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09 November 2008

Ruminations: 2008 YPulse Mashup Boston

I just spent a couple days at the YPulse Youth Marketing Mashup East which was held on the campus of Boston University. As usual, it was a fantastic event! Congrats to Anastasia and the Modern Media team for putting together a really informative, fun and relevant event.

I have a few longer posts about the event brewing in my noggin that I hope to push out here on Barking Robot sometime next week. But I had a couple quick thoughts  and highlights from the event that I'd like to share while it's still fresh in ye olde noggin.

On Boston: The more time I spend in this city, the deeper I fall in love with it. New England in the fall is something that everyone should experience. One morning I took a walk along the Charles River. The tree's were heavy with orange, yellow and red foliage, the ground was still wet from the overnight rain and rowers glided silently up and down the Charles. Stunning.

On Boston University: Graceful old buildings, a deep sense of history and lots of energy oozing from the student body. Just fantastic. One morning on my way to the YPulse event, I passed the campus chapel and a beautiful sculpture of doves flying up into the sky. At the base of the monument, students had placed bundles upon bundles of flowers. I was curious, but I was also running late, so I didn't have time to learn more.

The YPulse event was opened by Dean Kenneth Elmore, Dean of Students at Boston University. He started with a super energetic and warm welcome to Boston the city and Boston the University. Dean Elmore was full of passion, energy and enthusiasm. As part of his keynote, he spoke about President-Elect Obama, collaboration, community and how great things can be accomplished when we work together. It was very inspiring.

Dean Elmore also took a moment to explain more about the bundles of flowers being left at the base of the sculpture I had seen earlier in the day. The sculpture is a memorial to one of the greatest alumnus ever to study at Boston University--Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

The morning after Barack Obama was elected the 44th President of the United States of America, students began to spontaneously leave flowers at the MLK monument to honor Dr. King and his contributions, sacrifice and role in making the Obama presidency a reality. It gave me chills.

We need more people like Dean Elmore in the world.

On Virgin Mobile: Ron Faris from Virgin Mobile USA gave a really fantastic presentation on the Virgin Mobile Festival and Pro-Social Initiatives. He started by having everyone text "karma" to 68405. He then told us that for every text, American Eagle would donate a hoodie to homeless teen. Way to go Virgin Mobile!

Ron's presentation was really, really interesting. Virgin Mobile, and the Virgin brand, have done some really innovative, creative and interesting work in the music, pro-social, marketing and branding space. He also talked about the mobile and texting habits of Gen Y and how Virgin is leveraging mobile to engage and market to youth. You can read more on the live blog transcript.

At the end of his presentation, he mentioned that Virgin Mobile next pro-social cause is to become an advocate on the issue of homeless teens. Virgin Mobile will be launching an awareness campaign in the next couple of weeks. Want to hear something shocking? According to research conducted by Virgin Mobile, there are approximately 1 million homeless teens in the United States of America.

Yes....1 million.

These teens are homeless for a variety of reasons ranging from being kicked out by their parents due to sexual orientation, abusive parents
or being abandoned. This figure just floored me. I've spent a lot of time working with homeless adults and mothers with children, but I was woefully ignorant on the subject of homeless teens.

I spoke to the Virgin Mobile team about their homeless teen campaign and I will keep everyone here at Barking Robot updated on how you can help out. I feel very strongly that the education technology community should be actively and passionately involved in this issue. Homeless teens are an education issue.

On SurveyU & MTV: Dan Coates from SurveyU gave a really interesting and relevant presentation titled, What Every Brand Could Learn from the Obama Campaign's Marketing to College Students. He shared lots of really good information, far too much to share here, but you can read more over on the YPulse Live Blog. SurveyU also had a very, very interesting report titled, What Happens to Media as Millennial Take Control?, that I'll blog about in-depth next week.

Dan Hart, SVP MTV Digital, also gave a very insightful presentation, Engaging Viewers Through Multiple Screens, where he talked about MTV's strategy to meet the demands and viewing habits of their (mostly) Gen Y viewers.

One example of how MTV was meeting the always on media habits of Gen Y was Backchannel --a social and interactive platform that allows "fans gather to talk about The Hills as it happens! Type your thoughts and don't hold back! Other players award points with a click of their mouse on the best comments. When it's your turn to click, earn points by predicting the comments you think will be the most popular." Mr. Hart said that this multi-channel approach has been wildly successful and popular.

On YPulse: As usual, this was a fantastic event. The next YPulse Mashup will be held in San Francisco on June 1 & 2, 2009. If you work with youth in education, technology, social services or marketing, you should--no you need--to attend the 2009 YPulse Mashup.

