Govt prepping for swine flu encore July 9, 2009
Posted by Angelo in Arizona State University, Emergency Preparedness, pandemic.Tags: DHS, Kathleen Sebelius
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Just two weeks after the swine flu summit was held here at Arizona State University, the federal government convened a large summit today.
Kathleen Sebelius, HHS secretary pointed to the urgency at hand, and the need for preparedness:
“We can step back from our planning. What we can’t do is wait until October.”
The summit had been pulled together on the request of president Obama. It’s part of a series of heightened actions to prepare for the fall flu season.
- The department of health is seeking community participation, offering a $2,500 prize for a winning public service video. Details here.
- The government is injecting $350 million in preparedness grants for fighting the H1N1 virus. Of this $260 million will be allocated to state health departments, while $90 million will be for hospitals.
- In June, Sebelius issued a joint statement with DHS Janet Napolitano on the need to start preparing now.
Aliens with two heads, security drones and other things July 1, 2009
Posted by Angelo in Arizona State University, Education, Events.Tags: James Blasingame, P. J. Haarsma
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Great story by ASU’s Judith Smith, about the event held here last month.
Young readers ‘game’ for Sci-fi series
The event was an unveiling of the wiki for a science-fiction series that involves two-headed aliens and drones, but also involved high school students who have begun to approach literature and learning in through new media channels.
Swine Flu conference this week June 22, 2009
Posted by Angelo in Arizona State University, Public Health, pandemic.1 comment so far
This is the one event we had been working on for the past few weeks. Taking place from June 25 – 28.
Ever since the H1N1 virus made its appearance in April, researchers at ASU have been looking at what this might tell us about virus propagation, mitigation and using scientific and economic data to make better decisions.
This workshop will focus on:
- How can we apply what have we learned from previous epidemics to help slow the spread of this virus?
- How useful has past knowledge been in dealing with current outbreaks?
- What is our current state of preparedness?
- Do we have enough vaccines and antiviral drugs to treat every person that needs it in the USA? What about other countries?
Topics include the emergence of a super-strain of influenza, trans border risk assessment, how modeling informs policy-making in real time, the impact of school closures, simulation-based public health exercises … and much, much more.
More details here at the conference registration site.
Can a wiki promote reading? Sci-fi author thinks so May 28, 2009
Posted by decisionlab1 in Arizona State University, Education, Events, Uncategorized.Tags: Basha High School, PJ Haarsma
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Live blogging a visit by author PJ Haarsma:
In about 30 minutes, students from Basha High School will be here to meet with PJ Haarsma, an author they have collaborated with.
Why is this event being held here? This is an interesting exercise in how how collaboration is changing the way knowledge and reading can take place. It reflects a lot of business trends going on now. It’s also a way of extending the reach of (and the technology within) the Decision Theater, showcasing a program that uses social media to enhance traditional pedagogical settings.
- 5.30 You can watch a short video of this decision-making space as a learning environment.
- 5.34 Watch this video of author providing background to 4-book series on YouTube http://ow.ly/9LhC
| 6:18 Five screen PowerPoint presentation to students and teachers of Basha High School links to the Rings of Orbis game. Of course there is a glitch with the log-in, but it is soon fixed.
6:22 The discussion of surveys is interesting. The author always seeks feedback from readers. It’s the basis of the Kid’s Need To Read Foundation (KNTR). Two officers of the foundation are in the audience. 6:25 KNTR has another promoter. Basha teacher Kerri Mathew , with two creators of the wiki. 6:29 Devon Adams, a high school language & composition teacher, brings up Social Media discussion –about how bi-directional information, where students are the educators, collaborative intelligence is tapped. Literature goes beyond composition. Check out the wiki Thesoftwire.wetpaint.com. Actually it’s still private but will be open to the public shortly. 6:30 Great quote: “You can’t Google the lexicon of The Softwire: –the lexicon is nowhere else! It only resides in the student wiki!
6:35 The student takes over the presentation. Another great quote as a disagreement is voiced by audience: “I am not the teacher, I don’t know whey I am not here.” Great irony, considering what the ASU’s Adams just said about ’students being educators!’ 6:37 “How does a wiki work?” asks the audience. Student does a live demo of how wiki authors can message each other, while updating content. 6:42 The wiki is not exactly open to the public, as it is being worked on say the teachers. Good discussion about how teachers and students look at concepts such as ‘locked down’ content and moderated content. It’s more about making gthis process a teaching opportunity rather than exercising controls. 6:51 PJ Haarsma takes over the presentation. Draws links between publishers and teachers, saying “the kids don’t read anymore” argument is not valid anymore. “We have sucked on to this paradigms “I have set my sights on how books are distributed on the planet!” “Game is a four letter word, but to some it is a bad four letters. We are now creating an online environment that places literature within this environment.” 6:53 “Writers will take back contol of the story from publishers” –by connecting with readers directly! “I will be the devil of publishers.” PJ Haarsma 6:55 Harsma says he looked at authors web sites and saw that they did nothing for kid’s and their reading. That was the genesis of the Rings of Orbis –”a place he created as a place where kids can hang out between books.” 6:58 He has just finished the fourth book. Just pitched Book #5. “I may not do it as a traditional book -maybe augmented reality, and telling stories that is not confined within the pages of a book.” 6:59 Haarsma: “I just write books, you guys figure out where it goes” says Haarsma, on how the publisher often tries to get the author to shift the book’s demographics. 7:01 Highly engaged audience of students. They ask Haarsma some tough ‘business’ questions, and he wrestles with them. Amazing how connected he is to the audience. 7:08 ASU’s professor Jim Blasingame announces that Candlewick Press plans to publish the student-created, student-managed wiki in their next imprint. Not an official announcement, but a strong possibility. 7.15 Wrap up by PJ. Questions. Photos. See some here. Acknowledgment: Two photos here are by Devon Adams. |
Science fiction meets wiki event May 26, 2009
Posted by Angelo in Alternative Futures, Arizona State University, Collaboration, Education.Tags: James Blasingame, Peter Goggin, PJ Haarsma, Rings of Orbis
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We are hosting an interesting event this Thursday.
