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So usually, what I do in the lab is I grow a bunch of E. Coli and I give the

E. Coli DNA and the E. Coli cells take the DNA and give me my protein back,

but we don't want to bring live bacteria like E.coli into classrooms.

To engineer Biology, you need complicated equipment,

you need fancy labs.

And as a result, most middle schools, most high schools,

and many colleges are not actually appropriately

equipped in order to teach kids the basics of synthetic biology.

You can imagine these schools are

struggling with STEM funding already and now you're asking

them to basically have all the equipment they need for

a BL1 lab and that includes things like freezers,

refrigerators, incubators that shake.

And one of the things we really set out to do in these bio-bits papers, both bio-bits bright,

and bio-bits explorer is to kind of change that paradigm.

We're creating essentially low cost educational kits

that could be used in a classroom setting for less than $100.

What I did is I took all the machinery that we need to build the proteins,

out of the cells, and put them into these little tubes.

So, we can actually make proteins using

these little pellets without having to grow E. Coli.

Now at a high level what we've done is create

the synthetic biology equivalent to the old chemistry kits.

They're inexpensive, easy to use, easy to store,

can be conducted actually in more or less any room,

and the nature of the kit is the idea that you can freeze dry cell-free extracts.

And what that means is you rip off the cell wall and you collect the guts of the cell.

You can kind of think about that like taking a car and you open the hood and you take

the engine and you put it over here and so what

we had have done is we've taken the engine out of a cell.

Like the ribosomes, the amino acids,

that kind of thing and put it into

a separate solution and if we just add the DNA to that solution,

transcription and translation will happen and

you'll get your protein output.

So we're going to add DNA to

these little pellets and then we're going to put them in our little warming incubator.

So we have the BioBits bright kit, where we use

these freeze-dried cell-free reactions to synthesize fluorescent proteins.

And this allows educators to teach components such as the central dogma:

DNA goes to MRNA goes to proteins.

So for example in one of our labs,

students take an eight-well strip of

these freeze-dried cell-free reactions and by just adding different amounts of DNA,

they show that they can synthesize

different amounts of fluorescent proteins in our test tubes.

In our second lab, we give students a 96-w ell plate of

freeze-dried cell-free reactions and we then

challenge them to build their own in vitro synthetic program,

which in their case means painting a picture with these fluorescent protein reactions.

They can make a rainbow, a periodic table,

and that allows educators to start to talk

about how synthetic biologists might control biology.

So you guys made fluorescent proteins.

Yay!

While the bright kit focuses on expression of fluorescent proteins,

the explorer kit introduces a number of new modules that go

beyond just simple fluorescent protein expression.

Showing that we can do other outputs as well,

such as smells, tactile-based hydrogels,

and the fruit sensors.

You remember why we are adding the soap?

To help break the cells. To bust open the cells.

A really popular biology experiment that teachers do

now is the fruit DNA extraction experiment.

You basically mash up the fruit and you extract

the DNA from it and that's the end of the lesson right there,

but with the cell-free sensors now, you can add on to that.

It actually detect if something is a banana or something is a kiwi.

You can really tell that is a banana.

So the sensor could tell the difference

between all these different fruits and all it's always based on the DNA.

That's really cool.

So for the tactile outputs,

we have the students express enzymes and

these enzymes are able to convert peptides into hydrogels.

Woah, this is cool!

For the smell-based outputs,

we are able to express enzyme called ATF1 and ATF1 is able to

convert Isoamyl alcohol into Isoamyl acetate which is another word for banana oil.

That's so cool. It smells like bananas.

You know, our effort has been done in

very tight collaboration with Northwestern University, Mike Jewett's lab.

Our team has included

really talented grad students and postdocs from MIT and the Wyss institute.

So from the outset,

we engaged as many educators as we could both in the university level as well as outside.

Mike Jewett's team actually already has

integrated and tested their kits in the Chicago school systems.

We actually put these reactions into the hands of K12 teachers and students.

Had them run them. They had never seen these reactions before.

It was their first time running

the experiments and we showed that they worked and that actually

that their results were comparable to experiments that I set up.

It's often times those hands on opportunities where you really

get to touch the science that can be transformative.

I think that that's what we hope these kids are.

We want them to be open access.

We want everyone to be able to engage in them.