And now, time for that nap...

Related Resources

03 October 2008

ILC 2008: Special Discount Offer

The Innovative Learning Conference (ILC) is an interactive three-day conference and exposition produced in partnership with CUE and FETC for the K-12 education community.

ILC 2008, is being held in the heart of Silicon Valley, will offer “hands-on” workshops, concurrent sessions, meetings and exhibitions.  I'm excited to be covering ILC 2008 as part of the education blogger and press corps.

I'm pleased to announce that now through Oct. 6, Barking Robot readers are eligible to receive an exclusive discount of $40 off of conference registration fees. To claim the discount, simply use the special promotional code ORG40 during registration.

See you there!

Related Resources

29 July 2008

K12 Open Minds Conference

If you have an interest in Open Source Software and its benefits for K-12 schools, I hope you will consider attending and/or presenting at the 2008 K12 Open Minds Conference, September 25-27, in Indianapolis, Indiana.

This is an unparalleled opportunity to talk with teachers, administrators and technology staff from around the U.S. and the world. Here are some important links:

The conference expects more than 600 attendees, from the US, Europe, Asia and North and South America. Dozens of sessions that address teaching and learning, leadership and policy, and technology and infrastructure issues related to open technologies make this conference a "must attend" event.

Featured Speakers include:

  • Donna Benjamin - Executive Director of Creative Contingencies and board member of Open Source Industry Australia;
  • Alex Inman -- Director of Technology at Whitfield School, St. Louis, MO - an Essential School using open source;
  • Dr. David Thornburg - Director of Global Operations for the Thornburg Center and author of several books including, When the Best is Free.

Related Resources

22 July 2008

YPulse 2008 National Mashup Recap

Due to a family emergency, I wasn't able to attend the 2008 Ypulse National Mashup, but it sounds like it was another fantastic and interesting event. I've poked around the web and rounded up some of the best of the best blog posts, UStream and tweets from the event.

And if, like me, you weren't able to attend the San Francisco Mashup, be sure to stay tuned for the 2008 YPulse Youth Marketing Mashup which will be held November 6-7 on the campus of Boston University. This event will focus on youth aged 16-24 (high school juniors, seniors and college age students).

Congrats to Anastasia on another outstanding event.

Related Resources

17 July 2008

Free Education 2.0 Conference

The Knowledge Bank online conference out of Australia this year is focused on Web 2.0 in education: what it is, how it’s being used today and its potential to radically change education. Steve Hargadon will be giving the keynote address on why "Web 2.0 Is the Future of Education."

You can learn more about the conference by clicking here.

Related Resources

05 July 2008

NECC 2008: Social Media & Education Session

There was a great back channel conversation during the Social Networks and Education panel a couple days ago here at NECC 2008 in San Antonio, Texas.

It was a lively discussion and there were lots of tips, suggestions and other good ideas shared among the group. Here's a copy of the transcript (pdf).

Enjoy!

Related Resources

19 June 2008

PodCamp Ireland 2008

PodCamp Ireland is the very first stand-alone event to promote the use and provide guidance and tips on the subject of social media in Ireland and will be taking place on September 27th 2008 in Kilkenny, Ireland.

You can learn more and get information on registration by clicking here.

Related Resources

18 June 2008

EdTech Obama Meet Up @ NECC 2008

Will you be in San Antonio, Texas, on Sunday June 29th? Come join me and other supporters of Barack Obama for President at a free EdTech  Meet Up for Obama in '08 and Unite for Change in TX.

Where: Sunset Station, Depot 1, just 2 blocks from the convention center

When: Sunday June 29, 8:30-10:30 pm

What: Chips, salsa, drinks, and great political conversation

RSVP: http://my.barackobama.com/page/event/detail/meeting/4gzk

Alternative RSVP instructions: Go to www.barackobama.com, click events in the right column, search for events in zip code 78205, and click EdTech Meet Up.

Related Resources

15 June 2008

K12 Online Conference 2008: Call for Papers

The K12 Online Conference 2008 has just issued a call for proposals. This year’s conference is scheduled for October 20-24 and October 27-31 of 2008, and will include a pre-conference keynote during the week of October 13. The conference theme for 2008 is "Amplifying Possibilities."

Participation in the conference (as in the past) is entirely free. Conference materials are published in English and available for worldwide distribution and use under a Creative Commons license. The deadline for proposal submission has been extended to July 11, 2008.

You can get more information, including the proposal form, over on the K12 Online website.

Related Resources

28 May 2008

Constructing Modern Knowledge 2008

The Constructivist Consortium is sponsoring a four-day institute focusing on "intensive computer-rich project development with peers and a world-class faculty." The conference will be held at the Radison Hotel in Manchester, New Hampshire.

