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June 30, 2008
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT:
Sandy Fash
C. Blohm & Associates, Inc.
(608) 839-9800
sandy@cblohm.com
ePals Starts a Conversation About 21st Century Skills, the National Education
Technology Standards for Teachers and Social Networking
Company Proposes Framework For Evaluation and Invites Educators, Administrators,
and Industry Leaders to Join the Discussion
SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS (June 30, 2008) —
Concurrent with the release of the National Education Technology Standards for teachers (NETS-T),
ePals, Inc., challenges educators
and thought leaders to move beyond solely a discussion of 21st century skills or technology integration,
and toward constructing a framework for evaluating solutions that build 21st century skills.
ePals has developed a set of six essential questions to encourage conversation and invites members
of the education industry to help complete the framework through which to assess transformative solutions.
Visit ePals' NECC blog to join the discussion.
As a catalyst to conversation, ePals proposes educators to ask the following questions
of educational service providers when assessing how can teachers move beyond technology
integration and authentically embed NETS into curricula across the content areas to transform
learning:
- How do you help students become global citizens in the global marketplace
(e.g., in building innovation, literacy, critical thinking, creativity, and responsibility)?
- How do you enable collaboration, teamwork and problem solving in the classroom?
- How do you address the needs of all students?
- How do you foster real-life learning experiences and independent exploration
across the curricula?
- How do you create a safe and secure environment for teaching and learning?
- How do you provide professional development that encourages teachers to collaborate,
share expertise and maximize student achievement?
"In order to make a real difference, as an industry we need to move collectively toward
implementing solutions grounded in innovative pedagogy using the Internet, social networks and
collaborative tools," said Ed Fish, President and CEO of ePals, Inc. "We are proposing
these questions and initial framework for evaluating solutions with full understanding that this
requires the input of educators and industry leaders alike. The point however is to move from an
amorphous debate to a concrete framework for evaluating educational solutions that can make a
difference. This is not about a collection of siloed tools; rather it must be about global,
community-centered learning approaches that scaffold the essential skills of 21st century citizens."
Demonstrating this commitment to transformational learning, ePals provides a safe and protected
global community, evidence-based curricula, and authentic, collaborative learning experiences,
empowering educators to help their students thrive in a global marketplace. Placing an emphasis
on making sure that under-resourced schools and students are given the same opportunities to access
and use technology while learning, in September 2007, ePals announced that its suite of tools,
SchoolM@il and SchoolBlog, in addition to its Global Learning Community, would be available at
no cost to educators and students. And in May 2008, the company announced its flagship
curricula-based e-mentoring program, In2Books, would be available at no cost to participating
Title I schools.
The ePals Global Learning Community (www.ePals.com)
is a free service, available for any educator to use to enhance their classroom instruction.
The community supports open Web standards for data and system interoperability, including
incorporating Open ID (i.e., single username and password) and Security Assertion Markup Language
(SAML) as a standard for exchanging authentication and authorization between security domains.
In order to support teachers in this transformation, ePals is providing professional development
opportunities to educators interested in incorporating social networking tools in the classroom
is a priority for ePals. This summer, ePals is hosting a special pre-conference event during
Alan November's Building Learning Communities 2008 Conference. The one-day event, held on
July 15th in Boston, Mass., will feature ePals executives, educators and instructional
technology directors. Speakers will address language learning, cross-cultural pen pal projects,
district-wide implementation, how to post podcasts on blogs, and how to connect families with teachers
through blogs to help support learning outside of the classroom. For more information about the
ePals Globally-Connected Classroom Conference, visit www.epals.com/conference.
For more information about ePals and activities within the global community,
please visit www.epalscorp.com.
About ePals, Inc.
Founded in 1996 and merged with In2Books in 2006, ePals offers K-12 students and teachers
around the world a safe environment for building and exchanging knowledge based on protected
connectivity tools, evidence-based curricula and authentic, collaborative learning experiences.
The ePals Global Learning Community™ (www.epals.com)
is the largest online community of K-12 learners, enabling half a million educators and millions of students across 200 countries and territories to safely connect, exchange ideas, and work together. The company's mission is to support lifelong learning through collaborative experiences that empower and inspire. ePals is especially committed to enabling academically rigorous educational opportunities in economically disadvantaged environments worldwide through the ePals Foundation — provider of In2Books, the company's flagship literacy e-mentoring program.
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