And it would be incredibly satisfying to see if we inspired a small number if

not a large number of kids to consider

careers in biomedical research as a result of these kits.

For more infomation >> BioBits: Low-cost education kits for molecular and synthetic biology - Duration: 5:48.

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LUKA BABY LEARNING SHAPES FOR KIDS WITH GEOMATRY EDUCATION - Duration: 6:06.

Hi guys. Today we continue with another episode on WOA Luka Channel:

LUKA BABY LEARNING SHAPES FOR KIDS WITH GEOMATRY EDUCATION

If you feel this video is some kind of cool stop motion animation.

Please hit "Subscribe" and "Like"

buttons below to see better episodes on WOA Luka Channel.

And don't forget ro hit the ♪BELL♪

For more infomation >> LUKA BABY LEARNING SHAPES FOR KIDS WITH GEOMATRY EDUCATION - Duration: 6:06.

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#sheleypie #baldisbasics I Cut Playtime's Jumping Rope | Baldi's Basics In Education and Learning - Duration: 1:13.

I Cut Playtime's Jumping Rope

For more infomation >> #sheleypie #baldisbasics I Cut Playtime's Jumping Rope | Baldi's Basics In Education and Learning - Duration: 1:13.

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[KDI FOCUS] Healing a Wary, Self-cultivating Society through Education (Hisam Kim, Fellow) - Duration: 4:11.

Social capital is an intangible asset

that is formed through relationships

between people and includes trust, networks and norms.

It is essential to economic growth and structural reform

as well as to the happiness of individuals and local communities.

According to an international survey,

Korea's social capital,

which was measured by the trust in others,

has dropped far below that of advanced countries.

As a result,

competition has taken over cooperation and

a 'each to his own" mentality now dominates Korean society.

In fact, a survey conducted on

the university students of four countries in 2017 found that

81% of Korean respondents thought high school was a 'battlefield.'

Social trust increases in line with the amount of education received.

But, while this is very true for countries in Northern Europe,

it does not apply to those in the Eastern part of the continent and Korea.

Then, what is the cause for the imbalance?

Past studies found that the formation of social capital

is more contingent on teaching methods

than on education level.

This is proven by the high levels of social capital in Northern Europe

where horizontal teaching methods are actively practiced and

the low levels in Eastern Europe and Korea

where vertical teaching methods prevail.

Then, can Korea really increase its social capital

by changing its teaching methods?

In order to find out,

an educational experiment was conducted on

the students of Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology for one semester.

Three classes were taught via vertical methods

centered around lectures and

three via horizontal methods that adopted team-based discussions and projects.

The changes in the students' network of friends and

perceptions of social capital were then tracked.

The results revealed that

students who were taught by horizontal methods

had wider and tighter networks of friends.

Also, horizontal classes helped to ease any imbalances within the students' networks

so that friendships were not overly dependent on a few specific students.

Horizontal classes made bigger improvements in the students' perceptions

about social capital, including trust, fairness and compliance.

And, the more team discussions and projects that were undertaken,

the more inclusive the classes became.

So, how were these improvements possible

when the subjects did not deal with social capital?

Horizontal teaching methods encourage interaction

and collaboration which, in turn,

expands students' networks and

enhances their perceptions about social capital.

For more infomation >> [KDI FOCUS] Healing a Wary, Self-cultivating Society through Education (Hisam Kim, Fellow) - Duration: 4:11.

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Kentucky interim education commissioner gives JCPS a week to consider settlement proposal - Duration: 1:54.

For more infomation >> Kentucky interim education commissioner gives JCPS a week to consider settlement proposal - Duration: 1:54.

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Kentucky's education board meets in Frankfort - Duration: 1:47.

For more infomation >> Kentucky's education board meets in Frankfort - Duration: 1:47.

