At the NSDL Annual Meeting last week, we got to see the usual great lineup of opening and closing speakers. One of the regulars by now at this meeting is…
…only about 5% of the Earth’s population speaks English as a first language, it makes sense to reach beyond English to make our free resources available to a wider diversity…
From increasingly autonomous self-driving cars to climate change models, Artificial Intelligence (AI) has become a ubiquitous medium for understanding, explaining, and interacting with the world around us. However, opportunities to…
…meaning listening always to what our place, our beaches, our coastlines, are telling us—through the stories of our Elders and our own stories. Western science can also tell us about…
…and statistics. At that time the localization process involved emailing files of English strings to our translation partners and receiving files of translated strings in return, which were then manually…
…sensors, embedded questions, videos with Elders, a glossary in both English and Yugtun, and both speech-to-text and text-to-speech capabilities (Figure 1). Each TREK includes a career connection and concludes with…
…AI system works and how it is built. Clickbait filter Nowadays, we read most news on the Internet because it’s convenient and has a wide coverage. But some headlines—called clickbait—are…
…University, where he majored in English, Biology, and Environmental Studies, a master’s degree from Teachers College, and a Ph.D. from Columbia in Human Cognition and Learning. Past Board Members Richard…
…to examine a specific area in detail or turn different rock types on and off to look for patterns. 6. We Bring Artificial Intelligence to English Language Arts Classrooms Artificial…
…or another. However, we need only look at the daily news to see the disconnect between “real” data and its classroom counterpart. News stories regularly tout the role of data…