Student Data and Its Discontents: How FUD undermined an education reform agendaPatrick McCormick
In 2012 New York launched one of the most ambitious education reform policy agendas in the country fueled by $700M in Race to the Top funding. New technology, online collaboration, and data driven instruction were at the center of one the largest NY RTTT projects. But within a year student data had shifted from being part of the solution to being part of the problem as public and political opposition grew across the state. The story of what happened in New York between 2012 and 2015 mirrored much of what unfolded across the U.S. raising the question of where we go from here with education reform, emerging technologies, and student data.
2-2-17: Today Data & Society is releasing a new report – The Legacy of inBloom – which takes up these questions. Coauthors Monica Bulger, Patrick McCormick, and Mikaela Pitcan engaged in a year-long series of interviews and research to map the story of inBloom and its closure, which ignited a public discussion of student data privacy and has become the legacy any future edtech project will have to contend with.
Lee Rainie, Director of the Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project, gave this speech during Washington, D.C.'s "Digital Capital Week" at the auditorium of the National Geographic.
UK Independent Parliamentary Report Into Online Child ProtectionKrishna De
Find the original document here - http://www.claireperry.org.uk/downloads/independent-parliamentary-inquiry-into-online-child-protection.pdf
Follow Claire Perry on Twitter here http://twitter.com/claire4devizes
Read about the report here:
http://www.claireperry.org.uk/claire%27s-news/news-archive/parliamentary-inquiry-concludes-isps-must-do/320
Student Data and Its Discontents: How FUD undermined an education reform agendaPatrick McCormick
In 2012 New York launched one of the most ambitious education reform policy agendas in the country fueled by $700M in Race to the Top funding. New technology, online collaboration, and data driven instruction were at the center of one the largest NY RTTT projects. But within a year student data had shifted from being part of the solution to being part of the problem as public and political opposition grew across the state. The story of what happened in New York between 2012 and 2015 mirrored much of what unfolded across the U.S. raising the question of where we go from here with education reform, emerging technologies, and student data.
2-2-17: Today Data & Society is releasing a new report – The Legacy of inBloom – which takes up these questions. Coauthors Monica Bulger, Patrick McCormick, and Mikaela Pitcan engaged in a year-long series of interviews and research to map the story of inBloom and its closure, which ignited a public discussion of student data privacy and has become the legacy any future edtech project will have to contend with.
Lee Rainie, Director of the Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project, gave this speech during Washington, D.C.'s "Digital Capital Week" at the auditorium of the National Geographic.
UK Independent Parliamentary Report Into Online Child ProtectionKrishna De
Find the original document here - http://www.claireperry.org.uk/downloads/independent-parliamentary-inquiry-into-online-child-protection.pdf
Follow Claire Perry on Twitter here http://twitter.com/claire4devizes
Read about the report here:
http://www.claireperry.org.uk/claire%27s-news/news-archive/parliamentary-inquiry-concludes-isps-must-do/320
These are the slides from my Keynote at the the Lexis Nexis 2011 Practice Management Annual Conference, which was held in Orlando, Florida (See: http://www.lexisnexis.com/pmac2011/).
A survey of nearly 900 Internet stakeholders reveals fascinating new perspectives on the way the Internet is affecting human intelligence and the ways that information is being shared and rendered.
Public policy and online social networks: The trillion dollar zombie questionChris Marsden
26th Human Behaviour and the Evolution of Society conference
Workshop on Internet and Evolution of Society
Prof. Chris Marsden
University of Sussex School of Law
In "The Future of the Internet IV," Director Lee Rainie reports on the results of a new survey of experts predicting what the Internet will look like in 2020 at the American Association for the Advancement of Science's 2010 Annual Meeting in San Diego.
Digital Divide The Factors, Developments and SuggestionsBeth Schoren
The Factors of Who, Where & What
With New Commitments Developing &
Suggestions for Achievement that Meet Four United Nations Goals on Sustainability Target Date 2030
My fortnightly column, A Dose of IT discussing on the Slates in healthcare opportunity in India
Kapil Khandelwal
QuoteUnquote with KK
www.kapilkhandelwal.com
Future of privacy - An initial perspective - Stephen Deadman, VodafoneFuture Agenda
An initial perspective on the future of privacy by Stephen Deadman, Group Privacy Officer at Vodafone. This is the starting point for the global future agenda discussions taking place through 2015 as part of the the futureagenda2.0 programme. www.futureagenda.org
Mobile Privacy and Security - Study by MobidiggerHubert Moik
In a world where Google, Facebook, Twitter and other top web sites share and save user
information, it is increasingly hard to protect individual privacy in new media—on the Internet and
mobile phones. At the same time, information about privacy protection is very hard to find.
Further, the majority of people who use the Internet are generally not properly informed about
new media privacy issues. To help users protect themselves, this presentation explores Internet
and mobile privacy problems and solutions through reviews of case studies. It is designed to
educate users of new media in both key issues and solutions.
