ReportWire

Tag: future

  • End of the Warriors, Knicks’ Ceiling, Zion, and Lillard’s Future With Frank Isola. Plus, Comedian Dan Soder.

    End of the Warriors, Knicks’ Ceiling, Zion, and Lillard’s Future With Frank Isola. Plus, Comedian Dan Soder.

    Russillo opens the show with his thoughts on the play-in games and the end of the Warriors dynasty (0:34). Then, Frank Isola joins to explain what went wrong for Golden State, share which eliminated team needs to hit the reset button, and discuss the Knicks’ ceiling (18:44). Next, comedian Dan Soder comes on to share why he chose comedy and details how jokes are created (55:13). Plus, Ceruti and Kyle join for Life Advice (89:51). How do we kick the bad player out of our pick-up games?

    Check us out on Youtube for exclusive clips, live streams, and more at https://www.youtube.com/@RyenRussilloPodcast

    The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming. Please check out rg-help.com to find out more, or listen to the end of the episode for additional details.

    Host: Ryen Russillo
    Guests: Frank Isola and Dan Soder
    Producers: Steve Ceruti, Kyle Crichton, and Mike Wargon

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / RSS

    Ryen Russillo

    Source link

  • Future and Metro Boomin’s ‘We Trust You Tour’ will stop at State Farm Arena

    Future and Metro Boomin’s ‘We Trust You Tour’ will stop at State Farm Arena

    Three-time GRAMMY® Award-winning artist Future and GRAMMY®-nominated record producer Metro Boomin announced the We Trust You Tour, presented by Cash App and Visa on Tuesday. It includes a stop at State Farm Arena in Atlanta on August 8. They will also stop in Brooklyn, Houston, Toronto, Las Vegas, Inglewood, Seattle and more before wrapping up on Monday, September 9 in Vancouver, BC. Additionally, the 27-date tour also features a festival performance at Lollapalooza in Chicago, IL on Saturday, August 3.

    The tour supports Future and Metro Boomin’s most recent collaborations, WE DON’T TRUST YOU which was released March 22, 2024 and WE STILL DON’T TRUST YOU released this past Friday, April 12, 2024 via Freebandz, Epic Records, Boominati Worldwide and Republic Records. WE DON’T TRUST YOU debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 following release and the track ‘Like That’ with Kendrick Lamar leads Billboard’s Hot 100 for the third week in row.

    Future has collected 3 GRAMMY® Awards, dozens of multi platinum certifications and reached rarified air as one of only a handful of rappers to achieve Diamond status for 2020’s “Life Is Good” [feat. Drake], affirming him as one of the best-selling acts of all-time. In 2019, he garnered his first GRAMMY® Award in the category of “Best Rap Performance” for “King’s Dead” alongside Jay Rock, Kendrick Lamar, and James Blake. Kanye West sought him out as Executive Producer on the headline-making Donda 2 in addition to appearing on two tracks. 

    Itoro N. Umontuen

    Source link

  • Rico Wade, founder of Organized Noize, TLC, has passed away at 52

    Rico Wade, founder of Organized Noize, TLC, has passed away at 52

    Rico Wade, one-third of the legendary production team Organized Noize and founding member of the Dungeon Family, has died. A cause of death has not been released at this time. Wade was 52.

    Wade was a pioneer, a trailblazer, and helped provide the sound for a generation of Atlanta artists. He produced records for OutKast and Goodie Mob, and he was integral in bringing in his younger cousin, Future, into the music business. Wade also TLC’s “Waterfalls” and En Vogue’s “Don’t Let Go (Love).” The Dungeon Family was named for Wade’s basement studio, the Dungeon.

    Killer Mike took to Instagram to pen the following tribute:

    Staff Report

    Source link

  • Your Weekend Playlist: New Music To Listen To This Friday

    Your Weekend Playlist: New Music To Listen To This Friday

    Breaking news: it’s Friday. So that means we have a whole week’s worth of new music. After Billie Eilish basically broke the internet by announcing a new album this week, everyone’s wondering who else is gearing up to release some future Grammy nominees. My guess? Harry Styles. (Or is that just a wish?)


    Either way, we have to focus on the present. While I’m overly ecstatic for it to be the weekend, I’m also equally excited to be listening to all these songs on Spotify. Plus, Coachella starts today, and I know a lot of you are going to need to add some songs to your pregame playlists.

    As always, I’ve combed through every New Music Friday playlist, I’ve read all the press releases, and I’ve done my own research. Here are some of the best new songs to listen to that were released today. Let’s get listening!

    Sabrina Carpenter- “Espresso” 

    Sabrina Carpenter is having herself a year. Ahead of her first Coachella performance this weekend, she releases “Espresso”, a fun-loving hit single that makes you want to lose all your worries and just move. Carpenter is having fun with her life, and it reflects her music. Written in Paris, she was in her traveler mindset just appreciating what the world had to offer. One of my favorite releases today, “Espresso” is a certified banger.

    Sabrina told Zane Lowe,

    “I don’t think I’ve ever gone into writing an upbeat, confident record being like, “I really want to write an upbeat, confident record.” I have to be in that headspace and I have to be in that mood. And this was one of those times in my life where it was just like, I just thought I was the shit in the moment.”

    Perrie- “Forget About Us” 

    Perrie Edwards may not be a familiar name by any means…formerly a leading member of Little Mix, Edwards’ vocal power set her apart from the crowd early on. “Forget About Us” is Perrie’s debut single as a solo artist, a pivotal song that’s both upbeat in melody and melancholic in lyricism.

    Written alongside Ed Sheeran, she reminds us in the same track that although relationships don’t always last, they’re still dynamic moments in our lives that shape who we are. Edwards says,

    “I look back on past relationships and do think happily about those times. Do I want to be there now? No. It didn’t work out that way and if it was supposed to be it would have happened. Relationships have been a huge part of my life and they’ve made me who I am now. I think it’s a nice sentiment to be honest about and it’s super relatable.”

    Peter McPoland- “Speed of the Sound (of you)” 

    Peter McPoland is a one-of-a-kind talent in the music industry. A special force who can write, produce, and record a record by himself and have it sound flawless, McPoland has an ear for a hit track. As his prowess grows, the songs get better…which is exactly the case with “Speed of the Sound (of you).”

    McPoland’s first song of 2024 doesn’t disappoint by any means. It’s a bop that’s worthy of playing over and over. Unique in its own way, Peter McPoland delivers yet another earworm-y song.

    Dua Lipa- “Illusion” 

    I’m getting a bit upset with Dua Lipa for not releasing any sort of ballad and declaring that her album would sound different than the rest…however, I can’t deny that her disco-pop style is great for partying. Although she hasn’t strayed far from her usual style, Lipa shows us she knows what it takes for a chart-topping record…and she’s sticking with what works.

    “Illusion” is every bit the 80’s workout sound you know and love.

    Future, Metro Boomin- “We Still Don’t Trust You” 

    Metro Boomin is the Jack Antonoff of rap, if that makes sense. A highly regarded producer and creator who can work with the best-of-the best and create a Grammy-nominated album every single time. Every time you hear that iconic “Metro Boomin want some more” intro, you know you’re getting a banger.

    “We Still Don’t Trust You” is an absolute vibe. A song I could see myself driving on the highway to at midnight, it’s more beat-heavy than about lyricism. Plus, a few melodies from The Weeknd make this even more of a brooding, moody tune that just works.

    Maggie Rogers- “The Kill” 


    Maggie Rogers has gone for the kill with her new album, Don’t Forget Me. A songwriter to her core, Maggie Rogers is highly regarded as one of the best indie alt stars of our generation. This album deserves its own separate article, but “The Kill” is one of her best submissions.

    About a relationship that has gone sour, Maggie Rogers reflects on how things used to be good…but now they’re just going for the kill.

    Chlöe- “Boy Bye” 


    Chlöe delivers an electric breakup anthem with “Boy Bye.” I immediately added this to my playlist because the song encapsulates being so done with a partner, needing to leave them because they don’t treat you right. She bids her boy bye with this upbeat R&B track, telling him to go back to his mother because she won’t even cry.

    It makes me even more excited for her debut album, In Pieces. The world is in desperate need of an R&B diva who isn’t afraid to tell it like it is…and I think we’ve found her.

    Suki Waterhouse- “Fun” 


    New mother, Suki Waterhouse, is wasting no time getting back to her music. In “My Fun”, she yearns for a partner who loves her like she loves having her fun. A folksy rock track that is reminiscent of classic greats like The Beatles, “My Fun” is the perfect ending to this playlist.

    Fun loving, scream worthy, “My Fun” is an easy listen. Suki Waterhouse makes no mistakes with her music.

    Listen To Our Full Playlist Here: 

    Jai Phillips

    Source link

  • How 1990s libertarians laid the groundwork for cryptocurrency

    How 1990s libertarians laid the groundwork for cryptocurrency

    The Austrian economist Friedrich Hayek wanted to denationalize money. David Chaum, an innovator in the field of cryptography and electronic cash, wanted to shield it from surveillance. Their goals were not the same, but they each inspired the same man.

    Max O’Connor grew up in the British city of Bristol in the 1960s and ’70s. Telling his life story to Wired in 1994, he explained how he had always dreamed of a future where humanity expanded its potential in science-fictional ways, a world where people would possess X-ray vision, carry disintegrator guns, or walk straight through walls.

    By his teenage years, O’Connor had acquired an interest in the occult. He thought the key to realizing superhuman potential could perhaps be found in the same domain as astral projection, dowsing rods, and reincarnation. But he began to realize there was no compelling evidence that any of these mystical practices actually worked. Human progress, he soon decided, was best served not by the supernatural but by science and logic.

    He was a keen student, and especially interested in subjects concerning social organization. By age 23, he’d earned his degree in philosophy, politics, and economics from St. Anne’s College, Oxford.

    The fresh Oxford graduate aspired to be a writer, but the old university town with its wet climate, dark winters, and traditional British values wasn’t providing the energy or inspiration he was looking for. It was time to go somewhere new—somewhere exciting. In 1987, he was awarded a fellowship to a Ph.D. program in philosophy at the University of Southern California (USC). He was moving to Los Angeles.

    O’Connor immediately felt at home in the Golden State. The sunny L.A. weather was an obvious upgrade from gray Oxford. And in stark contrast to the conservative mindset prevalent in Great Britain, the cultural vibe on America’s West Coast encouraged ambition. Californians celebrated achievement, they respected risk taking, and they praised movers and shakers.

    Here, O’Connor would start a new life as a new man. To commemorate the fresh start, he decided to change his name; from then on, Max O’Connor would be “Max More.”

    “It seemed to really encapsulate the essence of what my goal is: always to improve, never to be static,” he explained. “I was going to get better at everything, become smarter, fitter, and healthier. It would be a constant reminder to keep moving forward.”

    FM-2030

    In California, unlike staid England, More found that he wasn’t alone in his interest in expanding human potential. One of More’s colleagues at USC, a Belgian-born Iranian-American author and teacher known originally as Fereidoun M. Esfandiary but now going by the name “FM-2030,” had spent the ’70s and ’80s popularizing a radical futurist vision.

    New technologies would allow engineers to dramatically change the world for the better, FM-2030 predicted. He believed that any risks associated with technological innovation would be offset by the rewards: Solar and atomic power would bring energy abundance, people would colonize Mars, robot workers would increase leisure time, and teleworking would allow people to earn a living from the comfort of their homes.

    FM-2030 predicted that technology would soon reach the point where it could drastically improve not just human circumstances but human beings themselves. Health standards would advance as more diseases could be cured and as genetic flaws could be corrected; future pharmaceuticals could boost human potential by, for example, enhancing brain activity.

    FM-2030 expected that medical science would even “cure” aging, doing away with finite human life spans, gifting us with bionic body parts and other artificial enhancements. By his estimation, humanity would conquer death around his 100th birthday, in the year 2030. (That’s what the number in his name referred to.) FM-2030 predicted that we would eventually turn ourselves into synthetic post-biological organisms. “It’s just a matter of time before we reconstitute our bodies into something entirely different, something more space-adaptable, something that will be viable across the solar system and beyond,” he wrote in 1989.

    Transhumanism

    To most, those sort of predictions sounded fantastical. But when a research affiliate at the MIT Space Systems Laboratory named K. Eric Drexler in the early 1980s described a technique for manufacturing machinery on a molecular level, the fantastical was already starting to sound a little less implausible. Nanotechnology, Drexler believed, could fundamentally change industries including computing, space travel, and any variety of physical production.

    Drexler believed that nanotech could revolutionize health care too. Physical disorders are typically caused by misarranged atoms, as he saw it, and he imagined a future where nanobots could enter the human body to fix this damage—in effect restoring the body to full health from within. Nanotechnology would thus be able to cure just about any disease and ultimately extend life itself.

    “Aging is fundamentally no different from any other physical disorder,” Drexler wrote in his 1986 book Engines of Creation; “it is no magical effect of calendar dates on a mysterious life-force. Brittle bones, wrinkled skin, low enzyme activities, slow wound healing, poor memory, and the rest all result from damaged molecular machinery, chemical imbalances, and mis-arranged structures. By restoring all the cells and tissues of the body to a youthful structure, repair machines will restore youthful health.”

    For Max More, such ideas weren’t just fun speculation. He believed these predictions offered a fresh and necessary perspective on human existence, even on reality itself. As More collected, studied, and thought about the concepts these futurists had been sharing, the Ph.D. candidate formalized them into a new and distinct philosophical framework: transhumanism.

    The general idea and term transhumanism had already been used by evolutionary biologist Julian Huxley in the 1950s, but More now used it to denote an updated version of the humanist philosophy. Like humanism, transhumanism respects reason and science while rejecting faith, worship, and supernatural concepts such as an afterlife. But where humanists derive value and meaning from human nature and existing human potential, transhumanists anticipate and advocate transcending humanity’s natural limitations.

    “Transhumanism,” More wrote in 1989, “differs from humanism in recognizing and anticipating the radical alterations in the nature and possibilities of our lives resulting from various sciences and technologies such as neuroscience and neuropharmacology, life extension, nanotechnology, artificial ultra-intelligence, and space habitation, combined with a rational philosophy and value system.”

    Extropianism

    Specifically, More believed in a positive, vital, and dynamic approach to transhumanism; he favored a message of hope, optimism, and progress. But he did not believe that this progress could be forced or even planned. He rejected Star Trek–like visions of the future where humanity settles under a single, all-wise world government to guide the species forward.

    Instead, More believed transhumanists could benefit from Hayek’s libertarian insights. Technological innovation requires knowledge and resources. As Hayek explained, the former is naturally distributed throughout society, while the latter is best allocated through free market processes that reveal that knowledge and how it matches freely chosen human desires. If people are allowed the liberty to experiment, innovate, and collaborate on their own terms, More figured, technological progress would naturally emerge. In other words, a more prosperous tomorrow was best realized if society could self-organize as a spontaneous order today.

