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  1. Added Dec 31, 2007 by ljsylvan
    Trying to duplicate the success of blockbuster Web sites like Club Penguin and Webkinz, children’s entertainment companies are greatly accelerating efforts to build virtual worlds for children. Media conglomerates in particular think these sites — part online role-playing game and part social scene — can deliver quick growth, help keep movie franchises alive and instill brand loyalty in a generation of new customers.
  2. Added Dec 16, 2007 by ljsylvan
    Megan Meier’s suicide made headlines because she was the victim of a hoax. Lori Drew, another mother in the neighborhood, said in a police report that she had created a MySpace profile of a boy, an invention named “Josh Evans,” and that she and her daughter had manipulated Megan into thinking that this fabricated person liked her.
  3. Added Dec 11, 2007 by ljsylvan
    long with their children, many parents oppose the ban, saying the students need to be able to call home quickly in case of an emergency. The mayor argues that the phones are a distraction and could facilitate cheating on tests.
  4. Added Dec 03, 2007 by ljsylvan and 1 other
    Apple enables educators to expand their curriculum to meet the mobile and media-rich learning styles of today’s students. iPod extends teaching and learning beyond the normal classroom hours, allowing students to easily and continuously learn. iTunes and iLife let them access, create, share, and communicate knowledge, and iPod provides students the ability to learn as they live — on the go.
  5. Added Dec 03, 2007 by ljsylvan
    Although few college students actually take cell phone calls in class, sending and receiving text messages during a lecture has become an acceptable part of cell phone culture, according to research from James Katz, professor of communications at Rutgers University and director of the Center for Mobile Communications Studies, and Jing Wang, a professor of Chinese language and culture at MIT.
  6. Added Nov 28, 2007 by ljsylvan
    he city is planning an intensive campaign that would use cellphones to help motivate students, most of them minorities and from poor families, in two dozen schools. The pilot program will include mentoring and incentives for high performance, like free concerts and sporting events and free minutes and ring tones for their phones. Every student in each of the schools will be given a cellphone.
  7. Added Oct 27, 2007 by ljsylvan and 1 other
    Until that moment, I had thought that the magic of the information age was that it allowed us to know more, but then I realized the magic of the information age is that it allows us to know less. It provides us with external cognitive servants — silicon memory systems, collaborative online filters, consumer preference algorithms and networked knowledge. We can burden these servants and liberate ourselves.
  8. Added Oct 10, 2007 by ljsylvan
    But even as students have been told to leave their iPods at home, the school here in Hudson County has been handing out the portable digital players to help bilingual students with limited English ability sharpen their vocabulary and grammar by singing along to popular songs.
  9. Added Sep 28, 2007 by ljsylvan
    ''You've always had the right to take a phone to school and take a phone from school,'' Mr. Bloomberg told reporters. ''You just don't have the right to bring it into the school, and that's not changing.''
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