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Digital Transformation in Education | #BCTECH Summit 2018 - Duration: 38:07.

good morning everyone and thanks Dr. Winter for that long introduction but I

am excited to be here not only because of Microsoft's great partnership in the

Cascadia Innovation Corridor and the importance to that partnership to the

company I'm also as someone who spends time in

education and I get a chance in my role to travel to about 30 to 40 countries a

year talking to education leaders and ministers and I would have to say and

for those of you do not already know it Canada's education system is one of the

most respected globally it's one of the best national treasures that this great

country has and it's something that is often a point of reference and hope for

countries around the world looking to change and I'm excited to have a context

or a foundation around the role education can and must play with the

innovation discussions the technology discussions that will be happening at

the #BCTECHSummit it's an important dialogue as we see the world around us

changing the role of Technology growing not only in our personal lives but in

the workplace how we keep the world safe how do we solve problems for the future

and technology is going to be a conversation and a topic throughout and

I'll mention technology certainly through my talk this morning but I

wanted a shift and start with mindset and I can tell you as someone who's

visited more than a thousand schools in more than 60 countries mindset is

everything it's what the foundation for change

needs to be not only in our education system but how we transform economies

how we transform workplace mindset starts by how do we shift the

expectation of every learner the reality is in most countries in most parts of

the world and I would argue in many parts of Canada students because of

their economic conditions because of how rule they are and disconnected from

cities maybe even because of their gender they don't walk into schools

expecting that they can must and should have a meaningful role in changing the

world they don't see a limitless potential and future for themselves

teachers have a close mindset about their role

maybe the thinking their role is diminished because of the arrival of

Technology when the opposite is absolutely true so we've got to think

differently this is something that at Microsoft we've embraced lots of the

work that Carol Dweck and Stanford University is done on growth mindset has

been foundational to our transformation and I will pivot throughout my talk this

morning about the role of mindset to shift expectations to think differently

about how we can embrace this opportunity that we're all living in

with technology transformation when I go to schools around the world we talk

about this great transformation it doesn't feel great

unfortunately for lots of educators because they see it as either putting

pressure on them as an educator maybe removing their need and value in the

classroom the reason why there's great transformation is taking place and it is

global I will tell you that the conversations the narrative the

buzzwords around this transformation not only in the economic dynamics but in

education are similar regardless of the country you go to and one of the things

that's become more clear in the last several years in my travels and work in

education is that there's a recognition that education is the engine for

economic growth and development and in this new fourth digital Industrial

Revolution one of the things that has fundamentally changed in the other three

industrial revolutions is that in this new digital economy people don't go to

find jobs jobs find people and when you have talent and you have an educated

population of students and workers leaving institutions to find jobs to

create jobs economic development and prosperity happens and it can happen

globally and so there's a lot of pressure on this transformation the

thing that what schools and many many universities often forget is that the

transformation has already taken place this is not a transformation that is

going to be equal to how many computers or devices that you buy or how much

digitization of textbooks that you do it's a fundamental shift

of how we think about the reality of the three most important things that any

education system can hope to change the first would be the actual mindset of

kids, students we know today students think differently about themselves their

role in the world they use technology and physical reality seamlessly we we

call this generation of students fidgetal and they don't see a difference between

their digital reality whether they consume digital devices collaboration

etc and the world that they live that's something that is becoming natural to

them they also because of that technology see their place in the world

differently and increasingly want to be responsible connect globally to issues

and be purposeful with what they're doing and that's going to become a

pervasive theme throughout the transformation that we need in education

we know that the way these students learn is different this is true for all

of us as well how we share ideas share information how we create content how we

get access to a globally expanding exponentially expanding reality of

content it's changed the way in which we all learn and certainly for students who

