my A-Z Teaching List.

A-Always...

Tales of a Gifted Ed Resource Teacher -...

Author's Note: This is the final installment of a three-part series on my experiences working as a gifted education resource teacher. I included the references used in all three blogs at the end of this blog.

Part 3: Discussion

During this autoethnography, I explored my progression from a frustrated resource teacher, who second-guessed my decision to accept the position, to a functioning co-teacher, who, in at least in some cases, able to influence my colleagues to better...

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