    More found an early ally in fellow USC graduate student Tom W. Bell. Like More, Bell adopted the transhumanist philosophy and favored More’s joyful and free approach to achieve it. He decided that he would help spread these novel ideas by writing about them under his own new future-looking pseudonym: Tom Morrow.

    To encapsulate their vision, Morrow coined the term extropy. An antonym of entropy—the process of degradation, of running down—extropy stood for improvement and growth, even infinite growth. Those who subscribed to this vision were extropians.

    More outlined the foundational principles for the extropian movement in a few pages of text in “The Extropian Principles: A Transhumanist Declaration.” It included five main principles: boundless expansion, self-transformation, dynamic optimism, intelligent technology, and—as an explicit nod to Hayek—spontaneous order. Abbreviated, the principles formed the acronym B.E.S.T. D.O. I.T. S.O.

    “Continuing improvements means challenging natural and traditional limitations on human possibilities,” the essay declared. “Science and technology are essential to eradicate constraints on lifespan, intelligence, personal vitality, and freedom. It is absurd to meekly accept ‘natural’ limits to our life spans. Life is likely to move beyond the confines of the Earth—the cradle of biological intelligence—to inhabit the cosmos.”

    Like the transhumanist vision that drove it, the extropian future was ambitious and spectacular. Besides life extension, arguably the central pillar of the movement, extropian prospects included a wide array of futurist technologies, ranging from artificial intelligence to space colonization to mind uploading to human cloning to fusion energy.

    Importantly, extropianism had to remain rooted in science and technology—even if in often quite speculative forms. Extropians had to consider how to actualize a better future through critical and creative thinking and perpetual learning.

    This called for “rational individualism” or “cognitive independence,” More wrote. Extropians had to live by their “own judgment, making reflective, informed choices, profiting from both success and shortcoming,” which, he explained, in turn required free and open societies where diverse sources of information and differing perspectives are allowed to flourish.

    Governments, in the extropian view, could only hinder progress. Taxes deprive people of the resources to produce and build; borders and other travel restrictions could prevent people from being where they are of most value to the global society; regulations limit people’s ability to experiment and innovate. “Centralized command of behavior constrains exploration, diversity, and dissenting opinion,” More concluded.

    The Subculture

    In the fall of 1988, More and Morrow published the first edition of a new journal called Extropy, marking the de facto launch of the extropian movement. Though they had printed only 50 copies of this first edition, its subscribers soon included computer scientists, rocket engineers, neurosurgeons, chemists, and more. Among them were notable names, such as the pioneering cryptographer Ralph Merkle and the Nobel Prize–winning theoretical physicist Richard Feynman.

    More believed that religion was irrational, but he also thought it served the important purpose of imbuing humans with a sense of meaning. Extropianism, he argued, had to provide a replacement for that. “The Extropian philosophy does not look outside us to a superior alien force for inspiration,” he wrote in 1989. “Instead it looks inside us and beyond us, projecting forward to a brilliant vision of our future. Our goal is not God, it is the continuation of the process of improvement and transformation of ourselves into ever higher forms. We will outgrow our current interests, bodies, minds, and forms of social organization. This process of expansion and transcendence is the fountainhead of meaningfulness.”

    The extropian perspective on life would over the next couple of years manifest itself as a small and local Californian subculture with distinct habits and rituals. The extropians had their own logo (five arrows spiraling outward from the center, suggesting growth in every direction), and they congregated at an unofficial clubhouse (or “nerd house”) called Nextropia. They developed their own handshakes (shooting their hands with intertwined fingers upward to only let go when their arms stretched all the way up—the sky’s the limit!), they organized events (where some of them wore extropian-themed costumes, such as dressing up as space colonists), and a number changed their names. There was an MP-Infinity and an R.U. Sirius.

    As the extropian community grew from a few dozen to a couple hundred people, More and Morrow in 1990 launched the Extropy Institute, with FM-2030 as its third founding member. The nonprofit educational organization would produce a bimonthly newsletter, organize extropian conferences, and—cutting-edge for its time—host an email list to facilitate online discussion. While email was still a niche technology, the tech-savvy and future-oriented extropians generally knew how to navigate the newly emerging internet.

    High-Tech Hayekians

    Drexler had joined the extropian community shortly after it was established, as had several of his friends—fellow technologists who worked on some of the most innovative and challenging projects of the day. One of them was Mark S. Miller, at the time the main architect of Xanadu, an ambitious early hypertext project. Founded in 1960, Xanadu was still a work in progress 30 years later.

    As part of the project, Drexler and Miller had throughout the 1980s published several papers on allocating processing power across computer networks. Computers, they proposed, could essentially “rent out” spare CPU cycles to the highest bidder. Self-interested computers would allocate their resources across the network through virtual markets to maximize efficiency, all without the need for a central operator. This would allow computing power to be used wherever it was most valued while encouraging investment in more hardware if there was sufficient demand for it.

    Drexler and Miller were using Hayek’s free market insights to design computer networks. They had studied Hayek’s work on the advice of another Xanadu contributor, their mutual friend Phil Salin. A futurist with degrees from UCLA and Stanford University, Salin liked to merge free market insights with cutting-edge technology. Most notably, he had by the mid-1980s concluded that the time was right for a private space transportation industry and launched one of the decade’s most ambitious startups, the private space launch company Starstruck. The three of them—Drexler, Miller, and Salin—had in 1990 been dubbed the “high-tech Hayekians” by the economics journal Market Process, a nickname the trio accepted with pride.

    AMIX and Cryonics

    Though it successfully managed suborbital launch in1984, Starstruck ended up a commercial failure. Salin found that the U.S. government made it practically impossible to operate a space transportation business, since the taxpayer-subsidized space shuttle was undercutting the market.

    But that wasn’t Salin’s only project. Besides advising Drexler and Miller, he’d also been publishing papers and essays about the economic effects of the computer revolution. These became the basis for yet another ambitious endeavor: Salin would create an online marketplace for buying and selling information. Although not as spectacular as launching rockets, he believed this project could change the world in an even bigger way.

    Called the American Information Exchange (AMIX), this marketplace could sell any information people were willing to pay for. It could include advice from a mechanic on how to get an old car running again, or a few lines of computer code to automate the accounting at a dentist’s office, or a blueprint design for a new vacation home in the Florida Keys. If it was information, it could be sold on AMIX.

    Salin believed AMIX’s greatest benefit would be a sharp reduction of transaction costs—that is, the costs associated with making a purchase, including opportunity costs (the “cost” of having to miss out on other things). A transaction cost could, for example, be the opportunity cost of doing market research to find out which insurance provider offers the best deal, or the cost of calling different liquor stores to find out which one sells a specific brand of wine. On AMIX, people could instead pay someone else to find the best insurance option for them, or purchase information about liquor stores and their inventories. If anyone on the information market offered these services for less money than it would have effectively cost the prospective buyers to find the information themselves, trading for it over AMIX would decrease the transaction cost of the purchases, making insurance, wine, and many other goods and services cheaper.

    Society would benefit tremendously from such an efficiency gain, Salin believed, because lower transaction costs would make certain trades worthwhile that otherwise wouldn’t have been. More trade means a better allocation of resources across the economy via spontaneous order.

    AMIX was a visionary concept. But it was also way ahead of its time. When AMIX went live in 1984, Salin and his small team had built the marketplace from scratch. The reputation system they developed was the first of its kind, as was their dispute resolution tool. Since no online payment processors were operational, they had to implement that themselves as well. Even websites didn’t exist yet, which meant that AMIX users had to establish their own network—a network they had to access via dial-up modems, since there was no broadband internet yet. Unsurprisingly, the project was off to a slow start.

    Sadly, Salin didn’t get to develop AMIX much further: Shortly after the project’s launch, he was diagnosed with stomach cancer. He sold AMIX to the software company Autodesk in 1988, and it shut down the project in 1992—just after the high-tech Hayekian had passed away at the age of 41.

    But for extropians, there is always hope, even in death. If indefinite life spans are really within reach for mankind, as extropians believe, dying just before this transhuman breakthrough adds a bitter layer to the tragedy. To stumble with the finish line in sight—perhaps just a few decades early—would mean the difference between death and eternal life. So extropians adopted a fallback plan: an escape route to bridge the gap. The extropians embraced cryonics.

    Today, five facilities across the U.S., China, and Europe cryopreserve a couple hundred bodies and heads of dead people. Those people signed up to be frozen (in whole or in part) as soon as possible after clinical death, to be stored in subzero temperatures. Over a thousand more people have signed up to have their bodies or heads thus preserved.

    Although clinically dead, the people kept in biostasis are essentially waiting for science to advance to the point where they can be unfrozen, resurrected, and cured from whatever ills had gotten the best of them. They would wake up a few decades into the future in good health, all set to participate in the transhuman future.

    So goes the theory. There is, of course, no guarantee that such resurrections will ever be possible. With today’s technology, it certainly isn’t. But with tomorrow’s technology, who knows? Even if one estimates that the chance of success is (very) slim, the odds of eventual revival may reasonably be estimated as greater than zero, and that’s a bet Salin and other extropians were willing to make.

    Digital Cash

    The extropian movement, like More himself, was naturally at home in California. Silicon Valley had become a global hot spot for innovation, attracting some of the most ambitious technologists, scientists, and entrepreneurs to the West Coast.

    But there was a notable exception. By the early 1990s, some extropians had become convinced that a small startup halfway across the globe was developing a particularly important technology: electronic cash. And David Chaum, who had launched a company called DigiCash in 1989, appeared to be holding all the cards.

    For at least one extropian, a computer scientist named Nick Szabo, that was reason enough to head to Amsterdam and work for DigiCash. Meanwhile, the game developer Hal Finney was advocating the importance of digital cash to his fellow extropians in hopes of getting more of them involved. Spread across seven pages in the 10th issue of Extropy, published in early 1993, Finney detailed the inner workings of Chaum’s digital cash system, and—tapping into the group’s libertarian ethos—explained why extropians should care.

    “We are on a path today which, if nothing changes, will lead to a world with the potential for greater government power, intrusion, and control,” Finney warned. “We can change this; these [digital cash] technologies can revolutionize the relationship between individuals and organizations, putting them both on an equal footing for the first time. Cryptography can make possible a world in which people have control over information about themselves, not because government has granted them that control, but because only they possess the cryptographic keys to reveal that information.”

    Other extropians generally came to share Finney’s concerns, and they understood why electronic cash offered an important part of the solution. Moreover, as they learned about cryptographically secured money, some extropians started toying with the idea that electronic cash had huge benefits even beyond privacy.

    Where Chaum had mainly been concerned with the anonymous features of digital currency, these extropians began to consider what it would mean for government monopolies on monetary policy. By 1995, a special Extropy issue was devoted to digital cash. The cover prominently featured a blue-reddish mock-up currency bill where instead of some head of state, Hayek’s portrait appeared. “Fifteen Hayeks,” the denomination read. It was supposedly issued by the “Virtual Bank of Extropolis.”

    Competing Free Market Currencies

    In one article inside the issue—”Introduction to Digital Cash”—the software engineer Mark Grant speculated that digital money could be used to establish local currencies. He also suggested one particularly spicy way of backing Chaumian cash.

    “Just as the personal computer and laser printer have made it possible for anyone to become a publisher, digital cash makes it possible for anyone to become a bank, whether they are a major corporation or a street-corner drug dealer with a laptop and a cellular telephone,” Grant explained. “Indeed, as national debts continue to increase, many people might see an advantage in using cash backed with, say, cocaine instead of cash backed solely by a government’s ability to collect taxes.”

    Another contributor, the web engineer Eric Watt Forste, wrote a rave review of the economist George Selgin’s The Theory of Free Banking. The book, which offers an elaborate account of how banking infrastructure could develop in an unregulated, denationalized environment, could offer a blueprint for the digital domain as well, Forste suggested: “While crypto mavens are busy explaining how these banks could function technologically, the theory of free banking explains how they could function economically.”

    Lawrence White, Selgin’s closest ideological ally in the free banking movement, contributed an article to the journal as well. Although it mostly offered a technical comparison between electronic cash schemes and existing payment solutions, White slipped in a hint of how digital currency could dramatically upset international banking dynamics: “One major potential advantage of electronic funds transfer via personal computer is that it may give ordinary consumers affordable access to off-shore banking.”

    Perhaps most notable of all, More took it upon himself to summarize and present Hayek’s seminal 1976 book on competing currencies, The Denationalisation of Money. Hayek’s work had shaped extropianism. The Austrian’s insights regarding distributed knowledge, free markets, and spontaneous order had been a core source of inspiration when More formulated the movement’s organizational principles. Now, More asked his fellow extropians to consider one of Hayek’s more radical proposals, an idea that had until then gained limited traction. Inflation is caused by government expansion of the money supply, More explained. The central bank’s interest rate manipulations cause economic instability. And “the monetary system enabled undisciplined state expenditure,” he wrote. “Raising taxes generates little enthusiasm, so governments often turn to another means of finance: Borrowing and expanding the money supply.”

    Each of these ills hampered economic growth, and that curtailed human progress. But those ills could be remedied, More argued, if we followed Hayek’s advice and left money to the free market. If the state monopoly on money could be abolished, competition would give private currency issuers an incentive to offer more desirable forms of money.

    More knew that this wouldn’t come easily. Since governments benefit from their monopoly the most, they had no incentive to abolish it and every reason not to. Yet More saw that technological innovation could fast-forward positive change. Hayek’s vision could be realized by leveraging the recent interest and innovation around electronic cash.

    It was trivial for governments to enforce a money monopoly when banks were easy to locate, regulate, tax, penalize, and shut down. But when banks can be hosted on personal computers on the other side of the world and operate with anonymous digital currency, the dynamic would change dramatically. Governments wouldn’t formally abolish the money monopoly, More figured, but the right set of technologies could make this monopoly much harder to enforce.

    And so the founding father of the movement called on extropians to consider transactional privacy and currency competition in tandem.

    “Competing currencies will trump the present system by controlling inflation, maximizing the stability of dynamic market economies, restraining the size of government, and by recognizing the absurdity of the nation-state,” More wrote. “Pairing this reform with the introduction of anonymous digital money would provide a potent one-two punch to the existing order—digital cash making it harder for governments to control and tax transactions.”

    More concluded: “I deeply regret Hayek’s recent death….Not having been placed into biostasis, Hayek will never return to see the days of electronic cash and competing private currencies that his thinking may help bring about. If we are to remain the vanguard of the future, let’s see what we can do to hasten these crucial developments. Perhaps we will yet see a private currency bearing Hayek’s name.”

    These seemingly outlandish ideas in small-circulation zines in the early to mid-1990s finally came to fruition in a world-changing way by the end of the next decade, when bitcoin emerged as Satoshi Nakamoto’s brainchild and made free market money something the world’s biggest financiers and bankers could no longer ignore.

    This article is adapted from The Genesis Book: The Story of the People and Projects That Inspired Bitcoin by permission of Bitcoin Magazine Books. 

    This article originally appeared in print under the headline “The 1990s Visionaries Who Saw the Digital Future.”