are fidgetal learning has fundamentally changed and we know all of you are part

of this the workplace has changed the dynamics of job creation the scale of

global economy the dynamics of manufacturing marketing how we actually

represent businesses and the skills required in this new economy are

different so when you think about education systems trying to transform

and trying to change what we often miss from a mindset shift is recognizing that

the three most important elements that schools could hope to change student

mindset the way in which we learn and the workplace we're preparing our

students for has changed and how do we build on that and it's incredibly

important to build on because as we see the wave of technology trends that are

going to be talked about throughout this conference and I'll touch on the

dynamics of what's potential and the paradigm shifting that will happen with

artificial intelligence in the middle the impact of mix reality

and certainly the emergence of quantum computing has an opportunity to

fundamentally shift and accelerate a lot of the innovation pathway that we've

been on served for the last decade or so and so we've got to get our students

prepared we've got to be thoughtful about how we use these technologies and

certainly we can start with mix reality and I'll just touch on on the dynamics

here and this is not a headset world only and I think oftentimes we think

about mixed reality as it's a son of a virtual reality headset or some

augmented reality technology we've got to understand deeply the connection

technology can have in our physical reality how can technology make us more

assistive how can it be natural how can we cross barriers with language the

reality is the digital reality that people play whether it's online etc

needs to be much more blended as well in this new dynamic so when we think about

mixed reality it's definitely across this spectrum and as we think an emerge

from headset environments as we think about you know a virtual reality

environment or augmented reality that uses technology naturally in our real

world and everywhere in between the future is going to be fueled with mixed

reality activities certainly the classroom has an opportunity to bring

immersive connection to content and experiences into the world for students

and build on that in terms of what we can create in this spectrum now this is

the exciting thing about mix reality it's not just hey I'm in a virtual world

or I'm seeing content differently it's going to allow us not only to help

people who need help with inclusivity but it's going to allow us to create and

make things differently there's an amazing example in Melbourne Australia

with RMIT which is a university in Melbourne that their school of

architecture has actually been using augmented technology and augmented

hololens devices to actually build new construction buildings and as the video

plays you'll get a chance to see how they're using it they built software to

allow them to do this in their school of architecture and what's interesting is

the students are using an augmented reality device to be able

to create different structures sculptures buildings in very different

ways what was interesting about this as I met with the students what the

students shared was these buildings would not be possible without augmented

technology because it's impossible to draw or sketch or build architectural

maps for these types of buildings and even if you did even if you can render a

map or design it's very very hard for contractors to build in this new way

with these new dynamics these new shapes and dimensions so what they're using in

RMIT to actually make these buildings a real reality is they're taking the

render putting in an augmented reality headset and as the the buildings are

welded and constructed the the contractors are actually using augmented

reality devices to understand the angles the wells the placement of beams and

steel and this is opening up an opportunity for creation that wasn't

before possible and this is going to be a huge shift as we think about the

education reality not just seeing the world differently but doing things

differently now as we think about the emergence of AI and emergence of AI is

going to be certainly a topic of conversation it's something that the

world is looking for certainly we know the role a I can play in every industry

in our personal lives and certainly in the world of Education and as we think

about emergence of AI it's not different from any other part of history when we

have an opportunity to make progress overcome challenges whether it's

crossing a river or feeding people how do we use technology devices ingenuity

to solve big challenges and we've had that happen in many many phases

throughout the world where we create the printing press or automobiles etc and as

these innovations have happened there's always been challenges you know well you

know we've got a rise of cars that obviously helps mobilize the population

create new connection create new industry create new jobs and may

displace jobs it may create pollution there's dynamics

around all these technology innovations and this is absolutely clear as we see

the rise of artificial intelligence it's not something that is actually even as

obvious or consistent as you would think we talk with a lot of schools who are

working to provide predictive insight of students who are about to fail this is

helpful versus seeing a student get an F on a paper wouldn't we use AI and

predictive insight to be able to tell a teacher or parent or a student even if

they're at risk of failing well that may seem like a good thing there are many

many parents who absolutely don't want that because they don't want that in the

mindset not only of their children they don't want their teachers thinking that

their student is at risk of failing so we have to think about how this new

opportunity this new innovation can help us and be thought practically now one of

