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Why Are We Doing This?
by
Michael Tempel |
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© 1988 Logo Foundation
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A couple of weeks ago I was sitting on an airplane on the way from
the ECCO conference in Cleveland to the CUE conference in San Jose,
preparing for a workshop I was conducting at the NYSCATE conference
in Syracuse. I began to have second thoughts about the whole idea
of educational technology conferences. I wondered if there was any
historical precedent for having organizations of educators that
focus on technology rather than on some subject area or professional
specialty.
After spending a week at the 42nd Street Branch of the New York
Public Library I managed to locate a fragment of the program of
the Ninth Annual BUE Conference which was held in Frankfurt in 1487.
It gives an indication of the kinds of sessions and workshops that
were of interest to Book Using Educators:
Books in the Elementary Mathematics Curriculum
Although books
are most often associated with language arts, social studies and,
of course, religion, there are also uses for books in the mathematics
class. This eyes-on workshop will explore some possibilities in
arithmetic and geometry. Enrollment is limited so that there will
be a maximum of two participants per book.
Technology Update
This session provides an overview of recent
advances in book technology including double sided high density
pages, mixing illustrations with text and the use of automatic page
turners.
A Report on the GCOT Project
The Gutenburg Classroom Of Tomorrow
project, funded by the Gutenburg Press, is an experiment in the
high density use of books in school. In eight selected classrooms
there is a book for each child to use whenever needed. Each student
also has a second book for use at home during the entire school
year
Hand Held Note Pads
What note pads lack in storage capacity
and page size, they make up for in portability and low cost. This
sessions will explore ways of using note pads for note taking during
lectures and for quick computation. We will also describe techniques
for transferring information from notepads to standard desk top
books.
Page Numbering, Bug or Feature?
The recent invention of page
numbering and indexing has made information retrieval almost effortless.
But will this inhibit the development of research skills among our
students? Should page numbers be banned from school books?
Keynote Speech: Books, Do we Need Them?
Dr. Karl Schmit,
Superintendent of Schools, Wiesbaden ISD
I found no record of other BUE conferences until 1502 although
they apparently were held annually since I did locate part of the
minutes of the meeting of the BUE Board of Directors which was held
at the 24th annual BUE conference in 1502. There seems to have been
a rather dramatic change in the organization:
"We all are aware of the severe downturn in membership and conference
attendance suffered by BUE over the past few years. It is indeed
paradoxical that this loss of interest in our organization's activities
is occurring at the same time as a tremendous increase in book use
in schools. It appears that educators are simply using books on
their own! Regardless of the reasons for our current plight we must
recognize that the attendance at this year's BUE conference of only
twelve people (nine of whom are members of this Board) does not
justify continuance of our organization. Therefore, be it resolved
that henceforth the Book Using Educators shall be reconstituted
as ABACUS, the Association for Blackboard And Chalk Use in Schools."
I'm trying to find out more about this organization.

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Logo Foundation
250 West 85th Street, Suite 4D
New York, NY 10024
Telephone: (212) 579-8028
FAX: (212) 579-8013
Board of Directors
Seymour Papert, Chair
Clotilde Fonseca
Tessa R. Harvey
Geraldine Kozberg
Michael Tempel
Takayuki Tsuru
The Logo Foundation is a nonprofit educational
organization incorporated in New York State.
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