    Aaron Van Wirdum

    Source link

  • Kendrick Lamar Ends ‘Big Three’ Narratives Disses Drake & J. Cole– ‘Motherf**k The Big 3, N***a It’s Just Big Me’

    Kendrick Lamar Ends ‘Big Three’ Narratives Disses Drake & J. Cole– ‘Motherf**k The Big 3, N***a It’s Just Big Me’

    Source: Taylor Hill, Prince William, Getty Images / Taylor Hill, Prince William, Getty Images

    Kendrick Lamar has thoughts on Drake and J. Cole and makes his stance clear on Future and Metro Boomin’s Album We Don’t Trust You.

    Metro Boomin’ and Future finally delivered the first installment of their long-awaited collaborative project We Don’t Trust You. Leading up to the project social media assumed Drake was the person they didn’t trust, turns out they were right.

    Future sent some bars his way on the intro allegedly, but Kendrick Lamar went after Drake and his light-skinned Brother Jermaine Cole directly.

    According to Complex, Kung Fu Kenny puts all the big three talk to rest and wants his respect paid in full.

    “These n***as talkin’ out of they necks/ Don’t pull no coffin out of your mouth /I’m way too paranoid for a threat/ Ayy-ayy, let’s get it, bro /D-O-T, the money, power, respect /The last one is better /Say, it’s a lot of goofies with a check /I mean, ah, I hope them sentiments symbolic /Ah, my temperament bipolar, I choose violence / Okay, let’s get it up, it’s time for him to prove that he’s a problem

    N***as clickin’ up, but cannot be legit, no 40 Water, tell ’em /Ah, yeah, huh, yeah, get up with me /F**k sneak dissin’, first person shooter, I hope they came with three switches”

    Kendrick empties his first clip on J. Cole for the audacity to link up with Drake and mention his name on their single “First Person Shooter“. As far as the Big Three goes Kenny makes it clear he doesn’t think the light-skinned picnic duo is on his level. As he reloads he turns his attention to Drake and all his Michael Jackson chatter from the same record. Perhaps his best wordplay in years comes with a stern reminder to Drake that Prince outlived MJ.

    “I crash out, like, “F*ck rap,” diss Melle Mel if I had to /Got 2TEEZ with me, I’m snatchin’ chains and burnin’ tattoos, it’s up /Lost too many soldiers not to play it safe /If he walk around with that stick, it ain’t Andre 3K /Think I won’t drop the location? I still got PTSD /Motherf**k the big three, n***a, it’s just big me /N***a, bum, what? I’m really like that /And your best work is a light pack /N***a, Prince outlived Mike Jack’ /N***a, bum, ‘fore all your dogs gettin’ buried /That’s a K with all these nines, he gon’ see Pet Sematary / N***a, bum

    For Drake, he makes sure to reference his latest release For All The Dogs, and promises the Canadian’s demise. This is a rather tall task but a blind man could see the bait from a mile away.

    Also, On Drake’s latest offering “Stories About My Brother” he hinted this day was coming and he welcomed it.

    “Wait on whoever to say whatever, they quiet as f**k /The city don’t love you like that and they fryin’ you up /I can’t wait for the day that you choose to retire your stuff /Takin’ off the sneakers ’cause you tired of tyin’ ’em up /That one day you wake up and tell ’em “Enough is enough” /That’s how you gon’ find out you not Kobe Bryant to us /Man, you not Kobe Bryant to us, at all”

    If Drake was truly talking to Kenny, saying he won’t be remembered in history like Kobe Bryant is grounds for war. Surely he expected shots in return as the only battle-tested rapper out of the bunch. This isn’t the last of the subliminal disses but for now, we await a response.

    You can listen to Metro Boomin’, Future & Kung Fu Kenny on “Like That” below.

    Noah Williams

    Source link

  • Air Canada Aeroplan Changes, New JW Marriott St. Maarten, Tire Flies Off Boeing Plane and More

    Air Canada Aeroplan Changes, New JW Marriott St. Maarten, Tire Flies Off Boeing Plane and More

    News Roundup

    You can stay in touch with us on Facebook/Twitter/Threads, or you can join the discussion in our Facebook Group. You can also subscribe to get all news/deals via one daily email, or choose instant notifications for time sensitive deals. As always, thank you for reading!

    News Roundup

    This is a roundup of news and other interesting pieces that I’ve come across over the last few days. I thought they are worth sharing so I hope you enjoy reading them.

     

    📰 Hyatt Regency Debuts New Collaboration with Personal Training Platform

    Hyatt Hotels announced today an exclusive collaboration between the Hyatt Regency brand and Future, a personal training platform that connects users with an ongoing fitness coach to create customized virtual workouts, further complementing World of Hyatt members and guests’ wellbeing journeys. ➡️ Read more

     

    📰 EVA Air Moving to The New Terminal One at JFK

    The New Terminal One at John F. Kennedy International Airport and EVA Air have announced a partnership for the airline to operate out of the world-class terminal. The New Terminal One is currently under construction with its first gates scheduled to open in 2026, in partnership with the Port Authority of New York & New Jersey as part of the agency’s $19 billion transformation of JFK Airport. ➡️ Read more

     

    📰 Air Canada Tweaks Aeroplan Elite Status

    Air Canada is rolling out some changes to its Aeroplan frequent flyer program. Thankfully, nothing is overwhelmingly negative — just a few minor tweaks and new partner airline benefits for 25K and 35K members. By extension, this means the cardholder benefits for those with the Aeroplan® Credit Card are improving. ➡️ Read more

     

    New JW Marriott St. Maarten Beach Resort & Spa

    The first JW Marriott and Marriott International luxury property in St. Maarten is set to elevate the island’s hospitality landscape by seamlessly merging luxury and wellness within this highly-coveted destination. ➡️ Read more

     

    📰 Both Pilots Fell Asleep In Cockpit Of Flight To Jakarta

    Both pilots of a Batik Air Airbus A320 fell asleep in the cockpit on a flight from Kendari to Jakarta, Indonesia. The aircraft was carrying 153 passengers, 4 flight attendants and 2 pilots. While cruising at 36,000 feet, the pilots removed their headsets and increased the cockpit speaker volume. The captain decided to take a short break and rested. After waking up, he offered to switch with the first officer but that pilot declined. The captain went back to sleep on the 1,095 mile flight. ➡️ Read more

     

    📰 Tire flies off United Boeing plane shortly after takeoff

    A tire flew off a United Airlines Boeing plane shortly after takeoff from San Francisco on Thursday, prompting an emergency landing in Los Angeles. Moments after United Airlines Flight 35 ascended into the air, one of the tires on the underside of the Boeing 777-200 detached. ➡️ Read more

     

    Guru’s Wrap-up

    Let me know if you enjoyed these articles and comment with any opinions you might have. You can also share any other interesting articles about deals, travel, credit cards and more.

    Use the social media buttons below to share this article. Your support ad engagement is always greatly appreciated.

    DDG

    Source link

  • Carolina Certified Version of OpenSciEd for Middle School Receives All-Green Rating from EdReports

    Carolina Certified Version of OpenSciEd for Middle School Receives All-Green Rating from EdReports

    BURLINGTON, NC Leading school science supplier Carolina Biological Supply Company announced that its Certified Version of OpenSciEd for grades 6 to 8 received all-green ratings from non-profit EdReports. The organization provides free reports and reviews online that help K-12 educators evaluate math, language arts and science instructional materials because high-quality content matters to teachers, to kids, and to their collective future. The materials are rigorously evaluated for alignment to standards and usability by teams of educators. EdReports’ content reviewers consist of outstanding classroom educators, district coaches, and state content leaders who deeply understand college-and career-ready standards and the importance of high-quality instructional materials. Read the full report on EdReports.org.

                In simple terms, the all-green rating from EdReports means that the Carolina Certified Version of OpenSciEd meets expectations for all three categories of review: Designed for the Next Generation Science Standards* (NGSS); coherence and scope; and usability. It further demonstrates that the enhancements Carolina made to its version of the program also meet expectations for alignment and usability.

      “As a non-profit science developer, OpenSciEd intentionally created an open-source science curriculum so that teachers could edit and adapt and localize the content for their students,” said Jim Ryan, Executive Director of OpenSciEd. “By making the OpenSciEd for grades 6-8 curriculum easier to use last year, the Carolina Certified Version paved the way for teachers to make these changes, while maintaining the high quality of the instructional materials. Working with Carolina as a certified partner resulted in another excellent version of our curriculum.”

    In 2021, Carolina became a certified partner with nonprofit science developer OpenSciEd to create a unique version of OpenSciEd science units grades 6 to 8. Carolina, through its own expert scientists and science educators, took a first step towards enhancing the OpenSciEd units to further support teachers and engage students. The Carolina Certified Version offers redesigned print materials, simplified equipment, and an enhanced digital experience, plus certified professional learning to help teachers make the shift to three-dimensional, student-centered, and phenomena-driven learning.

    “We appreciate receiving the review from EdReports, a highly respected source for reliable insight, and are very proud to have earned all green ratings,” said Jim Parrish, President and CEO at Carolina. “Carolina, like EdReports, knows teachers spend many hours looking for quality materials. Their rigorous review process can make it much easier for educators to quickly see and be assured that our Carolina Certified Version of OpenSciEd for middle school met their standards in every category and went through deep scrutiny by a team of educator reviewers. The review can definitely help take another burden off teachers and help them find high-quality materials for their classrooms.” 

    Carolina is grateful for the opportunity to have its version reviewed by EdReports. The Carolina Biological Certified Version of OpenSciEd draws upon the same science content as OpenSciEd and has the same scores across the program. Some evidence statements have been edited to reflect the differences in program navigation and usability, including the presence of an online digital platform.

    For information, Carolina encourages educators to visit its online page at https://www.carolinaopenscied.com to learn about its versions of OpenSciEd. Units are available for purchase now through Carolina. Visit Carolina’s website or, call (800) 334-5551, or e-mail curriculum@carolina.com.

    Carolina Biological Supply Company
               From its beginnings in 1927, Carolina ( www.carolina.com) has grown to become the leading supplier of science teaching materials in the world. Headquartered in Burlington, NC, Carolina serves customers worldwide, including teachers, students, and professionals in science and health-related fields. The company is still privately owned by descendants of the founder, geology and biology professor Dr. Thomas E. Powell Jr.

    * NGSS is a registered trademark of WestEd. Neither WestEd nor the lead states and partners that developed the Next Generation Science Standards were involved in the production of this product, and do not endorse it.

    eSchool News Staff
    Latest posts by eSchool News Staff (see all)

    ESchool News Staff

    Source link

  • Now Hear This—The Future of Classroom Audio Systems

    Now Hear This—The Future of Classroom Audio Systems


    One of the biggest announcements out of FETC24 this year involved Lightspeed, the leading provider of instructional audio solutions that create equal access to learning, and their launch of Cascadia—a networked instructional audio platform that not only projects the teacher’s voice within the classroom but also empowers teachers to call for help and communicate outside of the classroom directly from their lanyard microphone.

    I had a conversation with Tony Zeikle, Senior Vice President of Revenue at Lightspeed Technologies, Inc. about the features of the new product, its integration with existing school systems like phone networks and paging solutions, and its potential benefits for teachers and students, especially in light of challenges posed by the pandemic. We also touch upon the evolving landscape of educational technology, including the role of audio in augmented reality, virtual reality, and language learning. Have a listen:

    More details about the launch:

    Cascadia delivers all the benefits of instructional audio and integrates with existing life-safety and building communication systems, providing the ability to initiate mobile, silent emergency alerts and make two-way calls to the office from anywhere in the building.

    “The need for teachers to communicate with resources outside of the classroom continues to grow, whether in an emergency or simply when help is needed,” said Shaun Fagan, Senior Vice President of Product and Lightspeed. “With Cascadia, schools can now meet this need by providing teachers with a communication tool that offers mobility, simplicity, and immediacy.”

    Cascadia connects to a school’s network, providing centralized monitoring and control, along with key integrations to critical building-wide communications. The Cascadia platform provides:

    • Timely alerts from anywhere in the building
    • Communication to the office with two-way calling
    • Real-time teacher location during an active alert
    • Power over Ethernet Plus (PoE+) to leverage network infrastructure
    • Integration with classroom multimedia
    • Student sharing with Sharemike

    “By integrating with leading life-safety and building communication providers, our solutions provide schools with the flexibility to leverage their existing investments and build the best systems to meet their needs,” said Fagan.

    This networked communication system can enhance existing safety protocols and procedures, which is vital for students and parents. Students (87%), parents (96%), and educators (98%) all agree that school safety is extremely important to them, according to the 2022 State of School Safety Report by Safe and Sound Schools.


    Below is a machine-generated transcript:

    00:00:05 Speaker 1 

    OK, Tony. Thanks so much for joining me today. I really appreciate it. Looking forward to off, etc in a couple weeks and I know lightspeed’s going to be down there. Maybe we could just get right into it, talk a little bit about the news and any announcements that that you guys might be promoting on the show floor. 

    00:00:22 Speaker 2 

    Absolutely. You know, we go to FTC every year. We love the opportunity to be able to interact with a lot of school districts and just across the entire industry of the Ed tech space. And you know, we are well respected and known for what we do in the classroom with instructional audio, putting a microphone on a teacher and providing a low volume, highly intelligible speech through speakers. 

    00:00:42 Speaker 2 

    So that every student in the classroom can effectively hear the instruction. 

    00:00:46 Speaker 2 

    The new product that we’re launching this month and it’s just gone on to our website this week is called Cascade, Cascadia and it’s an instructional networked platform. It’s our first foray into being a networked system, so that our our technology directors can have visibility into all of their instructional audio solutions. 

    00:01:05 Speaker 2 

    Across an entire school. 

    00:01:07 Speaker 2 

    And also adding some additional features. You know, the thing that we really realized was as we put microphones on, teachers and teachers are wearing a microphone, you know, both in their classroom and around the school is that that microphone can have some additional features and abilities beyond just that. We have an important piece of real estate. 

    00:01:27 Speaker 2 

    So to speak, by having that microphone right here at a, you know, hands distance away. 

    00:01:33 Speaker 2 

    For the teachers, So what we’re doing is adding some components of being able to integrate our microphone for safety and security purposes and that can be incorporating it in as a discrete silent alert that can notify the office that there’s something wrong in a classroom or somewhere else in the school. And we’re also integrating it with the school’s phone system so that the. 

    00:01:55 Speaker 2 

    Teacher is actually able to make a teacher initiated call to the office. 

    00:02:00 Speaker 2 

    Sometimes a little bit more information is required. You know with that discrete alert or something like that, and the teacher being able to have a quick conversation with the office and it could be something as minor as a student needs help in the hallway. It could be just instruction, maybe a teacher or a student’s heading to the office just so that quick information can provide a little bit more. 

    00:02:20 Speaker 2 

    Information for the teacher and staff to be able to communicate the thing we really realized coming out of the pandemic. 

    00:02:27 Speaker 2 

    Was that gone? Are the days that a teacher just walks into their classroom at the beginning of the day doesn’t interact with any other adults the rest of the day? And you know, they’re just with their students in that classroom. The dynamic has changed and teachers need support, whether it’s for behavioral purposes, whether it’s just standard communication across the school campus. 