the things about all the phases of this ingenuity and certainly what's happening

in AI it's driven by data and this is a reality and this is a journey and I'll

talk about this narrative fundamentally as it relates to education because I

meet with schools and universities who have this problem and certainly

understand this dynamic but this is I think true in all industries I look at

really four core phases of this data journey and this is critically important

and you need to understand where your organization is maybe the elements

within your organization are as it relates to this data journey because a

lot of the innovation that's going to be possible is gonna be fueled by your

evolution across the spectrum the first phase is the collection phase lots of

data is being collected in many of your institutions and organizations certainly

in schools lots of data though is not collected as well if you have children

in schools think about what happens when their student is in school for a year

and your teacher knows what motivates them they knows what makes them happy

they know the interests that they have outside of school maybe what they want

to be in the future and they're putting grades into a sheet

that's often what's transferred to their next year teacher all that nuance all

that insight is often being lost the data that we are capturing is often

siloed not aligned to systems not transparent for educators or policy

makers etc so we've got to work to say all this data we've got to collect the

right things we've got to make sure that it's obvious and transparent to the

people using the data and purposeful in that guidance so we moved because that

data is overwhelming and it's challenging we know it's important to

display and the display phase is the dashboard phase of the journey this is

where red yellow and green lights become popular this is where we start to think

about hey we've got to organize the data to make it meaningful this is the

shortest phase of the journey and that's partly because once you actually have

exposure to the data once you can see it across your organization or institution

you want to act on it you don't want to look at historical trends and activities

you want to actually say I don't want to see things after they happen I want to

understand how to prevent issues how do I Drive for the future so you use

predictive algorithms use insight to use the data to actually anticipate to

become more adaptive and predictive now the reality of this phase it's

absolutely important but it's not the end we need to use data not only to tell

us where to go but actually go and evolve data to where it actually no

longer needs to be core present upfront because I'm not sure about your

institutions but one of the big challenges that we have with data and a

data-driven culture in schools and universities is that teachers and

professors are not customed to actually looking at dashboards before they build

a lesson before they engage with schools educators don't have the time or maybe

even the interest or maybe the mindset to embrace data and instruction and

increasingly with the rise of AI with the rise of connected systems data will

become the fuel of experiences and this is where AI really becomes magical for

classrooms certainly with the organizations how do you use the data

the insights that you're collecting to drive the right experiences to keep

people safe to save energy to innovate to draw the right

inclusions and strategy and so we've got to talk about this role of AI and really

what it's doing to fundamentally unlock human ingenuity and we often think about

AI as something that is anti human naturally AI is going to remove jobs

it's going to displace workers what we've got to do is actually understand

how AI can help amplify human potential we certainly see that reality in

classrooms where we can use personalized learning to connect students to their

passions what motivates them as a student to make everything that we learn

purposeful and by the way if you have children in school or if you're an

educator or a teacher the most important question every student should ask and we

should ask is why are kids learning what they're learning what are they going to

do with what they learn in a world where answers are on your phone content is

ubiquitous it's much more important now than ever before to give that purposeful

connection and we can use AI to fuel that human innovation and ingenuity and

let's take a look at some of the ways in which that's happening in all of our

lives

behind every great achievement every triumph of human progress you'll find

people driven to move the world forward people finding inspiration where it's

least expected people who lead with their imagination but in an increasingly

complex world we face new challenges

and sometimes it feels like we've reached our limits now with the help of

intelligent technology we can achieve more

we can access information that empowers us in new ways we can see things that we

didn't see before and we can say on top of what matters most when we have the

right tools and AI extends our capabilities we can tap into even

greater potential whether it's a life-changing innovation being the hero

for the day making a difference in someone's future or breaking down

barriers to bring people closer together intelligent technology helps you to see

more do more and be more and when your ingenuity is amplified you are

unstoppable

so it's all about unlocking that potential in people but I want to give

it a practical example and maybe you can also help me participate in this example

