This blog is a place for student discussion and comment related to Mrs. Keith's classes.
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
Current Events: Child Labor (10 points)
Current Events: California Wildfires (10 points)
Saturday, October 27, 2007
Setting up a Pageflake Account (5 points)
- What was easy and/or hard about setting up a Pageflake account?
- How can you use Pageflakes for school related things?
- How can you use Pageflakes in your personal life?
- Would you recommend Pageflakes to a friend or your parents? Why or why not?
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
Wikispaces (10 points)
Wednesday, October 10, 2007
Current Events: Music File Sharing (10 points)
CNN TRANSCRIPT: When you hear a new song you like, you might hop online to get it. But how you download is important. Almost 8 million homes use file-sharing programs, but the American recording industry says those programs are illegal, and last week, a federal jury agreed. It ordered a Minnesota woman to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars for sharing copyrighted music online.
File-sharing has been in the news for years, partly because it's so widespread. We know where the people who do it stand, and we know where the record industry stands. But what about you?
Current Events: Overpopulation (10 points)
CNN TRANSCRIPT: The number is staggering: 6.6 billion people. The entire population of the United States times 22! And all of them are dependent on the Earth's resources. So, it's easy to see the problems that overpopulation can cause. More than a billion people -- roughly one-sixth of the world's population -- don't have their basic needs. Many go without clean drinking water; many don't have access to modern health care.
Let's look at Africa. This is the world's fastest growing continent, with about 900 million people today. By the year 2050, it's estimated there'll be almost two billion, possibly three times as many Africans as Europeans! But is population increase all bad? Won't there be more people to work, more to provide the services others need? Yes. And when you add up more workers and more consumers, you get a growing economy. The problem is, population growth is expected to be most significant in developing countries, places that already have trouble providing the basic needs of their people. So, having more people could likely worsen the situation, straining these countries' already limited resources. And there are societal factors too: One expert pointed out that with higher population density, you'll see higher crime rates and an increased chance of spreading disease. So, the policies that countries make to deal with these problems today can determine how well we'll handle them tomorrow.
Monday, October 1, 2007
Current Events: Myanmar Protests & Technology
ASSIGNMENT: Read the following piece of a news story from www.cnn.com. Then, make a blog entry to give your opinion on this topic. Be sure that both the content and your style of writing is appropriate for school, and that you include only your first name and last initial.
Myanmar: The World is Watching
LONDON, England (CNN) -- Close the borders, shut down the media, expel dissidents and restrict visitors: The world's most oppressive regimes have developed watertight ways of shielding themselves from the eyes of the world.
Myanmar is no exception. Democracy has been repeatedly quashed; an uprising in 1988 left thousands of citizen protesters dead, while a democratically elected leader has not been allowed to govern and remains under house arrest.
The military junta rules and the press is government-controlled and heavily censored. Yet as images of the monks' protests are splashed around the world's media, it is apparent technology in the form of blogs, digital photos, and text messaging has become the chink in the regime's armor.
"The technology is making a huge difference. Now everyone in the world can know what is happening in Burma (Myanmar) via the Internet," said Sein Win, managing editor of Mizzima News, an India-based news group run by exiled dissidents, "It is a reality of globalization. Whether the junta likes it or not, the government cannot isolate itself from the international community," Sein Win said.
While the Myanmar government has reportedly moved to shut down the Internet, the events in the country in the last week show technology can transform the geo-political landscape and empower dissidents and activists. It has transformed the world into a witness; and that, activists hope, will be enough to subdue the military.
The rest of the article can be found at the address below if you want to read the whole thing.http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/meast/09/28/ww.burma/index.html