Texas
Wind Blows With Green Power
"Not many would think of oil-producing Texas as a center for green
energy. But new state laws are sparking a wind-power movement that has
made the state the second-largest wind producer in the country."The Sky's the
Limit
"Some 11,000 miles above the earth, 28 satellites beam down data that
enables the targeting of locations with once-unthinkable precision. It's a
lethal tool in war -- and a killer app for business. The Global
Positioning System (GPS) is transforming everything from auto insurance to
agriculture, from hauling freight to trading stocks. Is your business
next?"
Pupils learn in wi-fi wood
"School kids in southern England have been given PDAs and pocket radios
to track down and record plants and wildlife, as part of the Ambient
Wood Project which looks at how technology can best be used to teach
schoolchildren about ecology. The feedback has been overwhelming
positive."
To: Mom and Dad Re: Homesickness
"At summer camps, children and parents now stay in constant
touch through technology. But when the kids want to come
home, the new forms of communication are a double-edged
sword."
Virtual
PE class works out
"Lina Ceron's gym class is just like any other, except that it has no walls
and no whistles.
She and other Florida high schoolers are staying fit this summer, and
earning needed physical education credits, without the watchful eye of a
teacher to keep them on track. All they need is a connection to the
Internet and a little self-discipline.
Too busy, or just too shy, for traditional gym class, hundreds of students
across the state have enrolled in online fitness courses. Taking tips from
textbook readings and an online gym coach, they can create their own
workouts and log their results in cyberspace, all on their own time and
from the comfort of home."
A
Young Writers' Round Table, via the Web
"Many young students struggle with writing. But online
technology is helping students improve skills by offering
them an audience of other students and adults for their work."
Good
students go on-line
"A three-year, $1.5-million Michigan State University study of children
from 90 low-income families has tentatively concluded that children
introduced to the Internet at home improve their grades and perform better
on standardized reading tests."
<http://www.forbes.com/technology/newswire/2003/07/24/rtr1037488.html>
Youth spend more time on Web than TV-study