and this is a real project Microsoft is working with the snow leopard trust

which is just a little bit below us outside of Seattle and they're using the

Microsoft cloud Azure to apply artificial intelligence to the research

that they're doing on the snow leopard population in Central Asia and there is

a diminishing population of snow leopards on the planet and the

researchers historically have gone to Central Asia and set up trap cameras not

unlike the one you see in this photo and they set these photos up and typically

of three or four times a year they set these cameras up throughout the habitat

and those those cameras take photos hundreds of thousands of photos of snow

leopards so they can help do research sometimes the photos are nice beautiful

shots like this but oftentimes the photos are at night or foggy etc

sometimes we're not actually seeing what we thought and by the way as I talked

about this this is also a metaphor for how data operates in your organization

or institution sometimes it's very clear sometimes it's a little bit dark maybe

you don't understand sometimes it's foggy sometimes you get unexpected you

get something that may look like a Snow Leopard

but it actually is not a lot of times you get really nothing or no clear

insight from this data sometimes it's hard to see you know I'll ask you to

play the role of a snow leopard researcher in with Snow Leopard trust

now imagine hundreds of thousands of photographs that people have to sort

through to find snow leopards looking in images like this is this a Snow Leopard

picture or not there actually is a Snow Leopard here you could see the end of

the tail and this pop pied how about this one there's none in there maybe

this one or you got one on the Left maybe here

you see a pic you see a sow leopard right here maybe the last one very

well-hidden a Snow Leopard staring right at you

now imagine researchers spending time manually going through hundreds of

thousands of images to find snow leopards when we can use the power of

pattern matching recognition of gait an understanding of the dynamics of by

collecting images and getting smarter about finding snow leopards and do this

fairly instantly and sorting these hundreds of thousands of photos to help

the researchers get through the work this is not fundamentally artificial

intelligence we think this is really authentic the intelligence that these

researchers are applying to learn more about snow leopards and actually do the

real research this is the shift this is what we need to embrace as we embrace

the potential of AI now let's give you an example in education this is a

context that we struggle with in classrooms every day

educators struggle with I've got two kids I want to understand which one is

it more risk lots of schools are saying let's bring data to the rescue

let's bring insight to the rescue so let's let me share that example okay now

we've got these students now imagine the system was really really you know

innovative and prevent progressive they're not only thinking about grades

they're thinking about connection to optimism socialization really connecting

to the in social and emotional learning journey that students want so the

educator has a plot of student performance at Grant's this grid you can

apply it to math science history etc grades it's very different and difficult

to understand which student is at more risk what does that even mean

the dynamics of what to do it's very difficult for an educator that's just

two kids most teachers have a lot more than two kids

they've got classrooms of kids schools of kids so it's not just about data

this is going to be true in organizations in every industry it's not

just understanding that we can collect data we can map it we're gonna need to

use new technologies to make the connection to data to understand the

opportunities for us to use the data in the experiences that fuel our work every

digital book that a student has should know who's reading it should know what

motivates them should know what's on their schedule could should understand

their challenges and weaknesses these are the dynamics that we have to bring

that will be powered by the way in which we bring AI to the mix and that's

something that we have to work together on collectively across industry across

vendors to do it I'll touch a little bit on quantum computing and quantum

computing is certainly the largest and certainly the most emerging

technology paradigm that's on this list but it happens to be one of them one

ones that is most fundamental if we're using data and AI to sort and

make data more useful the power that we can harness with quantum is going to

enable us to use that data to solve some of the challenges that are a little bit

out of reach for us to solve with the current computing platform so let's take

a look at some of the work that we're doing at Microsoft some of the work that

will emerge and the impact quantum computing can have on all of us

when we talk about quantum computing it's a completely different game quantum

computing you will enable us to solve problems that currently take longer than

the lifetime of the universe in seconds hours or days we completely reconceive

the space in which we do computation quantum computing is like going from

crawling to going to a different planet

it's different

it's only natural that we would want to use the world's most powerful device to

combat the world's most challenging problems we could attack global warming

security what are the boundaries of machine learning fighting diseases

the possibilities of modern computers are endless

Microsoft has the best and the brightest it's working on this problem

it's really happening progress is very fast we're building a quantum computer

but the world wants to know us what happens when we turn the machine on

what problems will be solvable with a computer that computes in a billion

parallel universes at the same time

so the potential of quantum and certainly mixed reality and AI are huge

one of the challenges that all of you face certainly the world faces is

finding students to innovate to build to create the future with those three

technology paradigms is hard it's impossible for companies to find the

technology staff the developers the data scientists the robotics engineers to

drive the connection and this is the change and we see this is attention

often between why students are in school and what their role is and what they

want to do in their future the perception of the way in which the

system or institutions are driving things like curriculum and the testing

model that exists in many countries and the role of educators to harness that

purposeful learning connection this is creating a global crisis of skills

around the world and this is true increasingly where the innovation

opportunities that countries increasingly do have is not met based on

the outcome and the output of institutions we have this inside of her

even the the dynamics with what we call stem or steam which increasingly is a T

problem not an SEM problem it's understanding the dynamics of Technology

in the role of Technology I think in 2015 only 12% of computer science

graduates which is a small population we need a lot more of 12% of those had

expertise with cloud computing when that's driving the change of the world

in that population 10% are women so we've got a problem inside that T but

increasingly as we think about AI and robotics and quantum computing mixed

reality the gap is greater and we've got to work on that we see it happening with

youth unemployment and certainly Canada is in a good position as it relates to

this global dynamic but as we think about the youth unemployment we see

Canada doing very well globally but the economic dynamics around education are

universal and that's creating pressure on the system and Microsoft were

starting to work with harnessing the power and potential of our

of the role LinkedIn can play with not only getting a student a purposeful

connection to learning but actually harnessing what they're learning and

what they need to prepare for the workforce that's changing we have a

project that's going on in India and Andhra Pradesh in India to actually

drive that work to make it real for students to give them a connection on

why they're in school and how they can prepare for the future harnessing the

power of the LinkedIn graph connected to their education landscape and let's take