    00:02:48 Speaker 2 

    And we realized that we could add some value there by adding some additional buttons and additional features onto our microphone. 

    00:02:56 Speaker 1 

    You know, it sounds like a pretty significant upgrade. And when you talk about significant, you’re also talking about sophisticated and and and complicated especially I guess when you’re tying in phone systems or IP based, if any of our readers or listeners here are responsible for those sort of IT systems. Can you give us some of the the? 

    00:03:16 Speaker 1 

    Weak speak when it comes to how those are being integrated. 

    00:03:19 Speaker 2 

    Yeah, absolutely. What we really desire to do is stay in our space from an instructional audio standpoint. That’s what we’re known for. That’s what we’re respected for. So we’re really staying there. But what we have done is identified that we can integrate with existing paging and intercom solutions through our network system. So that from a wireless standpoint, we use deck technology for our wireless. 

    00:03:41 Speaker 2 

    Transmission, but from the amp we’re now connected through the through the network and integrate with that paging system so that we’re integrating with what the school is already used to using. 

    00:03:52 Speaker 2 

    And being able to navigate and then those buttons can do different things based upon what the school desires it to do based upon their safety and security protocols and those kinds of things. One of the things that we really wanted to make sure that we did through this process is there can be complexity on the back end for sure, but how do we keep it simple for the teacher? How do we make it so that it’s very easy and intuitive? 

    00:04:14 Speaker 2 

    For them to use, you know, one of the things that we realized was when it comes to school wide communication, there’s different ways that teachers were interacting, whether it be, you know, maybe a walkie. 

    00:04:24 Speaker 2 

    Bucky and those are kind of bulky and they might be taking them to recess or different places across the school. They’re not very wearable, so to speak, but they serve their purpose. You think about other things that they’re using sometimes they’re using their own cell phone, which sometimes isn’t on the school’s network, isn’t a school. 

    00:04:45 Speaker 2 

    Piece of property. 

    00:04:47 Speaker 2 

    And there’s some challenges tied to apps and things like that. On their own personal device that can be challenging for a school to navigate, and then, you know, they have their phone system maybe or their, you know, in the school and it’s fixed. And it’s not a wearable technology, so to speak. So we felt like there was a little bit of a gap in terms of just communication that we can make a little bit simpler. 

    00:05:07 Speaker 1 

    Yeah. And you mentioned the pandemic in in some of the the changing behaviors. 

    00:05:12 Speaker 1 

    Is that something that that as as a company as as a technology company who’s emphasizing these technologies as being an enhancement, has there, has there been a change in terms of maybe convincing faculty members who maybe were resistant? Like why do I need a microphone? I’ve always, I’ve always taught my algebra class for for 30 years and never seem to have necessary like. 

    00:05:34 Speaker 1 

    And always felt awkward about. So maybe now that they’re more comfortable and see those benefits. 

    00:05:39 Speaker 2 

    Yeah, really kind of two purposes that the pandemic really highlighted the need for this technology. One was when teachers were wearing masks in their classroom, you know, that mask was at 10 decibel drop in their voice. And also you had the loss of the visual cues of the mouth through that mask. And so I think that necessity of audio and the challenge of communication through the pandemic. 

    00:06:02 Speaker 2 

    Just heightened teachers awareness of why this technology is important. One of the first responses we’ve gotten for years when teachers put a microphone on and they hear that low volume, highly intelligible speech coming through, is that they didn’t have to repeat their instructions nearly. 

    00:06:17 Speaker 2 

    This much students were more attentive and at the end of the day the teacher had more energy. They realized I don’t have to raise my voice all day, every day for my students to be able to hear me, you know another, you know, we talked a little bit about maybe the rise in behavioral issues in a school. You know, I I went to a lot of Superintendent conferences towards the tail end. 

    00:06:37 Speaker 2 

    Of the pandemic and. 

    00:06:38 Speaker 2 

    After the pandemic and a lot of superintendents would just say we are just seeing an A significant increase in behavioral issues tied to all of the challenges that the pandemic had for students, their home life and all the things that they were going through. And, you know, there was an increase in room clears just. 

    00:06:55 Speaker 2 

    You know things that are every day in a school that you know a lot of people maybe don’t hear about, but they’re the challenges that teachers are facing every day and they’re very aware of it. So increased communication across the school campus was one thing that we just wanted to really focus on. And, you know, one of the things that I’m sure that you’ve thought about too, and you’re hearing from other companies. 

    00:07:16 Speaker 2 

    As well. 

    00:07:16 Speaker 2 

    Well, is how technology needs to evolve. You know, we talked about AI and ChatGPT and how that’s being incorporated into the classroom. And there’s a lot of different things. And I think coming out of the pandemic and in the next few years, we’re gonna continue to see a lot of really innovative technologies that are going to change the way that the classroom is shaped and the way teaching and learning. 

    00:07:38 Speaker 1 

    Yeah, because especially we’re talking about the future of education technology conference, right. And I’m I’m looking forward to getting down there and now that we’re. 

    00:07:45 Speaker 1 

    Kind of finally free to a certain degree from the pandemic and kind of start to look forward on some of these technologies, the augmented reality, the virtual reality audio is a big part of all of those things, right? So I mean you can, are you anticipating other new kind of applications where? 

    00:08:06 Speaker 1 

    Audio will be part of that. 

    00:08:09 Speaker 2 

    Yeah, absolutely. You know, the other component is just making sure you have clear audio for extended learning. You know, students that are outside of the classroom. How do you make sure that audio is clear on both ends? You know, if you have a group of students that are in another classroom across the school campus or, you know, in a different part, or if you have a teacher that’s remote. 

    00:08:29 Speaker 2 

    How do you make sure audio is clear through that whole process and we continue to think through that and we have a lot of various innovative solutions that we provide to be able to make sure that that can happen. One of the things that. 

    00:08:42 Speaker 2 

    Provided during the pandemic was our T3 solution, which is basically being able to provide a student with every a microphone. Every student in the classroom, and that became really applicable for remote learning where you might have a teacher that’s remote because if a student has a question that teacher needs to be able to hear it and. 

    00:09:01 Speaker 2 

    Being able to interact that way and really making the classroom setting different than what it has been in the past, and I think we’ll continue to see that evolve and change. But audio is at the heart of a lot of. 

    00:09:12 Speaker 1 

    Things one especially too. I I’ve noticed that when you look at various AI applications, various transcription applications, I mean specifically just Microsoft Word, the character recognition. 

    00:09:28 Speaker 1 

    It’s kind of across the Rubicon, right? I mean, it used to be like it was pretty good, but you’d have to spend a lot of time kind of cleaning. 

    00:09:36 Speaker 1 

    I notice now that just I mean the the character recognition when it comes to audio transcriptions, it’s just really spectacular. But the key comes down to. 

    00:09:47 Speaker 1 

    The microphone and what that technology can capture, right? I mean, so that’s kind of like the the front lines of any of this stuff working at all. 

    00:09:56 Speaker 2 

    Yeah. And you think also even about, you know, English language learning and the way that’s evolving in in K12 right now, I think over 10% of our student population. 

    00:10:05 Speaker 2 

    And now is falling into that category. So how can we do translation services through that process as well? So there’s a lot of exciting things that are happening through all of that. 

    00:10:17 Speaker 1 

    And the one piece of the the audience here that I don’t think needs much convincing are the students themselves. 

    00:10:26 Speaker 1 

    Right. I mean this is just. 

    00:10:27 Speaker 1 

    This is the technology is not a novelty to them. I mean, of course we’re all going to be speaking into microphones. 

    00:10:34 Speaker 2 

    Absolutely. And you know, I think students, especially now with, you know, headphones and everything else, they’re used to a more immersive experience when it comes to audio. So how can we deliver that to them, whether they’re in the classroom, whether they’re at home or whatever medium that they’re doing in the learning environment? We need to be thoughtful of that and engage them where they are. 

    00:10:53 Speaker 1 

    Well, lots of exciting stuff. Uh, I look forward to seeing you in person, not just on the on the zoom platform where we can kind of go more in depth. But thanks for your time to kind of. 

    00:11:04 Speaker 1 

    Let our listeners and let our readers kind of know what’s on the on the forefront here when it comes to audio. 

    00:11:09 Speaker 2 

    Absolutely. And what you know will be on the showroom floor, but we’ll also have a demonstration room where we can show Cascadia and demonstrate it on a first hand level in an enclosed space. So we look forward to being able to meet with many people at FTC. 

    00:11:23 Speaker 1 

    Excellent, Tony. Thanks again. Appreciate it. 

    00:11:25 Speaker 2 

    Thank you. 

    Kevin Hogan
    Latest posts by Kevin Hogan (see all)





    Kevin Hogan

    Source link

  • Friday 5: Tracking AI in education

    Friday 5: Tracking AI in education


    Key points:

    It seems as if we hear about AI in education every day, if not every hour. AI’s rise in popularity has brought with it questions about ethics, skills students will need for workplace success, and how to balance negatives with positives when it comes to teaching with this new generative tool.

    Here are five insights around AI in education:

    When it comes to AI tools for education, there are a number to choose from. ChatGPT is likely the first to come to mind, but AI is woven into so many tools and helps automate tedious tasks, connects student progress with personalized recommendations, and improved PD feedback. Tools include Canva Magic Write for creative writing, Eduaide.ai for instructional materials, and Google Bard and Microsoft’s Bing Chat.

    How is AI beneficial in education?

    AI is here to stay, and will be an important workforce skill–and many educators want to teach students to work with it, not against it. This makes the future of AI in education intriguing, to say the least. Just as the internet revolutionized learning, AI will be the next game-changer. While the fears of using AI to cheat aren’t unfounded, how many educators have actually tried writing an essay using just AI? Using AI still requires work, and in fact, it often leads to a deeper understanding of the subject matter because you are the one who has to teach AI what to do and say. Just like the internet, AI isn’t going anywhere–so let’s teach our kids to work with AI, not against it. Here are 5 positive ways students can use AI.

    What are the negative effects of AI in education?

    When it comes to the disadvantages of AI in education, educators are increasingly concerned about the influence AI writing tools could have on education and students. The discussion around the influence of AI writing on instruction has never been so active – all thanks to the launch of ChatGPT last year. The tool is so advanced compared to other writing tools of its kind that a lot of people instantly started using it for all kinds of ethically ambiguous purposes. Educators are concerned about the influence AI will have and how its negative effects could be detrimental to learning. Here’s how to counteract the disruptive influence of AI writing on learning.

    What is the role of AI in education?

    There’s a lurking concern that AI is just going to help students find mindless shortcuts for cheating their way to good grades. But that’s only a risk if schools and teachers hold a low bar for what they expect of their students. If schools and teachers want to elevate expectations for their students, the role of AI in education can be powerful for rapid feedback and iterative prototyping. Here’s how AI can make for a sink-or-swim moment in classrooms.

    How can AI be used in teaching?

    Last spring, a high school English teacher challenged her students: “Artificial intelligence can do any of your class assignments,” she told them flatly. “Now prove me wrong.” She wanted to provoke them, to get them to ask questions, and to start using these tools—not to cheat—but to flip their learning on its head. She knew her she and her students needed to learn together. And since that day, they didn’t just shift the paradigms—they sent them into somersaults. Here’s what AI for teachers can look like in the classroom.

    Laura Ascione
    Latest posts by Laura Ascione (see all)





    Laura Ascione

    Source link

  • Appealing New Charging Cart Offers Enhanced Value in Classrooms

    Appealing New Charging Cart Offers Enhanced Value in Classrooms


    Lakewood Ranch, FL  JAR Systems premiered its newest solution, the Elevate USB-C Charging Cart EDU 32, at the Future of Education Technology Conference. The illuminated cart caught the eye of many educators and technology leaders as they learned of the new advantages it provides.

    The cart maintains a critical feature—AC adapterless charging. This eliminates the long-dreaded activities of wiring carts and maintaining expensive charging cables. Powered by the company’s latest charging technology, the Quick-Sense USB-C PD Education Line, the cart is newly fine-tuned to the requirements of educational devices.

    “Over our 20 years as a company, it has always been our goal for our developments to be forward-thinking to what our customers will need next. The Elevate USB-C Charging Cart EDU 32 is a shining example, making state-of-the-art USB-C PD charging technology more affordable in education”, said Axel Zimmermann, JAR Systems’ CEO.

    The Elevate USB-C Charging Cart EDU’s affordability comes in addition to benefits tailored to school environments. Teachers will know the charging status of each device with LED lights visible through the cart door. Devices charge simultaneously in the cart at a steady rate that lends to battery life extension, helping device fleets stay usable for longer.

    The new carts will begin shipping in April 2024. Interested parties may place pre-orders by contacting their IT solutions providers or by calling JAR Systems at 866.393.4202. Additional information can be found on the company’s website: JAR-Systems.com/NewElevateEDU.

    About the Company: JAR Systems provides more versatile ways to charge and secure ever-evolving technologies. The company works closely with its clients to develop products that support and streamline how mobile technology is used for learning and working in real-world environments. JAR Systems’ focus is on being a leading manufacturer of innovative charging solutions and designing efficient products that will work dependably for many years.

    eSchool News Staff
    Latest posts by eSchool News Staff (see all)





    ESchool News Staff

    Source link

  • Ex-Food Alley, Yates site on Albert St in Auckland CBD stays empty, fenced: Singaporeans ponder future – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Ex-Food Alley, Yates site on Albert St in Auckland CBD stays empty, fenced: Singaporeans ponder future – Medical Marijuana Program Connection


    Civic leaders are disappointed a central Auckland commercial building site linked to a wealthy Singapore family remains undeveloped more than a year after buildings were demolished.

    But Peter Wall, who works for the Kum family,

    AdvertisementAdvertise with…

    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..



    MMP News Author

    Source link

  • Past Relationships Worksheet (PDF)

    Past Relationships Worksheet (PDF)


    Learn from past love to improve future love. This worksheet will guide you step-by-step so that you can take away the most important lessons from your past relationships.


    Download:

    Past Relationships Worksheet (PDF)

    Read Why It’s Healthy to Reflect on Your Past Relationships for more information.

    Check out more self-improvement worksheets here!



    Steven Handel

    Source link

  • BenQ Education Announces “Teach Your Way” Projector Program

    BenQ Education Announces “Teach Your Way” Projector Program


    COSTA MESA, Calif. — BenQ, an internationally renowned provider of visual display and collaboration solutions, today announced its new “Teach Your Way” Projector Program. Committed to partnering with schools to enable greater positive outcomes for all students by transforming classrooms, BenQ’s program offers planning, pricing, and customer support benefits for BenQ’s latest lineup of maintenance-free LED and laser projectors and InstaShow Wireless Presentation System (WPS).