Think of it as a literature-meets-wiki project. A multimedia unveiling of a new wiki, that students at Basha High School created to expand on their reading of PJ Haarsma’s science fiction series.
It is presented by Jim Blasingame ASU associate professor of English, who with fellow professor Peter Goggin, worked with Haarsma and local schools for the past two years to understand whether gaming had an influence on reading.
During the unveiling, students will demonstrate their roles in the free online video game “The Rings of Orbis,” which Haarsma created as a supplement to his books. Director of the Kids Need to Read Foundation, Denise Gary.
WHEN: Thursday, May 28, 6-7:30 p.m.
WHERE: Decision Theater, 21 E. 6th St., Suite 126A, ASU’s Tempe campus
- Candlewick Press, the publishers of Haarsma’s series, plans to incorporate this student-driven wiki in its next series release.
- Denise Gary, Director of the Kids Need to Read Foundation will be attending.
- Goggin and Blasingame will be present further findings about the intersection of literature, video gaming and computer literacy at an international conference this August.
- The Rings of Orbis has its own MySpace page
- You can follow The Softwire on –where else?– Twitter!
There’s limited seating. If you are from the media please contact us at 480.965.4098.
Friday Focus: When media get it right, no one notices May 22, 2009
Posted by Angelo in Arizona State University, Collaboration, Education.add a comment
I speak to many groups from within and outside the university. Whenever the talk of the media is raised people get their guard up.
Why?
Because they’ve either had a bad experience, or subscribe to anecdotal evidence out there that the media can never get it right.
Au contraire
We bring the media in all the time –we have blogged about this several times– and the truth is, there is a lot of good journalism out there. It’s just that no one notices when they get it right. Even when they editorialize.
Case in point, last week’s opinion piece that debunks the myth that research universities are expendable and a waste of money. It’s a thumbs up for Arizona’s three public universities, saying we “are driving innovations that will improve our lives.
“The universities don’t have much connection to local communities. From UA’s popular series of lectures by top scientists to NAU’s mobile dental clinic staffed by students and faculty, the universities are reaching out to the rest of Arizona in virtually every area. ASU’s Decision Theater, with its 260-degree screen, is used by the community as well as researchers to visualize the future. Many have direct bearings on our lives, such as simulations of an influenza pandemic and water-management scenarios. The Greater Phoenix Economic Council used the Decision Theater last week to look at the state’s budget challenges.”
Apart from the ink they give us, it takes on other myths too, such as the claim that researchers work in isolation, or that research into obscure things –like algae, or toad tongues– have no bearing on our lives. Worth a read!
Quick update on our community connections. We are so embedded in the community that we often asked asked what our connection is with ASU –a question that used to be reversed not too long ago. Last week it was leaders from the greater Phoenix, the previous week it was the city of Scottsdale. Next week it will be a public school in Chandler, and on the same day, we host a public meeting by the city of Glendale. The list goes on.
Brainstorming energy and design issues May 20, 2009
Posted by Angelo in Arizona State University, Collaboration, Design, Economy, Education, Energy & Climate, Events, sustainability.Tags: PSI, Think Tank
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So we’re into the second day of the workshop on design-meets-engineering for improving built environments, and the group has moved into the brainstorming mode. I just snuck into the control room and got this picture.
What you see is the collaborative Think Tank exercise, where each participant gets to come up with ideas and solutions –this takes place anonymously as each one interacts with the group via a wireless laptop. The ideas are immediately displayed on one of the seven screens.

Today’s topics are “integrating areas of scholarship discipline with feasibility study” and “energy conservation in the context of the community.”
Obama’s ‘Body of work’ speech settles brouhaha May 15, 2009
Posted by Angelo in Arizona State University, People.add a comment
This video is worth watching, if only to see how the president of the United States put an overblown media controversy to rest –giving that phrase a new context, now.
Another look at Obama’s commencement speech May 15, 2009
Posted by Angelo in Arizona State University, Design, Education, Events.Tags: Obama, Wordle
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If you loved yesterday’s post about what Obama’s speech looked like, here’s another version.
This time I ran the speech through Wordle. The word cloud generated is a permanent map here, too.
Visualizing Obama’s speech from last evening May 14, 2009
Posted by Angelo in Arizona State University, Events.Tags: ASUGrad09, Obama
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President Barack Obama’s speech at ASU’s 2009 Commencement yesterday was embedded with powerful messages to a generation that will have to go out into a world in which “the very foundations of our lives have been shaken.”
Urging them to take risks, shake things up and invent their own destiny, Obama threw the gauntlet to those whose ‘body of work‘ (a phrase used four times) is yet to come.
The broader message looks interesting when we look at the weight some words have in relation to others.
I created this using a tag cloud from tagcrowd.
Photo by Brian Cramer




