Partly recorded on the airline flight from Detroit to Tokyo and partly recorded from our hotel in Shanghai for the Learning 2.0 conference, this podcast features four additional implications of our 21st century “attention economy” for teachers and students. This is the last part of a three part podcast series focusing on Michael Goldhaber’s 1997 article on “The Attention Economy” and what the implications of those ideas are in educational contexts.
SHOWNOTES:
- Podcast187: Implications of the Attention Economy for Schools (Part 2 of 3)
- Podcast174: Relevance in the Attention Economy Part 1: Key Ideas
- Michael Goldhaber’s 1997 article, “The Attention Economy and the Net”
- Images from GameInformer Magazine Gave Me Nightmares
- Habits of Mind from Ted Sizer and Essential Schools
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On this day..
- Map Media to the Common Core with iPads: Classroom 2.0 LIVE on Saturday! – 2013
- iPhone 5, Steve Jobs Reflections, & Amazing (free) Science Videos – 2012
- Publish student stories online with artwork, text and audio narration with StoryKit (free) – 2010
- Share your 5 Photo Stories on Posterous! – 2010
- Praise for Red Eye Removal and Custom Book Ordering in iPhoto ’09 – 2009
- A virtual chat with President Lincoln – 2008
- Explaining the value of microblogging and Twitter for educators – 2008
- Hello from Shanghai! – 2007
- Working behind the great firewall of China – 2007
- Stitching transformative social networking experiences and impactful professional development – 2007
Comments
2 responses to “Podcast190: Implications of the Attention Economy for Schools (Part 3 of 3)”
[…] How, incidentally, do I know this Flickr site purporting to be the official Flickr account of Senator Obama is REALLY his? Is this an important question to consider? Of course it is. Validating information is a necessity, not an option, in our 21st century attention economy. […]
[…] Part 1: Key Ideas, Podcast187: Implications of the Attention Economy for Schools (Part 2 of 3), and Podcast190: Implications of the Attention Economy for Schools (Part 3 of 3.) The primary motivator for this thinking thread was Michael Goldhaber’s 1997 article, “The […]