a look at project Sangam in Andhra Pradesh India ended other than the job I

so this is just getting started but the connection between why we're learning

what we're learning what we're going to do with it

what we can make is critical it's critical to inspire students it's

critical to unleash the talent that exists everywhere around the planet in

every classroom and it's not just helping kids get a job the reality is

that's not enough in many cases the youth unemployment is challenged because

there's not enough entrepreneurship and job creation and in this digital

Industrial Revolution that's what we've got to do we've got to inspire students

to create jobs building on the skills that are not only going to be necessary

in the workplace but going to fuel their passion and their lifelong learning

growth and this is the work we've got to do across these we often call these

historically the four C's creativity critical thinking collaboration and

communication certainly we understand computational thinking computing is

entered that top C and I'll add another C maybe a six C and that's character

increasingly in the global world that we live in the complex dynamics not only

with regards to technology but the implication of ethics around how we use

technology understanding how we can have a meaningful world up a world connection

to helping people around the world live better lives character is going to be

essential for students and giving them that growth mindset to overcome

obstacles to believe that they can achieve to go into schools expecting a

greater future for themselves and their family and they've got to embrace that

growth mindset it's what's fueling everything that we do at Microsoft and

I'm gonna close with just an example of applying that growth mindset to a

project that started here in Vancouver so I'm gonna talk a little bit about the

work that we've done at Microsoft with our hackathons and I'm looking forward

to in in July I'll be part of many hackathons I have a number of ideas and

I'm forming teams now it's an opportunity that every year the company

gets teams together across disciplines across talents to build and innovate

with ideas that connect to their personal passion how they can use their

talents to great work and we had a hackathon team led by our

engineering team in Vancouver who created a hack called learning tools now

learning tools that started out as an add-in to OneNote OneNote is a product

in office 365 it's available cross-platform cross-device is available

for free for students around the world to help kids primarily with dyslexia or

dysgraphia learn to read more effectively what we've learned and that

was a tremendously noble mission I'll share a little bit more about it what

we've learned about the work that we do around inclusive technology it unlocks

potential for everyone it unlocks understanding of how we use language in

this context how do we use our own AI platforms and technologies to make an

experience possible for kids we've got increasingly think about

inclusivity in terms of the work that we do and it's driving and fueling

innovation across many unexpected disciplines and that's absolutely true

what's with what's happening with learning tools now learning tools can

take anything texts notes that you're taking maybe even a photograph of a

piece of paper and not only bring that into a clean easy to read experience but

understand languages understand words read back to a student who's struggling

to read and the results of this have been incredible students that have

struggled to read beyond their grade level are advancing multiple grade

levels in a very very short amount of time teachers who have had problems with

students who not only have dyslexia dysgraphia but maybe I've just struggled

to read are unlocking potential and confidence in kids and let me share a

that's a tool it's an amazing tool it started here in Vancouver as part of our

partnership with the Cascadia innovation corridor the work that we're doing

together in Canada that's a tool used all around the world by educators and

students and that speaks to the change that we all need to make to lead

embracing a growth mindset on how we're going to apply this innovation that we

all have capacity to do think about the role technology can have to make the

world a better place and to unleash the potential in every amazing kid on the

planet thanks to work that all of you do as

leaders as technology innovators to drive that change not only for Canada

but for the world thanks for the work that you're doing Microsoft is happy and

proud to be a part of it in Canada and globally and have a great #BCTECHSummit

thank you

you

For more infomation >> Digital Transformation in Education | #BCTECH Summit 2018 - Duration: 38:07.

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Question 8 - Jan Tinetti to the Minister of Education - Duration: 2:42.

For more infomation >> Question 8 - Jan Tinetti to the Minister of Education - Duration: 2:42.

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Cyber Education Center - Duration: 0:55.

For more infomation >> Cyber Education Center - Duration: 0:55.

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Beaufort County continuing education - Duration: 1:59.

For more infomation >> Beaufort County continuing education - Duration: 1:59.

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Structural inequality in education - Duration: 2:38.

For more infomation >> Structural inequality in education - Duration: 2:38.

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Onslow County Board of Education swears in newest member - Duration: 0:39.