    “Schools have had to purchase outdated, low-resolution projectors in order to save money, but these fail to meet the standards for the future of learning and provide all students with access to state-of-the-art technology,” said Bob Wudeck, senior director of business development at BenQ Education. “The BenQ Education ‘Teach Your Way’ Projector Program offers an easy and affordable pathway to projector upgrades. Plus, our latest solutions offer exclusive features and benefits that align with modern teaching pedagogies and IT standards while adding immense value and reducing TCO.”

    The BenQ Education “Teach Your Way” Projector Program is available exclusively to educational institutions. It offers schools special discounted pricing on BenQ projectors — aligning with the company’s pledge to provide top-tier service and product accessibility to today’s evolving education community. As a result, education partners can create richer classroom settings enabled by the sector’s most advanced AV projection solutions.

    BenQ Education’s portfolio of classroom solutions is designed to provide not only intuitive use but also greater collaboration and engagement opportunities. BenQ’s lineup of projectors include solutions with 100% solid state and maintenance-free technology, high resolution and brightness, and lower power usage and greater energy quality with unmatched affordability for a substantially lower TCO. This includes the new BenQ LH650 4,000-lumen 1080p laser projector perfectly suited for today’s classrooms. This maintenance-free projector sets a new course in the classroom projector category, delivering twice the pixel density (PPI2) of an average WXGA classroom projector and over 2 million total pixels on a 100” screen. With 90% Rec. 709 coverage for color accuracy, HDR10 for video, lower power consumption, centralized software management, a three-year unrestricted warranty, and special education-only pricing of just $977, the LH650 is designed with sustainability in mind, featuring recycled plastic, a small form factor, and less e-waste.

    The new InstaShow VS20 wireless hybrid classroom presentation solution is also available under the “Teach Your Way” Projector Program. The latest in the WPS Series, the InstaShow VS20 facilitates seamless collaboration with up to four devices displayed simultaneously. It integrates wireless presentation, conferencing, and advanced microphone technology into an intuitive, all-in-one button system. Perfect for hybrid classrooms, it connects within six seconds to various devices, supporting USB-C or HDMI connections, and ensures crisp, secure content delivery with 4K UHD presentation. The system enhances audio with an omnidirectional wireless microphone and prioritizes data and network security with robust cybersecurity measures.

    Schools can learn more about the BenQ “Teach Your Way” Projector Program at campaigns.benq.com/en/teach-your-way-projectors. More information on BenQ is available at www.BenQBoard.com.

    About BenQ Education
    BenQ Education is helping teachers shape the future of learning with interactive display solutions that maximize engagement in and out of the classroom while improving student performance. For over 10 years, BenQ has been the No. 1-selling TI DLP projector brand worldwide, according to Futuresource, and is one of the leading interactive display vendors in North America. The award-winning BenQ Board is the first and only interactive display to feature TÜV- and SIAA-certified germ-resistant screens, interfaces, and pens as part of its purpose-built ClassroomCare technologies designed for healthier classrooms. The BenQ Board RP03 Series has been recognized as the first smart board to achieve Eyesafe® Certification, the advanced blue light mitigation technology developed in concert with optometrists and ophthalmologists. Industry-recognized, BenQ’s Tap ‘N Teach technology for fast sign-on, EZWrite license-free annotation and whiteboard software, InstaShare wireless screen presentation system, and IT-friendly monitoring and management tools create exciting and intuitive active learning experiences. EZWrite 6 is also AWS Qualified, having passed Amazon Web Services (AWS) Foundational Technical Review (FTR), providing schools with assurance in security, reliability, and operational excellence. Educators can focus on giving lessons that leave an impact and give the leaders of tomorrow the tools they need to reach their maximum potential. The company’s products are available across North America through leading value-added distributors, resellers, and retailers. More information is available at www.BenQBoard.com.

    All trademarks and registered trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their respective owners.

    eSchool News Staff
    Latest posts by eSchool News Staff (see all)





    ESchool News Staff

    Source link

  • Friday 5: The many faces of classroom learning

    Friday 5: The many faces of classroom learning


    Key points:

    There’s no denying it: Classroom learning is changing. Classrooms today could be in person, online, or hybrid. Classrooms may be student-driven, might focus on project-based learning, or may offer learning through a specialized topic such as STEM.

    And while today’s classrooms look different, students and teachers remain at the heart of classroom learning.

    Let’s take a look at a few trends in classroom learning and how these trends are impacting the future of education.

    What is a learning activity in a classroom?

    Project-based learning is one of the most sensible solutions to the variety of needs teachers must try to meet for each student because it allows student autonomy and targets specific areas. The concept hinges on the idea that students complete a project on a single topic–ideally, they choose their own topics to promote interest and motivation–and, in doing so, dive deeply into that topic, ultimately becoming an expert on it. Projects can be individually completed or a collaborative effort, promoting group work and social skills. Because students control their learning in the PBL approach, differentiation is simple, if needed at all, as students conduct their own learning at their own pace and present their learning in a mode that makes sense to them. One of the most significant benefits of PBL is that it addresses students’ questions as they learn, fostering curiosity and perseverance in
    learning as opposed to having to stick to a specific curriculum. Here’s how one educator is advocating for more PBL in classrooms through effective teaching strategies.

    What is an example of learning by doing in the classroom?

    Classroom learning is much more successful when students are engaged in that learning via interactive classroom activities. Whether students take the bus to school or run downstairs to the computer room, keeping them engaged in their classwork throughout the day is the best way for them to master content and progress to the next level of their education. But not all students do this, or at least, do it well. So how can teachers and principals up their game to keep students engaged and make sure each child stays focused and ready to learn? A teacher with more than 20 years of experience offers 6 tips to help keep students engaged throughout the day, whether they are in a traditional or a virtual classroom.  

    What class activities help you learn the most?

    Edtech tools are invaluable when implemented correctly by trained educators–and they can help reluctant students come out of their shell. Engaging shy students in K-12 classrooms can be a rewarding challenge, and edtech is a valuable tool in creating inclusive and interactive learning environments. Many educators are merging one with the other, discovering strategies to use edtech to engage shy students. By leveraging edtech tools and educational activities for students, teachers can foster participation, build confidence, and provide tailored learning experiences for excellent classroom learning. Explore these five strategies to use edtech to engage shy students.

    What is an advantage of classroom learning?

    Classroom learning doesn’t have to happen indoors. COVID was a national window-walled classroom moment. In fall 2020, many districts, schools, and individual educators across the country took to learning outdoors out of necessity–and their learning activities and strategies blossomed. Green Schoolyards America led a beautiful collective effort to document outdoor learning practices in a National Outdoor Learning Library. Learn how one teacher is dedicated to using the outdoors as the perfect classroom learning environment.

    What is the learning process in class?

    Classroom learning is most impactful when students feel safe and can be their true selves in their classrooms. Every educator knows that weirdness is what makes our students grow. After all, curiosity, creativity, and critical thought don’t bloom in a stagnant mind. So instead of wringing our hands over the social ecosystem, let’s encourage our students to think weirder through fun activities for students in the classroom. Here are just three benefits to letting students embrace their inner weirdness.

    Laura Ascione
    Latest posts by Laura Ascione (see all)





    Laura Ascione

    Source link

  • Payday 3 Developers Address Future of the Hopeless Heist Sim

    Payday 3 Developers Address Future of the Hopeless Heist Sim

    The highly anticipated launch of Payday 3 was turned sour quickly as the game was plagued with issues in the eyes of the players, with problems like server failures, features missing and no offline mode.

    Now, four months after its launch in a post titled “Our Plans Going Forward,” the developers of Payday 3 have made a statement regarding the struggling game’s future.

    Image Source: Deep Silver via Twinfinite

    Right off the bat, the devs were sure to address the fact that they know players are not happy with Payday 3. It’s not unlike a studio to try to dodge the negative press as best as possible and try to paint themselves in a positive light, but the studio has been aware of people’s feelings since the launch of the game and can’t really hide from them.

    Luckily, as ominous as the post’s title may sound, Starbreeze Studios doesn’t seem like they plan on pulling the plug “The Day Before – style” anytime soon. With the amount of feedback the studio has received in forums, comments and social media, it would be a shame for the developers to call it a wash and give up on the game.

    The team on Twitter/X has even gotten a nickname — payday twitter man — as the community has had to have such close contact with the studio in order to communicate the slew of problems it was faced with. Starbreeze Studios has spent the time since launch doing a great deal of saying how they’re taking feedback into account, and much of the announcement on January 17 echoes the same sentiment.

    The studio then goes on to claim that they have assembled a “strike team” of some of their veteran developers in order to make the game reach people’s initial expectations. This team consists of people from all different departments of the studio, being the community, design, production and communication teams, with the hope of properly taking all of that feedback and putting it to work.

    They close out the post with a time frame to look forward to finding out more; February 2024. Whether this announcement will come early or late in the month is still yet to be seen, but they claim that it will detail future improvements to Payday 3 and when players can expect them to roll out.

    While this seems like a great promise on the surface, it’s only backed by months of players constantly finding issues, bugs and matchmaking errors within the game. It’s hard to say for sure whether this “strike team” will actually make a difference in the aspects of Payday 3 that consumers are really looking for, but it seems like a step in the right direction.

    About the author

    Avatar photo

    Nick Rivera

    Nick Rivera graduated from the University of Pittsburgh in 2021 studying Digital Media and started as a Freelance Writer with Twinfinite in early 2023. Nick plays anything from Halo to Stardew Valley to Peggle, but is a sucker for a magnetic story.

    Nick Rivera

    Source link

  • Are microschools the future of education?

    Are microschools the future of education?

    Key points:

    This article originally appeared on the Christensen Institute’s blog and is reposted here with permission.

    Microschools have become a hot topic over the last few years. Their big appeal is that they promise to do a better job catering to students’ and families’ individual needs and interests. But right now, they only serve about 2 percent to 4 percent of U.S. students. So, could microschools eventually become the new normal in schooling?

    Well, let’s see what innovation theory has to say about this question. To start, we first need to take a quick dive into the history of the steel industry (and yes, and I promise it relates).

    From the mid 1800s until the 1960s, steel came from massive integrated mills. These large mills did everything from reacting iron ore, coke, and limestone in blast furnaces to rolling finished products at the other end. It would cost over $12 billion to build a huge, new integrated mill today.

    Then in the 1960s, a new type of steel mill called the minimill entered the scene. Unlike their giant predecessors that needed large blast furnaces to process raw ore, minimills made new steel products by melting scrap steel using a new technology called the electric arc furnace.

    These minimills transformed the economics of steel production. Whereas an integrated mill today might cover two to four square miles and would cost around $12 billion to build, minimills are less than a tenth the size of an integrated mill and only cost around $800 million.

    But early minimills had a problem. Because the scrap steel they recycled varied in its chemical makeup, they could only make certain steel products like rebar. 

    But from the 1960s to the 1990s, as the technology improved, minimills were gradually able to produce more and more of the products made in larger and more expensive integrated mills. First angle iron, then structural steel for buildings, then finally sheet steel for things like soup cans and cars

    What does this have to do with microschools?

    Microschools are small, independent schooling programs. They often have students of mixed age groups and one or two educators who facilitate the learning experiences.

    Just as minimills operate at a smaller scale compared to integrated mills, microschools are much smaller than conventional schools. They typically only serve around 15 to 40 students—much smaller than the typical school with hundreds to thousands of students.

    As with minimills, the physical facilities of most microschools are also small and lean. Whereas most conventional schools have large, expensive campuses with multiple buildings, playgrounds, and athletic fields, microschools often operate out of homes, churches, retail space, or office buildings, and use nearby public parks for their outdoor facilities.

    Also, just as minimills keep their costs down by recycling scrap steel, microschools take advantage of community and online resources to keep their costs lean.

    Whether microschools become mainstream alternatives to conventional schooling remains to be seen. 

    Just like minimills had to improve their technology over time to offer a wider array of steel products, microschools will have to evolve if they hope to serve a wider array of students and families. 

    Today’s microschools aren’t for everyone. They’re limited in their ability to provide diverse social interactions, extracurricular activities, and specialized support for unique educational needs, making them an unproven and un-enticing option for many families.

    So what’s the takeaway? Microschools may someday disrupt conventional schooling just like minimills disrupted integrated mills. They definitely have some of the key ingredients. But we’ll have to wait and see whether they can evolve to become compelling alternatives to conventional schooling.

    Latest posts by eSchool Media Contributors (see all)

    Thomas Arnett, Senior Research Fellow, Clayton Christensen Institute

    Source link

  • 65 predictions about edtech trends in 2024

    65 predictions about edtech trends in 2024

    As we wave farewell to 2023, we’re looking ahead to edtech trends in 2024 with optimism for education as a whole.

    Moving away from the pandemic, educators still grapple with learning loss and academic disparities and inequities.

    Create your Free Account to Continue Reading

    eSchool News is Free for qualified educators. Sign up or login
    to access all our K-12 news and resources.

    Please confirm your email address

    More News from eSchool News

    There are more than 140,000 Special Education (SPED) students in the state of Washington. Often, these students don’t have access to the same level of resources that are available to general education students.

    In today’s digital age, one student alone might be using two or three different devices for their schoolwork – that’s more surfaces for security threats to creep in than ever before.

    Back in early 2020, educators and students nationwide were living in a fast-paced world full of choices, adjustments, and constant changes. But in March of that year, everything changed. 

    The rise in popularity of artificial intelligence (AI) and access to AI tools over the last year has reignited the debate over how technology is used in the classroom.

    In today’s digital age, learning has gone through a profound transformation, reshaping traditional educational models. Technology’s omnipresence has brought forth a new era of accessibility.

    In the dynamic landscape of learning in the digital age, K-12 educators are increasingly leveraging technology tools to enhance teaching and learning experiences.

    Technology tools in K-12 education have revolutionized traditional teaching methods, offering innovative solutions to enhance learning in the digital age. From interactive whiteboards and educational apps to virtual classrooms, these tools empower educators to create dynamic, engaging lessons.

    Technology plays a pivotal role in transforming K-12 teaching and learning in the digital age, offering innovative tools that enhance engagement, personalization, and efficiency.

    In the ever-evolving landscape of K-12 education, technology tools for teaching and learning play a pivotal role in shaping dynamic learning environments. From interactive applications to collaborative platforms, edtech tools enrich the educational experience.

    In the dynamic realm of K-12 education, leveraging technology tools for teaching and learning is essential for creating engaging and effective learning environments.

    Want to share a great resource? Let us know at submissions@eschoolmedia.com.

    Laura Ascione

    Source link

  • 64 predictions about edtech trends in 2024

    64 predictions about edtech trends in 2024

    As we wave farewell to 2023, we’re looking ahead to edtech trends in 2024 with optimism for education as a whole.

    Moving away from the pandemic, educators still grapple with learning loss and academic disparities and inequities.

    In 2023, a new popular kid in town, better known as AI, dominated headlines and prompted debates around how students could abuse–and should use–the generative tool for learning.

    The future of education is changing, and global workforce demands will be influenced by the need for knowledge around and skills in fast-growing technologies such as AI. This begs the question: What’s next for education?

    What are the projections for edtech?

