depressing demographics

Liz Lane Lawley discusses a presentation by demographer Dr. Harold (“Bud”) Hodgkinson about the number of children living in poverty in the US.

Particularly striking—and distressing—were the numbers reflecting child poverty. Twenty-two percent of children in the United States live in poverty. Twenty-two percent. That’s the highest rate of any developed nation. And yet, as Hodgkinson pointed out, there’s little or no public outcry or outrage over this horrifying number... [mamamusings]

Movable Type, Not Just For Blogging

A Whole Lotta Features:Beyound the Blog... Matt Haughey writes about using Movable Type as more than just a weblog tool. Lots of good ideas and examples... At Buckman Elementary School we use Movable Type to power the teacher pages and the main school web page. For the most part the teacher pages are just blogs, but a few teachers have tweaked their templates and they have more of a look of a traditional page. The main page is also set up not to look like a blog. I plan to do some more work with this before the school year begins.

Typepad

I've been playing with the Typepad beta. So far I'm pretty impressed. Very nice interface for page design, editing and such. Very easy to do things like blogrolls, and book and music lists... Take a look... http://lauer.typepad.com/weblog

I have encountered a few issues with the css layouts. (At least on my PC at home, the page doesn't load correctly in IE. ) It will be interesting to see how they price this...

Open Source Alternatives to Microsoft

Ed Tech Dev: Microsoft vs. Open Source at NECC

I think educators and the general public still largely know nothing about OpenOffice, because if they did they'd realize there is no need to purchase Microsoft Office. They may not realize that OpenOffice and other free and open source software work just fine on Windows and MacOS too. Trying open source software doesn't require immediately leaping over to Linux and dropping Windows completely.

Over at Ed Tech Dev they discuss an article from the Seattle Post Intellgencer about the large Microsoft presence at NECC. While you had to hunt to find them, Paul Nelson of Riverdale High School had a group of students there in the poster session area running a Linux Terminal Server lab. He had quite a bit of traffic, even though you really had to hike to find the room. Maybe next year we can get someone to underwrite a booth for them on the exhibit floor. Maybe right across from Apple and Microsoft... :-)

I took two teachers from my school to visit his set up and they were very impressed. The lack of the ability to run Microsoft Office did not concern them As one of them said; "A word processor is a word processor. As long as my kids can browse the web and write, I really don't need much more than that."

She also was very impressed with the whole thin client set up. Each student has a login and can work from any terminal. You can even boot to it from Windows boxes and it will run in Mac OS X. This fall we are planning to set it up for her classroom and for our other 5th grade classes at Buckman.

Spell Checking in your Browser

ieSpell - Spell Checker add-on for Internet Explorer

ieSpell is a free Internet Explorer browser extension that spell checks text input boxes on a webpage. It should come in particularly handy for users who do a lot of web-based text entry (e.g. web mails, forums, blogs, diaries).

Laura Gibbs, of XPLANA points to this Internet Explorer extention for Windows users that adds spell checking cabilities to browser.

For Mac OS X users, Safari 1.0 has the ability to spell check web forms. The tool is off by default and needs to be enabled. To do so, open a web form page, insert the cursor, then go to the Edit menu and choose: Spelling > Check Spelling as you Type... [by way of...Steve Gillmor's Emerging Opps] spelling.gif

4th of July on Salmon St.

For as long as we have lived in our house, there has been a 4th of July parade in the neighborhood. A local firetruck comes and as the truck drives slowly through the neighborhood, kids follow behind on bikes, wagons and on foot. Today was no exception. The image above is a panoramic image of the goings on at SE Salmon and 58th in Portland earlier this morning.

Happy 4th of July...

DC Metro Blog Map

An article in Slate by Brian Montopoli, City Wide Web - City "blog maps" enable point-and-click sightseeing, discusses the premise behind blog maps. His example, D.C. Metro Blog Map, a subway map of Washington DC which denotes "blogs" in thevacinity of Metro subway stops.

Might be interesting to so something similar with a school map. By moving the mouse over a school map, student and teacher blogs would pop up... [by way of...Smart Mobs]