| Similar Articles |
 |
T.H.E. Journal October 2007 |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework Large-district (4,000-plus students) technology coordinators speak out on their experiences with a fundamental component of the 21st-century school system: internet access.  |
T.H.E. Journal September 2008 |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework What is most important to you in a learning management system?  |
T.H.E. Journal September 2006 |
Extracurricular: For Technologists Who do Their Homework What are the hottest education technologies? The new report "America's Digital Schools 2006: A Five-Year Forecast" predicts which tools will make the largest gains over the next five years.  |
T.H.E. Journal November 2008 |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework Is a bandwidth crisis approaching?  |
T.H.E. Journal September 2007 |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework Surveys of district-level technology directors show that technology budgets haven't changed significantly in recent years, except in the area of tech support. Here is a breakdown.  |
T.H.E. Journal August 2006 |
Extracurricular: For Administrators Who do Their Homework Districts continue to aspire to a 1-to-1 student-to-computer ratio. How many have achieved it?  |
T.H.E. Journal January 2008 |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework Despite talk that school districts are dropping their 1-to-1 computing programs, a new survey shows a slight increase in implementation.  |
T.H.E. Journal December 2007 |
Extracurricular :: For technologists who do their homework Sixty-two percent of school districts report the use of a learning management system. Here's the who, why, and how.  |
T.H.E. Journal April 2007 |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework Students' browsing experiences are impacted by a school's available internet bandwidth.  |
T.H.E. Journal August 2007 Geoffrey H. Fletcher |
For Technologists Who do Their Homework In the next five years, expect to see Microsoft's new operating system, Windows Vista, to explode in use in public schools and open source platforms to get traction in schools with smaller budgets.  |
T.H.E. Journal October 2008 |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework In consecutive America's Digital Schools surveys, tech directors predicted increases in the amount of bandwidth schools will need in future years.  |
T.H.E. Journal May 2008 |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework Though stationary units are most common, the prominent use of mobile computing devices in schools indicates the rise in 1-to-1 implementations.  |
T.H.E. Journal October 2006 |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework Online learning is opening up new academic avenues to both teachers and students.  |
T.H.E. Journal February 2008 Geoffrey H. Fletcher |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework According to surveyed school districts, the use of online assessment to track students' progress and performance is surprisingly widespread.  |
T.H.E. Journal April 2008 |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework The purchase of a mobile student-computing device requires districts to consider several factors, from warranty options to battery life.  |
T.H.E. Journal November 2006 |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework Professional development is crucial to the implementation of a 1-to-1 computing program. Yet roughly a third of surveyed curriculum directors doubt their district's ability to support a ubiquitous rollout.  |
T.H.E. Journal November 2007 |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework Interactive whiteboards are quickly gaining a presence in US schools. District technology directors tell why.  |
T.H.E. Journal August 2008 |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework Here is a look at which learning management systems providers technology directors prefer, and to what ends the systems are most commonly used.  |
T.H.E. Journal December 2006 |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework The appeal of online learning as an educational alternative is increasing.  |
T.H.E. Journal January 2007 |
Extracurricular :: For technologists who do their homework Professional development and technology spending go hand in hand, as teachers have to be trained in each new tool a district acquires. Tech directors expect spending on both ends to rise significantly in the next five years.  |
T.H.E. Journal March 2007 |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework A survey of superintendents shows where your tax dollars are going.  |
T.H.E. Journal May 2007 |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework According to district superintendents, influence shifts among instructional leaders as various facets of technology and curriculum policies are put in place.  |
T.H.E. Journal February 2007 |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework Tech directors are forecasting substantial increases in software spending over the next five years, including a more than 70 percent jump in spending on core curriculum software.  |
T.H.E. Journal March 2008 |
Extracurricular :: For technologists who do their homework How closely do the following two scenarios describe your district's experiences with 1-to-1 computing implementations?  |
T.H.E. Journal June 2007 |
Extracurricular :: For Technologists Who do Their Homework The expectations of technology directors who have yet to implement 1-to-1 computing programs positively reflect the experiences of tech directors who have 1-to-1 plans already established.  |
Entrepreneur March 2010 Dan O'Shea |
Bonds Worth the Investment Broadband bonding patches together a bigger pipe with a price tag sized for small business.  |
InternetNews December 23, 2003 Roy Mark |
Broadband Growth Slightly Cools High-speed connections increased 18% during the first half of 2003 to put 23.5 million lines into service.  |
Salon.com September 23, 1999 Simson Garfinkel |
Cable modem or DSL: Which is better? My Net connection approaches light speed with cable, but that doesn't guarantee victory over DSL. If the history of technology is any guide, however, it's unlikely that the battle between cable modems and DSL will be won on technical merits.  |
PC World January 2001 Scott Spanbauer |
Warp Speed Web Access: Cable vs. DSL vs. Everything Else The latest in fast Net for 2001: We compare the providers, identify the best broadband sites, and rate the new home gateways.  |
T.H.E. Journal October 2006 Stephen R. Leeolou |
Breaking Up the Bottleneck The new affordability of ultra-high-speed networks is relieving K-12 schools of insufficient bandwidth and opening them up to a world of digital education.  |
Entrepreneur April 2010 |
Top Honors Business school students give a shout out to their schools. The Princeton Review's Student Opinion Honors for business schools.  |
Reason May 2004 Lisa Snell |
Capital Choices School voucher progress.  |
Bank Technology News September 2003 |
By the Numbers Almost one quarter of respondents anticipate increased IT spending in the second half of 2003, up from only 4 percent in April and in line with February's survey of 23 percent.  |
PC World May 1, 2000 Rick Overton |
Broadband or Bust According to Aesop, the slow and steady tortoise beats the fast and flighty hare. But wouldn't it be great if that dang rabbit hunkered down and delivered on its promise? That's what consumers hope will happen in the world of high-bandwidth Internet access. Folks at home who want a fast connection to the Net must choose from a bewildering array of broadband technologies, among them ISDN, cable modem, and an alphabet soup of DSL varieties, including ADSL, SDSL, and G.Lite. But for people with money to burn, new superfast technologies make huge promises that sound awfully enticing.  |
T.H.E. Journal December 2008 Geoffrey H. Fletcher |
Separation Anxiety The annual Speak Up survey returns, with some unsettling data revealing a disconnect between students and their educators.  |
CRM November 10, 2010 Glenn Houck |
The Quick and the Dead The competitive advantage of getting to a lead first.  |
Fast Company September 2006 |
School Days Should for-profit companies run public schools? An entrepreneur and a principal weigh in.  |