27 Matching Annotations
  1. Aug 2022
    1. Hi! Welcome to the Civics of Technology #AnnotateEdTech conversation about school surveillance platforms. We’ll be engaging in close, critical reading of the claims made by ed-tech companies about their technology, how it works, and to what ends. The annotations we leave behind can also act as living resources for others to visit and build upon; to that end, you can use the affordances of social annotation, such as hyperlinking, to connect your observations with texts beyond each company’s website. You can also draw upon and contribute to a growing library of journalism, reports, peer-reviewed articles, opinion pieces, and other texts about school surveillance technologies.

      If you decide to annotate, you might consider addressing some of the following questions: * What do you notice? What do you wonder? * What narratives does the company tell about education? About being a student? A teacher? An administrator? About teaching? About learning?

      You can also use the Baldwin Test for educational technology to guide your annotations: 1. Be as specific as possible about what the technology in question is and how it works. 2. Identify any obstacles to our own understanding of a technology that result from failures of corporate or government transparency. 3. Name the corporations responsible for creating and spreading the technological product. 4. Attribute agency to the human actors building and using the technology, never to the technology itself. 5. Name the technology’s theory (or theories) of learning. 6. Describe the technology’s effects on pedagogy. 7. Highlight the technology’s impacts on the environment.

      Thanks for joining us!

    1. Hi! Welcome to the Civics of Technology #AnnotateEdTech conversation about school surveillance platforms. We’ll be engaging in close, critical reading of the claims made by ed-tech companies about their technology, how it works, and to what ends. The annotations we leave behind can also act as living resources for others to visit and build upon; to that end, you can use the affordances of social annotation, such as hyperlinking, to connect your observations with texts beyond each company’s website. You can also draw upon and contribute to a growing library of journalism, reports, peer-reviewed articles, opinion pieces, and other texts about school surveillance technologies.

      If you decide to annotate, you might consider addressing some of the following questions: * What do you notice? What do you wonder? * What narratives does the company tell about education? About being a student? A teacher? An administrator? About teaching? About learning?

      You can also use the Baldwin Test for educational technology to guide your annotations: 1. Be as specific as possible about what the technology in question is and how it works. 2. Identify any obstacles to our own understanding of a technology that result from failures of corporate or government transparency. 3. Name the corporations responsible for creating and spreading the technological product. 4. Attribute agency to the human actors building and using the technology, never to the technology itself. 5. Name the technology’s theory (or theories) of learning. 6. Describe the technology’s effects on pedagogy. 7. Highlight the technology’s impacts on the environment.

      Thanks for joining us!

    1. Hi! Welcome to the Civics of Technology #AnnotateEdTech conversation about school surveillance platforms. The annotations we leave behind can also act as living resources for others to visit and build upon; to that end, you can use the affordances of social annotation, such as hyperlinking, to connect your observations with texts beyond each company’s website. You can also draw upon and contribute to a growing library of journalism, reports, peer-reviewed articles, opinion pieces, and other texts about school surveillance technologies.

      If you decide to annotate, you might consider addressing some of the following questions: * What do you notice? What do you wonder? * What narratives does the report tell about education? About being a student? A teacher? An administrator? About teaching? About learning?

      Thanks for joining us!

    1. Hi! Welcome to the Civics of Technology #AnnotateEdTech conversation about school surveillance platforms. We’ll be engaging in close, critical reading of the claims made by ed-tech companies about their technology, how it works, and to what ends. The annotations we leave behind can also act as living resources for others to visit and build upon; to that end, you can use the affordances of social annotation, such as hyperlinking, to connect your observations with texts beyond each company’s website. You can also draw upon and contribute to a growing library of journalism, reports, peer-reviewed articles, opinion pieces, and other texts about school surveillance technologies.

      If you decide to annotate, you might consider addressing some of the following questions: * What do you notice? What do you wonder? * What narratives does the company tell about education? About being a student? A teacher? An administrator? About teaching? About learning?

      You can also use the Baldwin Test for educational technology to guide your annotations: 1. Be as specific as possible about what the technology in question is and how it works. 2. Identify any obstacles to our own understanding of a technology that result from failures of corporate or government transparency. 3. Name the corporations responsible for creating and spreading the technological product. 4. Attribute agency to the human actors building and using the technology, never to the technology itself. 5. Name the technology’s theory (or theories) of learning. 6. Describe the technology’s effects on pedagogy. 7. Highlight the technology’s impacts on the environment.

      Thanks for joining us!

    1. Hi! Welcome to the Civics of Technology #AnnotateEdTech conversation about school surveillance platforms. We’ll be engaging in close, critical reading of the claims made by ed-tech companies about their technology, how it works, and to what ends. The annotations we leave behind can also act as living resources for others to visit and build upon; to that end, you can use the affordances of social annotation, such as hyperlinking, to connect your observations with texts beyond each company’s website. You can also draw upon and contribute to a growing library of journalism, reports, peer-reviewed articles, opinion pieces, and other texts about school surveillance technologies.

      If you decide to annotate, you might consider addressing some of the following questions: * What do you notice? What do you wonder? * What narratives does the company tell about education? About being a student? A teacher? An administrator? About teaching? About learning?

      You can also use the Baldwin Test for educational technology to guide your annotations: 1. Be as specific as possible about what the technology in question is and how it works. 2. Identify any obstacles to our own understanding of a technology that result from failures of corporate or government transparency. 3. Name the corporations responsible for creating and spreading the technological product. 4. Attribute agency to the human actors building and using the technology, never to the technology itself. 5. Name the technology’s theory (or theories) of learning. 6. Describe the technology’s effects on pedagogy. 7. Highlight the technology’s impacts on the environment.

      Thanks for joining us!

    1. Hi! Welcome to the Civics of Technology #AnnotateEdTech conversation about school surveillance platforms. We’ll be engaging in close, critical reading of the claims made by ed-tech companies about their technology, how it works, and to what ends. The annotations we leave behind can also act as living resources for others to visit and build upon; to that end, you can use the affordances of social annotation, such as hyperlinking, to connect your observations with texts beyond each company’s website. You can also draw upon and contribute to a growing library of journalism, reports, peer-reviewed articles, opinion pieces, and other texts about school surveillance technologies.

      If you decide to annotate, you might consider addressing some of the following questions: * What do you notice? What do you wonder? * What narratives does the company tell about education? About being a student? A teacher? An administrator? About teaching? About learning?

      You can also use the Baldwin Test for educational technology to guide your annotations: 1. Be as specific as possible about what the technology in question is and how it works. 2. Identify any obstacles to our own understanding of a technology that result from failures of corporate or government transparency. 3. Name the corporations responsible for creating and spreading the technological product. 4. Attribute agency to the human actors building and using the technology, never to the technology itself. 5. Name the technology’s theory (or theories) of learning. 6. Describe the technology’s effects on pedagogy. 7. Highlight the technology’s impacts on the environment.

      Thanks for joining us!