These are the slides from my Keynote at the the Lexis Nexis 2011 Practice Management Annual Conference, which was held in Orlando, Florida (See: http://www.lexisnexis.com/pmac2011/).
A survey of nearly 900 Internet stakeholders reveals fascinating new perspectives on the way the Internet is affecting human intelligence and the ways that information is being shared and rendered.
Public policy and online social networks: The trillion dollar zombie questionChris Marsden
26th Human Behaviour and the Evolution of Society conference
Workshop on Internet and Evolution of Society
Prof. Chris Marsden
University of Sussex School of Law
In "The Future of the Internet IV," Director Lee Rainie reports on the results of a new survey of experts predicting what the Internet will look like in 2020 at the American Association for the Advancement of Science's 2010 Annual Meeting in San Diego.
Digital Divide The Factors, Developments and SuggestionsBeth Schoren
The Factors of Who, Where & What
With New Commitments Developing &
Suggestions for Achievement that Meet Four United Nations Goals on Sustainability Target Date 2030
My fortnightly column, A Dose of IT discussing on the Slates in healthcare opportunity in India
Kapil Khandelwal
QuoteUnquote with KK
www.kapilkhandelwal.com
Future of privacy - An initial perspective - Stephen Deadman, VodafoneFuture Agenda
An initial perspective on the future of privacy by Stephen Deadman, Group Privacy Officer at Vodafone. This is the starting point for the global future agenda discussions taking place through 2015 as part of the the futureagenda2.0 programme. www.futureagenda.org
Mobile Privacy and Security - Study by MobidiggerHubert Moik
In a world where Google, Facebook, Twitter and other top web sites share and save user
information, it is increasingly hard to protect individual privacy in new media—on the Internet and
mobile phones. At the same time, information about privacy protection is very hard to find.
Further, the majority of people who use the Internet are generally not properly informed about
new media privacy issues. To help users protect themselves, this presentation explores Internet
and mobile privacy problems and solutions through reviews of case studies. It is designed to
educate users of new media in both key issues and solutions.
Learning to crowd-surf: Gov 2.0 and community engagementPatrick McCormick
what are the implications of social media, the Internet and new technologies for community engagement and how do traditional and new ways of engagement complement each other to create new opportunities through Gov 2.0 initiatives and co-production?
Presentation by Patrick McCormick , Manager Digital Engagement, Strategic Communication Branch , Department of Justice - Victorian Government to Smart Government Australia 2010 conference, 14 September 2010
lessons in Gov 2.0: building strategy from the inside outPatrick McCormick
In the seminar, Pat will share his experience and provide an overview of:
the application of social media to the business of government and engagement with citizens
developing a strategic approach to using social media as well as supporting a culture of collaboration.
Pat\'s presentation will draw on a range of practical Gov 2.0 examples in the Department of Justice such as Fire Ready mobile applications, Championship Moves, Cameras Cut Crashes, and the Sentencing Advisory Council.
Presentation 1: Web 2.0 - Leading Applications in Government
Presenters:
Eric Bristow - Senior Manager, Deloitte Consulting
Doug Shoupp – Principal, Deloitte Consulting
I developed this presentation as a member of the Union Square Redevelopment Civic Advisory Committee (CAC) and its Transportation and Infrastructure subcommittee. The presentation was made to fellow CAC members, members of the public, Somerville City Government staff, US2 (the Master Developer) staff, and other group representatives including Union Square Main Streets, Union Square Neighbors, and the Union United Coalition on 7-14-15. The purpose of the talk is to present underlying concepts, benefits, and options related to smart city infrastructure in the context of Union Square Somerville. My intent was to spark discussion and further consideration including the idea of making Union Square an urban innovation lab (to attract employers, improve civic life, and support public and private services and benefits) for the entire city and beyond.
Tinkering with Justice 2.0: opportunities for citizen shaped innovationPatrick McCormick
My presentation, from the Australia panel at the 2010 Gov 2.0 Expo in Washington DC, outlining initiatives and case studies from the State of Victoria and Victoria Department of Justice
presented at FutureGov Hong Kong in March 2010 - an examination of opportunities for citizen engagement and Gov 2.0 and review of examples from the Department of Justice and Victorian Government
Government 2.0 or the use of the new collaborative tools and approaches of Web 2.0 offers an unprecedented opportunity to achieve more open, accountable, responsive and efficient government.
Information collected by or for the public sector — is a national resource which should be managed for public purposes. That means that we should reverse the current presumption that it is secret unless there are good reasons for release and presume instead that it should be freely available for anyone to use and transform unless there are compelling privacy, confidentially or security considerations.
Government 2.0 is central to the delivery of government reforms like promoting innovation; and making our public service the world’s best.
presented at Gov 2.0 conference in Canberra on 22 Oct 2009: using Larry Lessig\'s Remix meme to describe the potential for government to leverage the architecture of the Internet and Web 2.0 tools to foster the co-production of public goods - including both services and policy development.