For more infomation >> Onslow County Board of Education swears in newest member - Duration: 0:39.

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Evansville Catholic Schools to implement new education model - Duration: 1:03.

For more infomation >> Evansville Catholic Schools to implement new education model - Duration: 1:03.

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Whole-Child Education: An Advancing K12 Overview - Duration: 4:26.

Kids are under pressure from all angles: over 18% of children are obese and 20% suffer from

mental illness.

They face increasing inequities as a result of the growing socioeconomic divide.

And, for generations, education policy has placed a premium on test stores and accountability,

to the detriment of individual students' unique abilities.

Cue the concept of "whole-child education."

It's a term used to represent the necessary evolution of our school systems beyond a traditional,

academic focus.

This approach nurtures several facets of child development, starting with health: both physical

and mental.

On the physical front, schools have embraced strategies to promote wellness, especially

by improving K-12 food service.

What was once an assembly line of low-cost mystery meals is now a central part of district

operations.

From full-service breakfasts to healthy, locally-sourced lunch line options, food has become more than

an afterthought.

Some innovative districts have even found ways to feed students after school and during

summer.

Why?

Because well-nourished bodies translate to active minds.

But wellness is just the beginning.

Many districts have instituted comprehensive frameworks to support whole-child education,

including three popular methodologies: Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports, or

PBIS, emphasizes encouragement and positive behavior over punitive reactions.

Response to Intervention, more commonly known as RTI, helps students get and stay on track

through personalized and data-driven instructional methods.

Multi-Tiered Systems of Supports, or MTSS, often incorporates both RTI and behavioral

interventions, including those related to attendance.

Now, keep in mind, these terms may be used interchangeably depending on where you are.

As for curriculum and instruction, personalized, customized, and project-based learning are

all neatly aligned with whole-child initiatives, so it's no surprise to see the explosion of

interest in these types of approaches.

When speaking to curriculum and instruction leaders, the common refrain we hear is a commitment

to identifying and providing the best options for every student.

Whether that means mastery-based programs for kids who would otherwise feel stunted,

blended learning opportunities for those who don't thrive in a traditional environment,

or projects requiring practical application of skills, the end result is the same—students

are more likely to feel supported on the most fundamental of levels.

As you might have guessed, whole-child learning works best when families are invested, too.

That's why it's so alarming to see the results of a recent Gallup poll, which shows just

TWENTY PERCENT of parents were fully engaged with their child's school.

I won't go into too much detail here, but I will happily direct you to skyward.com/parentengagement,

an epic library of research, resources, and success stories from school districts on the

topic of parent engagement.

The final, familiar component to our exploration of whole-child learning might be the easiest

to overlook: simply put, it's the duty of the school system to provide a challenging

academic environment.

Take all the most common buzzwords of the past decade (think rigor, standards, and agency)

and blend them together with the understanding that the whole child is only served when the

child is adequately prepared for what comes next.

High school graduation cannot be the ultimate goal of K-12 education.

And that, my friends, is what whole-child education is all about.

It's a monumental ideal for schools to work toward, knowing there is only so much time

in the day and only so much funding on the way.

Your challenge is to figure out how to make it work despite all the obstacles.

How are you doing so far?

Are your students able to shine?

Are you doing right by the whole child?

Thanks for joining us.

Stay tuned for more from the intersection of technology, culture, and leadership.

For more infomation >> Whole-Child Education: An Advancing K12 Overview - Duration: 4:26.

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7th International Congress on Education and Learning (2018) - Duration: 3:02.

The journal is interested in both articles that are research oriented as well as

theoretical, in both at the elementary middle school as well college and

university perspectives, but we welcome also the opportunity to have special

issues that focus on particular topics that would be of interest to our subscribers.

This conference is absolutely fantastic and what I've really enjoyed about it is

number one, the interdisciplinary strand of the conference. Is so interesting to

find out about what you're actually thinking or you're doing in terms of

research, some of the people are actually doing something very similar as well,

even as diverse as they are. And this conference is... what I think I really

enjoyed about it is the global side of things, it's internationality.

The exchange of knowledge among the delegates

given that there are 40 countries here represented.

When you travel to foreign countries, language is always an issue that makes things difficult.

But in this Congress I can use both my mother language and English, which is widely used,

and that makes me feel more at ease.

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