    We asked edtech executives, stakeholders, and experts to share some of their thoughts and predictions about where they think edtech is headed in 2024.

    Here’s what they had to say:

    Text-based AI interfaces provide an opportunity to help close the digital divide…and avoid an impending AI divide. Ten years ago, when we began building equitable, offline-first education technology for the 2/3 of the world who didn’t have internet access, many people told us to just wait and the gap would close naturally. But we knew that unless we proactively built bridges to ensure everyone could be included in the benefits of new technologies, each cycle of innovation would leave people further behind. Today, over 2.9 billion people are still without internet, and the rate of internet growth has actually slowed. However, one of the exciting things about text-based AI interfaces is that we can now leverage low-connectivity channels like SMS to bridge high-tech online innovations to communities who would otherwise not have access. So the big push in 2024 will be finding ways to support building capacity and awareness around the potential benefits and effective use of these tools, and finding equitable funding models to ensure free access for all, so it doesn’t become yet another tool that further entrenches the advantages of those who already have the most.
    Jamie Alexandre, Co-Founder & Executive Director, Learning Equality

    Buckle up and enjoy the ride! 2024 is going to be either an awesome roller coaster ride or a roller coaster ride with unexpected turns resulting in silenced screams. I predict two issues will take center stage- artificial intelligence (AI) and cybersecurity. With AI, we have just begun to see the possibilities this technology can provide for education. Although AI is not new in other industries, it’s still an emerging trend in education and we are finally allowing ourselves a glimpse of hope, skepticism and wonderment. From how to delve into the nuances of student learning and removing the heavy lift of teachers trying to figure out how to individualize instruction, to enabling someone like me to speak in seven languages so that I may express ideas or collaborate with others from around the world, AI holds endless potential.  On the down side, as the technology evolves it will also enable hackers to be more adept at infiltrating systems that store sensitive student data. I predict a greater focus on cybersecurity so schools can protect our students and themselves from these unexpected (and unwelcome) twists and turns. No doubt 2024 will be an interesting year and I, for one, am looking forward to 2024!
    Dr. Maria Armstrong, Executive Director, Association of Latino Administrators and Superintendents (ALAS)

    While digital and virtual simulations can help students understand complex science and engineering concepts, these tools should be coupled with meaningful hands-on activities that show students the limits of models and the challenges of making things work in the real world. When students can bring models to life and test them in real world situations, they are expanding beyond paper and screen into the world around them.
    Michael Arquin, Founder, KidWind

    The integration of AI in education has the potential to revolutionize the way students learn, especially for non-traditional learners. AI can deliver content to students in a manner that supports each student’s unique learning styles and preferences. This customized approach helps all students practice and learn new concepts in a way that works for them. Additionally, AI can shorten the feedback loop on student work, allowing students to quickly identify any misunderstandings they may have. This helps build strong retrieval pathways and helps students more efficiently master concepts and skills. Immediate feedback also helps students develop self-efficacy. Knowing the results of their efforts shortly after completing an assignment lets students know both when they have mastered a concept and where they need to do additional work. Another advantage of AI is the time it can save teachers in the creation of personalized learning experiences. By leveraging AI technologies, educators can overcome the limitations of time and resources, offering a level of personalization that enhances the learning experience for each individual student. This approach acknowledges and accommodates the unique needs, strengths, and learning styles of learners.
    Kris Astle, Global Education Strategist, SMART Technologies

    Far too many students continue to struggle with reading, with post-pandemic recovery remaining slow—and in some cases, stagnant—among our young readers. There is a clear need for science-driven curriculum, and the thoughtful implementation of emerging technologies. For instance, new AI tools are providing educators with an invaluable resource—more time for individualized instruction, with increased specificity. I’m optimistic that proven, coherent technologies in the hands of a committed teacher will achieve the goal of more confident, successful readers. 
    Elizabeth Bassford, Vice President of Content & Implementation, Curriculum Associates

    As the multidisciplinary nature of astronomy is recognized, schools should look to expand curriculums with more astronomy-focused courses in 2024. The growing space industry requires a diverse workforce beyond the conventional role of engineering. A range of fields including healthcare, law, business, entertainment, and food are increasingly involved in space-related initiatives. Therefore, inspiring students’ interests in space topics through astronomy education can cultivate the broad skill sets and passions demanded across many sectors within the expanding space economy. By fostering the next generation’s passion for space, schools can help develop a versatile workforce ready for the diverse jobs of the future in the domains of space exploration and development.
    Kachine Blackwell, Director of Product Marketing, Slooh

    Leaders will look for evidence-based wellness programs. With increased funding challenges and various political pressures surrounding wellness programs, science will drive decision-making. Education leaders will continue to put resources toward wellness programs, but with greater scrutiny and demand for evidence-based data. This trend follows the pattern of other public interest phenomena. A crisis brews, followed by a building realization of the problem. Organizations and institutions spring into action, including gathering information about the scope of the problem and implementing emergency solutions. Now we are in the phase of sorting out which solutions have the best results so we can consolidate learning and direct resources appropriately. We now have plenty of data about our ParentGuidance.org program to help decision-makers understand implement programs at scale that hold the promise to improve youth mental health and reduce suicide.
    Anne Brown, CEO & President, Cook Center for Human Connection

    More meaningful, tailored school-home communication will be imperative to supporting academic recovery and addressing chronic absenteeism. In 2024, developing more meaningful school-home relationships and partnering with families to support better student outcomes will be imperative. Currently, more than 25 percent of K-12 students are chronically absent and most students have ground to make up in math and reading. Research shows that the average student would need more than 4 additional months of instruction to catch up to pre-COVID reading levels. At the same time, there’s a gap between how parents and caregivers think their children are doing and the reality. Many families aren’t aware if their child is behind academically, or may not understand how absenteeism is impacting their child’s progress. We will see more districts leveraging real-time data so families can understand more than just what their child’s grades are. Communications with student-level data tied to outcomes feel relevant and actionable to families. School-home communications will focus on driving meaningful results, promoting student success, and engaging all families. Meaningful connections with families encourage engagement that supports better student outcomes.
    Russ Davis, Founder and CEO, SchoolStatus

    The evolution of technology in education spaces is certainly not slowing down in 2024. As an integral part of learning today, educators and students deserve new and improved ways to display and interact with classroom content, but to be successful, these tools need to be flexible and user-friendly. One thing that cannot be denied is the disconnect in today’s education technology between AV and IT and various domains. Most educators and students are not technology professionals and prefer classroom solutions that are simple to use and easily work with the various programs, software and other hardware which educators have grown accustomed to. Historically there has been a limit to seamless integration across various technology solutions within today’s classrooms. However, projector manufacturers are working towards solving some of these problems with their latest classroom display technology.
    Remi Del Mar, Senior Product Manager for K-12 Projectors, Epson America

    I believe the mental well-being of students and educators will continue to be a top focus in 2024. This past year presented numerous challenges for educators, leaving many of us scrambling to do our best to meet the rising needs with limited time and resources – which isn’t sustainable. We need self-care not just for students, but for teachers, too. Teachers will need tools to make their mental health a priority in 2024, as the only way to stay calm and carry on in the midst of so many to-dos is to replenish their own well-being first. A free download called ‘Take What You Need’ helps to infuse more calm, joy and gratitude into even the busiest routine. Incorporating proven techniques into our lives and keeping them front and center will be critical in a year that’s expected to bring its own unique challenges.
    Katie Dorn, MA, LSC, MFT, General Manager, Catapult Learning & Co-Founder, EmpowerU 

    The ESSER fiscal cliff is here; reliable and actionable data will be key to investing in effective efforts. As we approach the impending ESSER fiscal cliff, states and school districts across the country will be grappling with the abrupt loss of federal pandemic relief funding. They have about $70 billion left to spend this school year—about 10 percent on top of their normal budgets—and then the money runs out. Schools have relied on those funds for the creation or expansion of summer programs and tutoring services, the purchase of high-quality curriculum and instructional materials, and a plethora of other efforts to address learning gaps students experienced through the COVID-19 pandemic. 2024 will be a mix of states and districts spending their remaining funds while also looking to the future. As the one-time funds expire, it will be more important than ever for education communities to have access to reliable and actionable data to know which interventions have been most effective in helping students grow, and where to continue investing strategically amidst shrinking budgets. Policymakers will be looking to leverage their existing data sources to better understand those trends and the remaining gaps, and they will continue to look for innovative approaches to learning and ways to assess the needs of students.
    Lindsay Dworkin, SVP of Policy & Government Affairs, NWEA 

    The pendulum has swung quickly toward the Science of Reading. I can see a world where we overcorrect, however, and start to view it in a very narrow way. Yes, it’s important, especially in the early stages of learning to read in K-2 classrooms, that teachers align with the Science of Reading. But that doesn’t mean everybody must do everything the exact same way. Using a science of literacy-based instructional approach doesn’t always look identical. Teachers should feel free to put their marks on it. They need the power to exercise their skill sets. It’s important to think about with early learners–not that we shouldn’t follow a scope and sequence, as a systematic approach is necessary. But how teachers implement that scope and sequence, the fun activities and what they do to make their classroom feel like theirs isn’t something they should ever lose.
    Laura Fischer, VP, Learning Design & Content Development, Learning A-Z

    Looking ahead, I anticipate that in 2024 the generative AI training wheels will come off and propel adoption of this technology. It is increasingly clear that AI will become a ubiquitous part of life. Therefore, it is in the educators’ best interest to prepare students effectively, ensuring they are well-equipped to coexist with generative AI in the workplace in the future. Educators can take the lead by incorporating opportunities to work with generative AI-powered tools. For instance, traditionally static presentations can be infused with dynamic generative AI elements, fostering a more efficient and engaging experience. This not only aligns with the evolving technological landscape but also prepares students for a future where collaboration with AI will be integral to various professional domains.
    Jose Florido, Education Lead & Chief Market Development, U.S., Freepik

    Cities and states will utilize dynamic policy making as they reach data maturity. With the investment of SaaS technologies and increased data sharing between the public and private sectors, cities and states begin to utilize data in near real-time for budgeting and policy making. Rather than taking eight months to calculate and aggregate home values to inform property taxes that will shape public budgets, policymakers can analyze this data as it’s published to avoid a budget crisis in eight months. Additionally, policymakers can accurately account for future budget allocation for roads, schools, and public safety. SaaS technologies now make it possible to expedite support of foster care providers, match appropriate providers with children, and then help allocate social and financial resources to those providers on behalf of children.
    Jeff Frazier, Head of Global Public Sector, Snowflake

    In 2024, the focus will be on reimagining education with AI at its core. It’s not about merely repackaging traditional learning methods with AI; it’s about innovatively leveraging AI to transform the educational experience. Virtual learning assistants, or mentors, will, with human overseers, autonomously support personalized development: Imagine personalized learning journeys powered by AI agents that bring relevant topics to your students’ attention, based on your interests.
    Graham Glass, CEO & Founder, CYPHER Learning 

    Finding new and innovative ways to support teachers will continue to be a priority for schools and districts this coming year and beyond. At St. Vrain, we’ve implemented artificial intelligence to provide teachers with extra support and to deliver high-quality, meaningful, and relevant professional learning opportunities. For example, this year our district launched the Exploration AI program to boost educators’ use and understanding of this emerging technology through self-directed, gamified learning. We have also continued to utilize the AI Coach by Edthena platform to help teachers reflect on their practice, take action steps toward instructional improvements, and measure their progress on student outcomes.
    Courtney Groskin, Instructional Learning Coach, St. Vrain Valley Schools, Longmont, Colo.

    Our recent research found that families, especially those with a lower household income are less likely to have access to paper-based technologies like printers, scanners, envelopes, and checkbooks, and they want to be able to use online systems to enroll their children and pay for tuition or school-related fees. Therefore, in the coming year I predict an increase in districts adopting technology to provide online options for everything from enrollment and tuition payments, to lottery and choice program applications. By improving access to district systems and processes, school leaders will be able to better serve and meet the needs and expectations of the families they serve.
    Matthew Hancock, Director of Customer Success & Services, Scribbles Software

    In 2023, the rapid integration of AI into education, surge in cybersecurity attacks against public schools, and increased focus on data security were notable developments within the education space.. While each of these trends impacted the industry in their own rights, all three development served as opportunities for education leaders to shift their approach to teaching, learning, and managing school operations that I foresee continuing in 2024. While we now better understand the potential benefits of AI in education and have seen the release of AI features in products, it’s still in the early stages of development. I believe we can expect significant product announcements in 2024 as the industry continues its exploration of AI’s potential impact across all facets of education – especially when it comes to seeing how mixing the power of AI with student data will help support personalized learning efforts at scale. Another aspect of AI’s impact in education I foresee growing in 2024 is the shift towards ensuring more responsible AI use, notably when it comes to addressing the uncertainties that came with introducing it. In 2024, I expect we will see big advancements towards determining the best way to use AI in both classroom and administrative settings, as well as clearly defining boundaries for ethical use. In 2023, the US witnessed a surge in cybersecurity attacks on schools and districts, making it a primary target. Throughout the year, we’ve seen districts and edtech companies fall victim to these attacks, compelling districts to adopt a defensive stance. This involved updating systems and educating communities about the substantial threat posed by these attacks and the most effective ways to prevent them. Looking ahead to 2024, the industry is poised to transition to an offensive stance. Armed with enhanced knowledge and tools, I expect districts will make the shift to having cybersecurity practices that have been updated, tested, and regularly monitored to thwart successful attacks. The goal is to witness a decline in successful attacks by the end of the year. Finally, I predict data security to be a continued focus for schools in 2024. As we consider what responsible AI use looks like, districts will also have to consider how new AI tools will leverage data without exposing it. As such, I expect combining the benefits of AI (with responsible use) with the best cybersecurity practices will be a key focal point in 2024.
    Ryan Imbriale, Vice President of Education Strategy, PowerSchool

    Research-based interventions will be needed to help older students with reading fluency. National data show that almost 70 percent of eighth graders are not considered proficient in reading based on 2022 test scores on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), also known as The Nation’s Report Card. In 2024, districts will be working to find research-based interventions to help older students with reading fluency. Reading fluency is essential for effective reading comprehension at any age, but it’s especially critical once students go from ‘learning to read’ to ‘reading to learn.’ Unfortunately, many students leaving elementary school are still not proficient in reading, and that creates a significant barrier to their ability to learn across subjects. Middle and high school teachers will need support to help older students with foundational reading skills to address this problem. Programs that emphasize repeated reading and giving older readers the opportunity to choose practice readings on topics they find engaging will help older readers improve fluency.
    Laura Hansen, NWEA Director of Academic Services, NWEA  

    As 2024 unfolds, the educational landscape embraces the transformative power of AI, crafting a future where accessibility and personalized learning take center stage. We are on track to see an increase in individualized homeschooling and e-learning, accompanied by the rising tide of gamification in education, promising a more engaging and dynamic learning experience.
    Diana Heldfond, CEO & Founder, Parallel Learning

