Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Timetoast Timelines

Just discovered a new timeline tool which students can post to the web:  Timetoast

See sample timeline created for World War II

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

A Cool New YouTube editing tool -sharing only the best part



Do you have a presentation in which you only want to show a minute of a much longer video?

A new tool in beta has just the solution for you. This tool would also work well for those film makers making mashups or video collages.


And they are crowdsourcing the snips so that you can search for those video snips most watched and favorited.
1) just enter your URL at http://snipsnip.it/


Set the start and ending times.


2) your SNIP will appear below


3) your embed HTML code(for  your site or blog)


& snipped link will pop  up below.


If you would like a link to your snip URL,
please use your Firefox  or Chrome browser.
Happy Snipping!
Below I am embedding a 30 second clip of Iraq War Footage from a Fallujah battle.



cropped with SnipSnip


Had a bit of trouble with the embed code and manually ended the "clip timing" in the code...but other than that, it works great.

Monday, January 10, 2011

Why Chinese Mothers are Superior

Professor Amy Chua argues that Chinese style parenting is not only different than more effective that "western" parenting in an excerpt of her new book  Tiger Mother   which appeared in Saturday's Wall St. Journal.

Chinese parents can order their kids to get straight As. Western parents can only ask their kids to try their best. Chinese parents can say, "You're lazy. All your classmates are getting ahead of you." By contrast, Western parents have to struggle with their own conflicted feelings about achievement, and try to persuade themselves that they're not disappointed about how their kids turned out.
There was considerable commenting (over 1000) so far as one would expect from someone who is writing "so expertly" on the best approach to parenting.  Bloggers were up in arms about her premise:  that  screaming at one's children to do drill work and music practice  and depriving them of  fun or social contact with their peers are the secrets to why Chinese and Chinese Americans raise smarter and more successful children than regular decadent Americans do.


Slate writer  Tom Scocca asks the question:  What makes her so sure she has succeeded?  Just because they got into a "good" college doesn't mean you have success. The jury is still out because of their relatively young ages.


Asian American adults have been weighing in on the article.  One response:  from blogger Betty Ming Liu, who says “Parents like Amy Chua are the reason why Asian Americans like me are in therapy.”  Looking forward to the follow-up discussion on the WSJ Ideas Market blog this Thursday.

New Trier Organic Garden