Showing posts with label News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label News. Show all posts

Friday, 25 November 2011

New App Puts Psychology News in Students Mobile Devices

Rhinebeck, NY (PRWEB) October 26, 2010

Michael Britt, psychology teacher and host of the popular podcast, The Psych Files, has just released an iPhone app called PsycExplorer (http://www.psycexplorer.com). The app allows students to carry the very latest news, videos, podcasts and tweets about the field of psychology right on their iPhones, iPods, or iPads. The way the app works is also unique - every day Britt scans the latest news from various fields of psychology and selects all the content that will appear in the app that day. PsycExplorer can be updated whenever news from the field of psychology breaks. The app also contains videos on all of the classic studies in psychology as well as recently published video from YouTube.


The app is the latest in the trend toward curated content: apps in which one individual helps others avoid information overload by selecting the most interesting news, videos, audio, etc., for others to consume. Unlike Flipbook, another popular app similar to PsycExplorer, Britt personally provides app users with only the text the content creator provides in their free RSS feed. Readers are then directed to the site where the news originated if they want to learn more. My goal with the app, says Britt, is to help high school and college students learn what psychology is really all about. There is a section of the app which provides the latest news and research on psychotherapy of course, but there are also sections on neuroscience, developmental, cognitive, social psychology and other areas. Its an ideal way, I think, for students and life-long learners to become familiar with the field of psychology and for their teachers to keep up on the latest news and research. Britts podcast, The Psych Files (http://www.thepsychfiles.com), is closing in on its fourth year and its 3.5 millionth download. Im proud to have a loyal and growing audience and to see the podcast consistently in the top 10 iTunes list of Higher Education podcasts. says Britt. The PsycExplorer app is available now in the iTunes app store.


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KnowledgeWorks Board Member Barry Schuler Lauds New Tech in Fox News Report on Education

Cincinnati, OH (Vocus) May 21, 2010

KnowledgeWorks Board member Barry Schuler touted the success of project-based learning found in New Tech Network high schools, including its flagship high school, Napa New Technology High School in Napa, Calif., during a recent hour-long broadcast, Fox News Reporting: Fighting for Our Childrens Minds.


The Fox News Reporting team visited seven states and the nation's capital over the span of five months to research and interview 30 individuals, including Schuler, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan and 2008 Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin.


Schuler, former board chairman and CEO of America Online and an early supporter of Napa New Tech High, told host Tucker Carlson that New Tech Network high schools are successful partly because of their approach to teaching.


We are not seeing rows and rows of desks, and the teacher is not the performer in the front, Schuler said during the episode that aired May 15. What they are really being is guide and coach. The classroom should really reflect the work environment. Its really doing experiments, hands on, to see how it works.

Napa New Tech Senior Melissa Moize supported Shulers assertion during the segment. You are learning real-world skills that you can apply in daily life, she said.


The Fox report also mentioned that all students at Napa New Tech High have their own computers at school, a valuable asset, according to Shuler.


Today, nobody can do their job without a computer. If you are a hotel clerk, you use a computer. If you are an auto mechanic, computers plug into engines. It is fundamental literacy in the 21st century, Schuler said. The report also noted that Napa New Tech students maintain the highest standardized test scores in science, English and history in the local school district.


Foxs report at Napa New Tech is the latest in a series of high-profile visits to the school and interest in the New Tech Network approach. In February, Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., and chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, and Rep. Mike Thompson, D-Calif., a member of the powerful House Ways and Means Committee, toured the school. California Assembly member Tom Torlakson held a public hearing on education technology at Napa New Tech High in January.


Monica Martinez, president of New Tech Network, said she is encouraged that others see the value in the New Tech approach to learning.


The story we have to tell is the story of using innovative approaches to contribute to student success in high school, Martinez said. The New Tech approach allows our teachers to unleash the imagination of their students through technology and project-based learning, and this environment is producing the next generations entrepreneurs, makers, creators and innovators.


Based in Napa, New Tech Network is a subsidiary of KnowledgeWorks, a national leader in developing and implementing innovative approaches to high school education in the United States.


New Tech high schools differ from traditional high schools in that lectures and the use of textbooks are rarely a part of the learning environment. Instead, teachers in New Tech high schools immerse students in a technology-rich, rigorous learning environment. They design projects tied to state and district standards that make sense to students and prepare them for college and the careers of tomorrow. The result: students who are deeply engaged in learning and develop important skills such as critical thinking and collaboration.


During the coming school year, 27 New Tech high schools are set to open in nine states, including Hawaii, Michigan, Ohio and Washington.


New Tech Network, is a school development organization that supports the start-up and implementation of innovative high schools. There are currently more than 40 schools across the country, including schools in Indiana, Illinois, North Carolina, New York, Oregon, Colorado, Texas, California and Louisiana. It is a subsidiary of KnowledgeWorks.


KnowledgeWorks is a national leader in developing and implementing innovative and effective approaches to high school education in the United States. The organization primarily focuses on redesigning urban high schools, developing STEM and Early College high schools, and supporting student-centered approaches to delivering real learning and results in our schools.


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