    Are students learning? Even the best instruction will not be effective if schools don’t provide a safe, positive learning environment, and if students aren’t ready to learn. As we head into 2024, we will see an emphasis on tools that support the needs of the whole child. Social and emotional skills set students up with a strong foundation to understand their learning needs, focus, ask for help when needed and collaborate, so they can reach learning goals. Tools that help students develop these skills will lead to improved academic engagement and growth.” 
    Evelyn Johnson, VP Research & Development, Aperture Education & Professor Emeritus, Boise State University

    Artificial Intelligence in the classroom will continue to be a focus in 2024 throughout education. While many schools are looking at the ramifications of students using AI to “cheat” or “avoid” classwork and writing papers, it is important to note that teachers themselves will be thrust into the AI world. There are advantages of using AI to do things for teachers that they do not enjoy doing. Letting the AI work FOR teachers instead of replacing teachers will be hugely beneficial to the education space in the future. Let the computers tackle the “science” of teaching while the humans focus on the “art” of teaching, exploring the nuances and building the rapport and understanding of individual student needs without being burdened by “randomizing versions of a test” or “figuring out block scheduling parameters” for rotational teaching purposes. AI can also help teachers create and teach in new and exciting virtual spaces which will save time and remove barriers for entry into high quality content and instruction.
    Chris Klein, Head of U.S. Education, Avantis Education (Creators of ClassVR)

    For years, employers have grappled with the looming concern of a talent shortage – a worry that originated with the retirement of Baby Boomers. However, in 2024, this concern will continue to embed itself at the state-level within schools and school systems across the nation. The talent shortage is no longer just an employer concern, but it is now a shared responsibility involving education systems and state governments. As the talent shortage concern shifts to the state-level, 2024 will be a year of increased collaboration between employers, schools, and government agencies. The goal will be to create a more responsive and adaptable education system that ensures the workforce remains well-equipped to meet the evolving demands of the job market. This transition will mark a turning point in addressing the talent shortage, with the potential to lead to a more robust and dynamic workforce in the years to come. This shift will be driven by several key factors. First, with a rapidly changing job market and evolving skill requirements, schools and education systems will find themselves under increased scrutiny to ensure that students are adequately prepared for the workforce. This will necessitate a reevaluation of curricula, training methods, and the development of future-ready skills. Second, in response to talent-shortage concerns, schools will place greater emphasis on work-based learning, STEM education, and vocational training programs. These efforts will be aimed at equipping students with the skills that are in high demand in the job market and promoting a broader range of career paths.
    Jeri Larsen, COO, YouScience

    In 2024 and beyond, we will see increased adoption of core curriculum tools and technology by school districts. The pandemic enabled educators worldwide to subscribe to virtual education products to aid in distance learning. This led to an oversaturation in products that students were exposed to, thus watering down the quality of each. Now, districts are placing increased emphasis on the high-quality core curriculum and are looking to technology to support their efforts. There has been significant research that clearly demonstrates that adoption of core materials is the largest driving force in student achievement. School districts want to be more unified with their curriculums, technology will help to lead the way. The teacher shortage and initiative fatigue isn’t slowing down in the new year. To combat this in 2024, districts should look to lean more on technology to support teachers and onboard new ones. The implementation of high-quality instructional materials (HQIMs) can help districts attract new teachers and rapidly upskill their existing staff, with built-in professional learning features.
    Abbas Manjee, Co-Founder & Chief Academic Officer, Kiddom

    With AI at the forefront of nearly every industry, districts and teachers need help weeding through the AI noise to find appropriate classroom applications. The best of AI is yet to come, and we are only beginning to see the tip of the iceberg with integration into edtech platforms. Any platform can integrate AI quickly for automation, but only the platforms that take the time to deeply understand the best applications for AI will thrive and truly help students and teachers alike. 2024 presents an opportunity for teachers leading the adoption curve to experiment with AI as a tool for assessment. For example, a teacher leveraging ChatGPT to help students draft comprehension prompts that best represent the texts they’re reading is likely to empower students with a higher degree of knowledge than a teacher that bans ChatGPT.
    Abbas Manjee, Co-Founder & Chief Academic Officer, Kiddom

    Education will be more online and more self-directed. Envisioning the trajectory of education in the coming decade, three discernible trends stand out to me, and I am confident in their continued growth. More online: Firstly, education will undoubtedly become more entrenched in the online sphere. The shift towards digital learning has been palpable, and this trajectory is poised to persist, shaping the way individuals access and engage with educational content. Multi-path: Secondly, the landscape of educational pathways will diversify significantly. Unlike the traditional model where one’s academic journey was largely confined to associate’s, bachelor’s, master’s, or PhD tracks, the future promises a more varied array of programs. This diversification is already evident with the proliferation of boot camps and the emergence of comprehensive multi-credential pathway programs, offering learners a broader spectrum of options. Self-directed: Moreover, the paradigm of education will become increasingly self-directed or self-paced. Learners will have the autonomy to guide their own learning experiences, marking a departure from instructor-mediated programs. This shift towards self-directed education aligns with the evolving needs and preferences of students seeking more personalized and flexible learning journeys. A notable example is the surge in online enrollment at community colleges, signaling a growing inclination towards self-directed learning even within traditional educational institutions. In this evolving educational landscape, technology plays a pivotal role. As we navigate the next decade, Muzzy Lane is poised to contribute to an educational landscape characterized by online accessibility, diverse pathways, and self-directed learning.
    David McCool, President & CEO, Muzzy Lane

    The popularity of CTE will continue to rise. There is no doubt that numerous industries, such as manufacturing, are facing a pressing need for skilled professionals to fill vacant job positions. This, in combination with recent high school graduates being uncertain about their education and career paths, will prompt educational stakeholders to explore ways to enhance students’ confidence and certainty before they embark on post-secondary education or enter the workforce after high school. One effective approach to achieving this goal is by implementing Career and Technical Education (CTE) programs. In 2024, we anticipate an increasing number of school districts nationwide will  introduce new CTE programs. The continued dedication to developing and supporting CTE initiatives ensures that students throughout the country will enjoy a broader spectrum of opportunities, promoting their personal and professional development. Moreover, it guarantees that industries will benefit from a continuously expanding pool of skilled talent to fill job openings.
    Hans Meeder, Senior Fellow for Education & Workforce Education, YouScience and Former Deputy Assistant Secretary for Career, Technical, and Adult Education, U.S. Department of Education

    Cybersecurity is a growing threat for schools. It’s not a matter of ‘if’ an attack will happen, it’s ‘when.’ I predict in 2024 we will see an increased emphasis on cybersecurity in schools. School districts will take proactive steps to ensure student data is as secure as possible. This may include moving to a digital records management system that is FERPA and CJIS compliant such as what we have done with Scribbles Software. Other steps may include eliminating the storing of social security numbers, providing specific cybersecurity training, and making sure the district has an incident response plan in case of a cyberattack.
    Beverly Miller, Assistant Director of Schools for Administration/Chief Technology Officer, Greeneville City Schools in Tennessee

    The upcoming year will be driven by careful, data-informed decision-making around technology usage in and out of the classroom. As we know, the pandemic led to a proliferation of learning technologies, with districts reporting the use of an average of 2,500 edtech tools in the 2023 EdTech Top 40 research study. But, with ESSER funds set to expire at the end of the 2023-24 school year, districts are asking important questions as they manage these unwieldy edtech ecosystems: Which tools support effective pedagogy? Are they supporting positive student outcomes? Effective tools are designed to provide data to inform decisions and ensure educators, students, and communities know what’s available, safe, and working in each unique context. The data that these tools provide lead to better operational, financial, and instructional decisions. We will also see continued emphasis on actionable data to address individual student performance, especially through standards-based assessment. As educators work to meet an even wider range of learning needs, access to timely insights around mastery will be increasingly important, as we saw in the 2023 State of Assessment in K-12 Education study. 
    Jenn Mitchell, Vice President, K-12 Marketing, North America, Instructure

    With ESSER funding coming to an end, it will be more important than ever before to consider the overall lifecycle and value of devices as IT leaders and administrators will have less budget available to make new and continuous edtech purchases. Additionally, school and district leaders should consider how high quality, durable technology enables the continuity of learning and less disruption, in comparison to technology not designed for the classroom or student use. The same goes for educators, with the average educator spending more than an hour a week troubleshooting edtech, it’s critical that educators have access to easy-to-use and intuitive technology that allows more time for teaching and less time troubleshooting.
    Madeleine Mortimore, Global Education Innovation and Research Lead, Logitech

    Let’s be candid: the education headlines from 2023 were bleak. We’re just beginning to fully comprehend the massive scope of learning loss wrought by school closures during the pandemic. Recovery is proving slower than expected and we continue to face staff shortages and chronic student absences. With these grim statistics as a backdrop, you might be surprised (I am, a little!) that I feel optimistic about what’s to come. Despite the challenges faced in the field of education – and particularly special education – both students and staff have proven ourselves to be a resilient bunch. There is a renewed interest in proactively addressing students’ social, emotional, and behavioral needs; rather than waiting until we notice an issue, many administrators and staff members are providing all students with universal support to enhance all aspects of wellness. More educators are intentionally embedding wellness supports for their students; community building, intentional instruction in coping and tolerance skills, and restorative and instructional responses to contextually inappropriate behavior help build positive classroom environments where all students and staff feel welcome, safe, and ready to engage.
    Diane Myers, Ph. D, SVP, Special Education–Behavior, Specialized Education Services, Inc.

    STEM opportunities are on the rise for young learners as elementary and early childhood programs increase exposure to STEM activities and careers. It is crucial that we take advantage of the many resources at our fingertips to develop the 21st century skills necessary for the workforce of the future. While the focus is often on secondary education, there is a great need to ignite interest and foster creativity when students’ curiosity and independence are at their peak. As we look to 2024, we should aim to integrate real-world problem solving that will encourage critical thinking and collaboration at an early age. We are moving away from the days of traditional teacher-centered instruction where desks are arranged in rows and the teacher is at the front of the room to a more collaborative hands-on learning environment. Immersive technologies are rapidly reshaping how students learn. Artificial intelligence, augmented reality, and virtual reality will transform how educators facilitate transdisciplinary learning in ways we never thought possible.
    Jennifer Noah, STEM Facilitator, Dalraida Elementary, Montgomery Public Schools (AL), ClassVR Ambassador

    States that have passed science of reading legislation recognize the need for teacher prep programs to include science of reading, but getting universities to change is a slow-moving shift, even if legislation requires it. The policy has passed, but questions remain on how universities will be held accountable. Expect more administrator training in science of reading as districts recognize the need for principals to understand what children need to learn to read.
    Janelle Norton, Senior Manager of Strategic Partnerships, IMSE, the Institute for Multi-Sensory Education

    The continued use of AI in education can significantly transform and enhance the learning experience for students, teachers, and educational institutions. With AI, educators are able to create more personalized lesson plans that are tailored to individual student needs, pace, and learning styles.  Additionally, AI can be used to develop tools that enhance accessibility for students with disabilities, providing a more inclusive learning environment for all kinds of learners. As we look ahead, it’s important that players in the education industry create products and tools that are accessible regardless of their abilities or disabilities and have equal opportunities to learn and participate in educational activities. 
    Danna Okuyama, Founder, Urban Sandbox  

    Gamification in education involves integrating elements of game design and mechanics into learning environments to engage students, motivate them, and enhance their overall learning experience. Over the past several years, educators have talked about how gamification has positively impacted the education industry, and how it will continue to help students evolve and grow. Gamification can capture students’ attention and encourage active participation with immediate feedback, allowing students to learn from their mistakes and successes in real-time, and develop a wide range of skills, including problem-solving, critical thinking, decision-making, and creativity.  
    Danna Okuyama, Founder, Urban Sandbox  

    In 2024, I firmly believe the growing synergies between real-time engagement (RTE) and artificial intelligence (AI) will profoundly revolutionize education. Drawing from a vast set of curriculum and inputs, including students’ interests, pace and learning style, AI has the potential to offer teachers with meaningful insights into their students and classroom that can be used to shape the learning experience and provide hyper-individualized education. Meanwhile, RTE enables responsive, accessible, and inclusive learning in the classroom by facilitating seamless and scalable interactive communications between students and teachers. Together, these technologies will allow teachers to provide tailored instruction, continuously optimize their teaching strategies, and spend more one-on-one time guiding students based on their unique requirements, leading to enhanced comprehension and academic performance.
    Wyatt Oren, Director of Sales for Education, Agora

    The youth mental health crisis will continue to be a focus for educators as they search for ways to help students through today’s unique hardships. As we explore ways to use technology for good, it’s important to evaluate how EdTech tools can help school districts, teachers and even families navigate a mental health pandemic in which almost three million youth reported experiencing severe major depression in 2023. Meeting students where they are – in today’s world, online – is the key to helping ensure they feel safe reporting on their wellbeing. Some students avoid asking for help in-person, as they may feel embarrassed or fear negative repercussions or backlash. Technological tools that offer anonymous check-ins on personal wellbeing, school culture and more can encourage students to seek out the help and resources they need. Additionally, we need to support our youth at school, at home and everywhere in between. In 2024, educators will prioritize technology that brings schools and families together to monitor and improve students’ wellbeing and ensure any red flags are detected and addressed as early as possible.
    Harrison Parker, Executive Vice President, Linewize

    In 2024, the role of generative AI in education will be at the forefront of many academic discussions. This rapidly evolving technology has only begun to make an impact in the field of education. A trend I hope to see is the utilization of AI to dramatically expand accessibility for those with learning differences, revolutionizing assistive technology. It has exciting potential to give highly personalized learning support never before possible, reducing barriers for diverse learners. AI may empower more students with greater independence in their education. At The Southport School, we take a skills-based approach to learning, whether reading, math, or technology. In my role supporting students with assistive and educational technologies, I focus on leveraging these tools to enable students to fully demonstrate their knowledge and abilities. This promotes an empowering sense of success even as students tackle more difficult learning challenges. Additionally, when they transition out of our school, the hope is those technologies are then second nature for them to engage with to continue on their learning journey with decreased adult support needed. The current assistive technology landscape could be transformed by the concept of AI, providing students not only with the support they require, but also evolving into personalized solutions that can grow, learn, and adapt to each child’s changing learning profile, developing skills, and academic growth over time. Ultimately this could foster ongoing academic growth and equip students with the tech-enabled skillset to continue succeeding independently in their future learning journeys.
    Sharon Plante, Chief Technology Integrator, Teacher Mentor, & Student Advisor, The Southport School

    At Mason County Central School District, we’re not just predicting the future of educational technology, we’re actively shaping it with our groundbreaking immersive classroom. As one of the first K-12 institutions in the country to integrate an AR/VR immersive room, we’re at the forefront of a revolution in learning. Our immersive classroom transcends traditional teaching methods, offering students an unparalleled, interactive learning experience that brings lessons to life. This technology is not just a tool, it’s a portal to a world of limitless educational possibilities, fostering engagement, creativity, and a deeper understanding of complex subjects. As we look ahead, we see our immersive classroom not only bridging learning gaps, it is also inspiring other schools to embrace this innovative approach, ensuring that the educational landscape continues to evolve and adapt to the needs of 21st-century learners.
    Miguel Quinteros, K-12 Technology Coach, Mason County Central School District in Scottville, Michigan