This isn't a typical conference where you get to sit and passively listen to the speakers. This is a hands-on conference where active participation is not only encouraged, it's expected. There's also a great line up of thought leaders from across the education space--including, Dr. Gary Stager.

I had the great honor and pleasure to have Dr. Stager as one of my grad school professors at Pepperdine University. What I love most about Dr. Stager is that he really makes you think and defend your positions, ideas and theories.

This sounds like a great event and I'm sure that anyone who attends will leave the conference full of ideas, resources and new insight.

Related Resources

14 May 2008

NECC 08 Community Network

Hot off the grapevine that is Twitter, here's an online community set up by Steve Hargadon for NECC 2008. Come join us!

Welcome to the NECC Ning, designed to help you connect to like-minded NECC attendees and extend the conversations. We hope you will use the Ning to:

  • Document and share your NECC experience by posting videos and photos
  • Interact with conference speakers
  • Create your own profile and find like-minded colleagues
  • Discuss and review conference sessions
  • Start or contribute to a forum discussion
  • Create a group for your school or organization
  • Stay on top of the action during the conference by receiving RSS feeds to your mobile

11 April 2008

Second Life Languages 2008 Conference

18 March 2008

ILC 2008: Call for Papers

The Innovative Learning Conference (ILC) 2008 is a new event produced in partnership by CUE and FETC for the K-12 education community. ILC is devoted to advancing student achievement through an interactive event that will include hands-on workshops, concurrent sessions, meetings and exhibitions.

ILC is designed for teachers, principals, district administrators, curriculum designers, media specialists, technology directors and other educators.

Applications to Present at Breakout Sessions are being accepted through April 1, 2008. You can learn more and complete your online application by clicking here.

10 March 2008

SXSW: Teens & Technology Panel

YPulse founder and Gen Y uber-blogger Anastasia Goodstein who is attending SXSW in Austin, has posted her notes from a panel featuring teens discussing "what they want in websites, cell phones and video games."

Lots of good tidbits here folks, so be sure to take a look.

Related Resources

05 December 2007

Best of Show: NCSS 2008

Last week I attended the National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS) conference in San Diego. The theme of the conference was "Crossing Borders, Building Bridges." Given the current state of the world, I think this shift towards a more world view is particularly important and relevant.

Even the unusually rainy weather outside wasn't able to quell the excitement of the enthusiastic bunch of social studies teachers from around the country who gathered in the convention center. As a self-professed C-SPAN geek, I was particularly happy to see the big C-SPAN bus in the convention center.

While there were tons of great resources and tools being shared at the conference, here's my list of my favorite resources for the social studies classroom.

So, in no particular order, here they are:

C-SPAN Classroom: Okay. I know I'm biased (see above!), but C-SPAN Classroom is chock full of fantastic resources for students and teachers. They have Campaign 2008 video clips, a fantastic site on Alexis deTocqueville, and other curriculum resources to support U.S. Government and Civics education.

Country Reports: This site is an incredible treasure trove of historical, statistical and cultural information on every country in the world. While this is a subscription-based site, there is still a great deal of free content available for students and teachers. Take a look at this country report for Iran.

The Choices Program
: This was, hands down, my most favorite discovery at NCSS 2008. The Choices Program is a national education initiative based at Brown University's Watson Institute for International Studies. The goal of the program is to "empower young people with the skills, knowledge, and participatory habits to be engaged citizens who are capable of addressing international issues through thoughtful public discourse and informed decision making."

The resources are a mix of fee-based and free lesson plans, resources and video clips. Another really useful program is the Teaching with the News, which provides educators with a vast array of resources based around current events. A great example is "U.S. and Iran: Confronting Policy Alternatives" module which provides resources, links and related curriculum units.

Flocabulary: Shakespeare is Hip-Hop! Yep. You heard that correctly. And the folks over at Flocabulary have figured out a way to blend hip-hop, multimedia and school together into an award winning program designed to engage students, foster literacy and boost their academic experience. Flocabulary has tons of great audio and other resources available including standards-based lesson plans. So go check em out, yo! (groan)

Saudi Aramco World: A free publication focused on Middle East issues, politics and culture. Each issue has a free lesson plans for educators. An all around beautiful publication. The images are stunning.

Outreach World:
A comprehensive one-stop resource for teaching international and area studies and foreign languages in the classroom. This is an incredible repository of resources, lesson plans and other teaching materials. Think of this as a clearinghouse of the best of the best area studies content on the web. Here's a recent curriculum unit that focuses on Muslim culture that includes an instructors guide (pdf).

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