    There is no doubt 2024 will be a year of political twists and turns, so our educator corps. must not be used as chess pieces and instead be seen and held in high professional esteem. The structured literacy ripple that began many years ago has formed into a seismic wave that will reach every corner and peak of school systems in this country; we must continue to educate our school communities in structured literacy for K-12. Lastly, as a collective community we will need to continue to create environments where all students are heard, seen, and allowed grade-level engaging, affirming, and meaningful instruction.
    Lacey Robinson, President & Chief Executive Officer, UnboundEd

    To sum it up, I think the key focus areas in 2024 are going to be: student agency/confidence, equity, and integrated supports. The impact of the pandemic is coming to a head. NAEP results came out this summer, showing significant decline since 2020, especially in math, and especially for students in minority groups. Whether we agree with the interpretation or not, the headline is that we’ve lost the last 20-30 years of gains. Students that were in 4th grade during the pandemic are now in 7th grade and the gaps in reading and math foundational skills only become more apparent each year. And on top of that, mental health needs are at an all-time high. If last year we were talking about universal screening, this year we need to be talking about universal services. Just because a student is identified as gifted doesn’t mean they don’t have a need for scaffolding/support. And just because a student is not identified as gifted doesn’t mean they won’t benefit from extension. There’s simply too great a need for individualized services and the only way to deliver it is by integrating it into the gen ed classroom — gifted services, emerging bilingual services, special ed services, etc. Educators will embrace the tools that most efficiently help them identify students’ needs and streamline the link from that information to tangible, individualized resources/services. Strengths-based insights + Multi-Tiered System of Supports (MTSS) is the answer.
    Rebekah Rodriguez, Project Manager, Riverside Insights & Former District Administrator

    Igniting specific curiosities will become a focus: Student engagement is critical to learning growth, and sparking student curiosity is an important step to engagement. But research shows that there are many types of curiosity. In 2024, educators will demonstrate their deeper understanding of the types of curiosity by strategically applying specific, more engaging edtech resources to nurture different types of curiosity. To support epistemic curiosity, the type of curiosity associated with the reward of knowledge, teachers will use more interactives and virtual labs. When a student interacts with a high-quality virtual lab or interactive, they become invested in the results, and the curiosity spurs them forward to finish the lab and even repeat it to vary the results. To support perceptual curiosity or ones’ interest in their surroundings, educators will inject augmented reality into instruction. Doing so challenges student perceptions of their environments in new and exciting ways and encourages the exploration of places and historical eras beyond the four walls of their classrooms. To support empathic curiosity, or the curiosity about the thoughts and feelings of others, educators will use online maker-spaces to create more collaborative learning opportunities that encourage greater discussion and idea sharing among students. The coming “Curiosity Revolution” will drive deeper student engagement in the post-Covid environment.
    Lance Rougeux, SVP of Curriculum, Instruction & Student Engagement, Discovery Education

    Teachers need AI training: In 2024, AI will be ubiquitous in the classroom, and teachers who don’t address it head-on will fall behind. To prepare the next generation of educators, teacher preparation programs should offer lessons about what AI tools are available, how students are already using them, and how they can be used to improve teaching and learning.
    Andrew Rozell, President, iteach

    As we head into 2024, many schools across the country will receive increased federal funding to help put safety plans into effect. Right now, many schools have a safety plan, however a gap currently exists between assessing threats and responding to them. In this next year, we’ll see many schools across the country commit to prevention and seek solutions and resources to close the implementation gap. This will ensure school leaders have the support they need to keep the safety of students and staff top of mind.
    Jason Russell, Founder & President, Secure Environment Consultants & Former Secret Service Agent

    Supply chain issues have prevented many schools from updating their technology. Now those issues are clearing up, but that doesn’t make technology adoption challenge-free. Educators must have a plan in place to determine what technology their schools really need and how to upgrade with minimal interoperability issues. Technology on the market covers everything from the latest EdTech and AI, to WiFi 6E, security devices, IoT devices, and your basic user devices. Not every school needs the same technology or should be on the same upgrade plan. Track all technology utilization and let those stats reveal your users’ experiences and predicted needs. Talk to every stakeholder – teachers, IT professionals, staff, parents, etc. Information from these sources will guide your decisions. Do you need infrastructure updates? New technology in the library or for your counselors? Is your school growing? Do you offer any special programs? Taking everything into account is crucial. Consider all users and your entire technology ecosystem – everything is connected and affects everything else. Finally, make sure you never back yourself into a corner. Technology, in every form, should be adaptable because the one thing we know for sure is that standards and capabilities are going to change over time.
    Roger Sands, CEO & Co-Founder, Wyebot

    Students and teachers will have a wider and wider choice of materials. Every year, we move further away from the “one size fits all” mentality that was the original textbook. I see that continuing in the future. As technology continues to expand and schools gain access to more materials, I see educational plans and curriculums becoming more tailored to individual student needs. I think we’ll see more variety in materials for students and more choice for teachers, and ultimately, more opportunity to work with students 1:1 with technology as the vehicle. The goal is to provide solutions that can be easily tailored to meet a specific need, that can be used alone or in tandem with another solution, and above all, something that is easy to use and reliable, so teachers are spending less time searching and planning, and more time teaching.   
    Lemma Shomali, VP, Product Management & Strategy, Domestic Learning, Gale

    An increased focus on Multi-Tiered System of Supports (MTSS) will be prominent in 2024. We know legislation and funding are fickle in the gifted world.  I think we are seeing the shift from pullout/enrichment to more support for academic growth.  With inconsistent funding and a need to ensure gifted services are defensible, there should be more of a focus on academic performance while maintaining equitable opportunity best provided through ability testing.”
    Monica L. Simonds, M. Ed., Director of Advanced Learning Programs and Services, Richardson ISD

    AI is one of the tools that can help make learning more personalized, engaging and efficient. For example, AI-driven algorithms analyze student data to adapt teaching styles and content for customized learning experiences. AI’s contributions to edtech don’t stop there. It can also take on administrative tasks and free up educators to focus on teaching. For example, automated grading and scheduling allow teachers to spend more time engaging students instead of doing paperwork. Of course, AI also comes with its challenges, including concerns around data privacy, the potential for misuse and the importance of human oversight. As a result, edtech companies also play a role in ensuring responsible AI use in the classroom by providing necessary training for educators and maintaining transparency around AI algorithms.
    Hubert Simonis, Global Lead of Edtech and HR Tech, Endava 

    As technology becomes integral to education, teaching digital citizenship is crucial. It’s about equipping students with the skills to use technology safely, responsibly and ethically. It also involves teaching them about privacy, digital footprints and online etiquette. Educators play a vital role in teaching digital citizenship by integrating it into the curriculum and fostering discussions on topics such as internet safety, digital rights and responsibilities, cyberbullying prevention and ethical online behavior.
    Hubert Simonis, Global Lead of Edtech and HR Tech, Endava 

    In education as an industry, K-20 must continue to define EDU 2.0. The pandemic and other factors continue to call into question the role education plays in society, and the concern of disconnected and inequitable experiences. Deeper connection across public and private sectors, stronger collaboration between school districts and colleges/universities, and a personalized view of the student’s journey across segments must be the priority heading into 2024.
    Joshua Sine, VP, Higher Education Strategy, Qualtrics

    In K-12, CTE will make its comeback. With a focus on career and workforce development, school districts will find ways to promote and grow their CTE programs to accommodate the growing demand for graduates with differentiated skills.
    Joshua Sine, VP, Higher Education Strategy, Qualtrics

    While the highly anticipated Apple Vision Pro headset is expected to revolutionize the virtual reality (VR) landscape, its high cost may limit direct classroom implementation in 2024. However, its release will significantly elevate the profile of the VR industry, attracting a new wave of entrepreneurs and fresh investment from venture capitalists. This will result in a healthier ecosystem that benefits even the lower-cost headsets that are already making their way into schools. This advancement offers immersive learning experiences, allowing students to explore virtual environments, conduct experiments in simulated labs, and interact with historical events in real time.
    Garrett Smiley, CEO & Founder, Sora Schools

    Artificial intelligence (AI) is quickly making its way into America’s classrooms. However, unlike the first generation of AI tools, AI in 2024 will be seamlessly integrated into existing platforms like grade books, enhancing functionality without adding complexity. AI-driven tools can personalize learning experiences, provide real-time feedback, and automate administrative tasks, allowing teachers to focus more on teaching and less on logistics. The integration of AI into familiar platforms ensures that its adoption is intuitive for educators, bridging the gap between advanced technology and everyday teaching practices.
    Garrett Smiley, CEO & Founder, Sora Schools

    The use of artificial intelligence is shifting the landscape in education and we will see schools increasingly adopting tools and resources that have AI components.  My prediction for 2024 is that schools will put policies in place to evaluate potential AI investments for rigor, equity, and results for kids in addition to innovation (It will be a “both/and” not an “either/or” approach).
    Joanna Smith-Griffin, Founder & CEO, AllHere

    Schools will take a proactive approach to improving student attendance, using two-way communication with families to understand and address the why behind absences. In 2024, we will see more personalized attendance interventions and increased school-home communication. Educators will engage families through proactive communication about the importance of attendance—before students become chronically absent. We will also see more educators reaching out to families to enhance connections and build partnerships. When families feel supported they are more likely to collaborate and work together with the district to better understand and address the root causes of student absences. With this information, personalized interventions will be designed to address specific challenges that students may face in maintaining regular attendance. Collaboration between families and schools will play a crucial role in addressing the unique needs of each student, considering factors such as heath, transportation, and socio-economic conditions.
    Grace Spencer, VP, Marketing & Product Development, SchoolStatus 

    AI curriculum will become mainstream in K-12 classrooms across the nation, particularly in high schools. More and more schools will recognize the importance of AI literacy and establish policies and guidelines for how students can and should use generative AI in their work. We will see states like California pave the way with acceptable use standards and policies to protect students using the technology while schools around the country roll out AI coursework. Schools will also start to encounter new risks stemming from AI use by staff. As a result, schools will have to start providing their staff with centrally-managed generative AI tools that have pre-built safeguards in place to ensure safe and ethical use, much as they do today with other productivity tools.
    Balakrishnan Subramanian, VP & GM of Education, Salesforce

    Generative AI will unleash a new wave in personalized education. Teachers will be able to generate content on the fly that is aligned with a student’s interests and skill level. While it would be prohibitively expensive to scale such an idea using the large language models (LLMs) and tools of today, within the next 1-3 years we will start to see the proliferation of specialized ‘small language models’ or SLMs. These specialized models will be able to bring the cost of scaling personalized learning down dramatically and help us take a huge leap forward in individualized instruction.
    Balakrishnan Subramanian, VP & GM of Education, Salesforce

    AI will further revolutionize education in 2024. Rather than traditional, multiple-choice questions, technology will interact with students at a greater clip. AI will have real, conceptual conversations with students to understand their progress. With this advancement, education will become more individualized and holistic, aligning with each learner’s unique journey. It will no longer be as simple as “right” and “wrong” answers. AI will grow with a student at their own speed to help them every step of the way. For example, when a student is learning division, AI can chat with them to ensure they have the basics down, like subtraction, addition, and carrying over, before mastering division. This tech-led way of learning will have a dose of play-based, discovery-focused techniques while still containing a structured lesson plan to help kids reach their goals.
    Vishal Sunil, Co-Founder & CTO, Rocket Learning

    AI will take over more routine tasks. Looking ahead, I am optimistic that artificial intelligence capabilities will continue advancing rapidly to take over more routine educational administrative tasks from educators. This will allow teachers greater time to focus on personalizing learning experiences for students. While progress has been made, ensuring equitable access to technology remains a priority.
    Wilson Tsu, CEO & Founder, PowerNotes

    In 2024 I expect we will see technology in schools shift away from pure technology solutions to human-centric technology supports. There will be less enthusiasm for self-paced technology programs requiring students to work independently, and more focus on a return to teacher and therapist-led engagement. Perspectives on technology in the classroom have been rapidly shifting with the introduction of AI, and questions of which parts of the day-to-day work of educators can possibly be addressed by technology. My hope is that schools will continue to be open to technology solutions, but they will also recognize that these programs are best leveraged in support of the human experts who can be truly sensitive to individualized student need.
    Kate Eberle Walker, CEO, Presence

    In 2024, we’ll begin to find a balance and use artificial intelligence to build authentic intelligence. AI will become a powerful tool for writers, especially those learning to write and facing writer’s block. However, the tool will need to be balanced so humans remain in control; we will see students and individuals needing to develop discernment skills.
    David Weinstein, CEO, Write the World

    Demand for AI-driven edtech resources grows: The launch of Chat GPT in 2022 kicked-off a year of debate in education about AI’s role in education. As that debate continues through 2024, the demand for AI-driven edtech products and services will grow. AI is a powerful tool that can save teachers time and scale best practice. In an era where the educator’s time is more precious than ever, AI is well-suited to become a transformative technology that supports teachers in a host of ways. AI can simplify grading, manage schedules, organize complex information, improve learning management systems, power professional learning, and much more. AI also supports the application of best instructional practice. Feedback loops, differentiated and adaptive learning, gamification, tutoring, and other education staples can be improved through the intentional application of AI. In 2024, edtech providers will look at AI through the lens of how it can be better integrated into their products and services to support the teacher and improve instruction, and then thoughtfully apply it in those places. In an era in which school systems are consolidating their edtech resources and keeping only those with demonstrated effectiveness, products supported by AI that improve the teaching and learning will have an edge.
    Pete Weir, Chief Product Officer, Discovery Education

    “The debate of cellphones in the classroom will remain a hot topic in 2024, and it’s time for schools to find ways to incorporate students’ cellphones into lessons. Whether it’s through AI tools or collaboration apps, there are endless opportunities to use this technology to enhance learning. This might include using an AI tool to add to a history assignment or having students use the Epson’s iProjection app to cast their work on the projector to share with the class. There are so many ways to allow students to use their devices during class and demonstrate how to utilize technology to enrich their learning.”
    Mark Whelton, Superintendent, Bridgeport-Spaulding Community School District, Bridgeport, Michigan

    In 2024, I believe that schools, districts and states will move to the next phase of implementing their Portrait of a Graduate by addressing the need to measure and evaluate students against the competencies in their Portraits. They will create innovative methods for measurement and leverage all the different modalities as they move away from traditional multiple-choice tests based on recall and recognition. Assessments will become more context-based and provide the data and insight needed to improve students’ academic and career outcomes. Education leaders will seek to increase student employability by providing opportunities for intentional instruction and deliberate practice of critical thinking and problem solving skills as part of a more holistic approach to ensure students are future ready. 
    Bob Yayac, President & CEO, CAE 

    For more news on edtech trends, visit eSN’s Innovative Teaching page.

    Laura Ascione
    Latest posts by Laura Ascione (see all)

    Laura Ascione

    Source link