Monday, February 8, 2016

More About Search Engine ...

https://classflow.com/activfoundation/resource/downloadResourceFile?resourceId=a61cdf6fbb584d8c863515d24ab0745c&resourceFileType=CONVERTED

Do Now: Search for the definition for the Word of the Day and capture it in citelighter, then paraphrase it in your own words. 
  
Word of the Day: Cruft




    Read: Google Search Tips

    Download: Google Search Tips.pdf

    Google Search Features Video

    Activities To Do:
    1. Read the Tutorial at: http://www.gcflearnfree.org/searchbetter/google-search-tips
    2. Download and answer the questions on the worksheet.
    3. Save and turn in at Engrade.com
    4. Sign up for https://delicious.com/ and put your user name on your blog. Follow CHS on Delicious.

    1. Visit Google Alerts.
    2. In the "Create an alert about" box, enter the words you want to get email notifications for.
    3. Click Show options to say how often you get alerts, what types of results you want to get, and more.
    4. Click Create Alert.
    5. Once your alert is set up, you'll start getting emails any time we find new search results for your keywords.
    6. You can also create an alert by clicking the + next to any of the suggested topics on the Google Alerts page. 
    Write a 100 word or more Blog Post: Read: How Search Works Write a post that gives explains a tip or trick that you know or learned about searching. Use examples and include the process you used to get the results you wanted.
    Digital Skills

    Daily Objectives:  Students will read, discuss and analyze information from articles, analyze, and think critically about online context, using written (Blog post), graphic, pictorial, or multi-media methods, with a student performance at the basic level or above and 6 out of 12 on the project rubric.

    Do You Know About TRiO Program?


    High School All-American Jabrill Peppers Participates in Mock Press Conference

     Shown in photo with high school football star Jabrill Peppers, of East Orange, is Brandon Robinson, organizer of the event.
    Paramus Catholic Paladin cornerback Jabrill Peppers, of East Orange, and head football coach Chris Partridge kept more than 50 students in an NJIT Upward Bound Multimedia Journalism class spellbound yesterday as Peppers, with humility and intelligence, answered students’ questions for almost an hour.  He talked about playing football to honor his brother who died way too young --in eighth grade.  “I think about him every day,” he said.  “He inspired me.”  He also detailed to the enthralled students his daily work schedule; School, practice, homework and when free time to practice his music.  Two students moderated the event.  ESPN ranked Peppers as the top high school cornerback in the class of 2014.  Peppers lead his squad to a 37-34 win over Bergen Catholic at MetLife Stadium winning the Non-Public, Group 4 title in 2012.  A talented musician off the field, Peppers released the video “Don’t Take it Personal,” the first single on his forthcoming album “Road to Glory” to be released in September.  Peppers recently committed to the University of Michigan live on ESPNU-TV.  The student stories written about the event will be their final exam grade.  Brandon Robinson organized the event.

    Tuesday, February 2, 2016

    Get Splashed this 2016 Summer School at NJIT!

    NJIT Summer Classes Lead Her to MIT: Meet Amanda Lazaro

    NJIT Summer Classes Lead Amanda Lazaro to MIT
    Are boys better in math and science than girls? Are boys innately superior to girls in analytical fields such as engineering?  Naturally aggressive and competitive, are boys bound to outperform girls in technological subjects?      A series of summer classes offered at NJIT challenges these stereotypes.  The classes at the Women in Engineering & Technology Initiatives FEMME Program, teach girls to delight in the fundamentals of pre-engineering.  And most girls who graduate from FEMME eventually major in science or engineering in college, according to the Center for Pre-college Programs, which runs FEMME.
    Take, for example, Amanda Lazaro.  In her younger years, she took three FEMME classes.  The classes bolstered her confidence and sharpened her intellect. So much so that she later graduated from Elizabeth High School as class valedictorian.  She was accepted at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where she now majors in chemical engineering.  She just finished her freshman year. 
    During the summers, though, Amanda returns to NJIT to work as a teaching assistant for FEMME.  It’s her way of helping the program that helped her excel academically.
    “I was a teaching assistant (TA) for FEMME 6 last summer,” says Amanda, “and I’m a TA for the same class this summer.  I wanted to TA as a way to give back to the program that did so much for me.   It's also really fun being on the other side of things.  I want to be a good role model for these bright young women and show them that, "I was you, once.  Look where I am now. You can do this!"
    In the below interview, Amanda talks about the value of FEMME, her academic background, and her experience as a minority woman studying engineering.  She also offers her views on a debate that never seems to fade:  Are boys biologically superior to girls in math, science and engineering?

    Is FEMME a valuable program? Does it fulfill its mission: to help girls, most of whom are minorities, excel in math, science and engineering?
    I believe FEMME is a very valuable program. The great thing about summer enrichment programs such as the FEMME classes is that they enable classroom learning without the threat of a report card.  Also, the classes keep your mind fresh with math and science throughout the summer months, allowing you to be ready once the school year resumes.
    What FEMME classes did you take? Looking back, were the classes helpful?
    I took FEMME 6 in mechanical engineering, FEMME 8 in biomedical engineering and the FEMME Academy in electrical engineering.  The classes in general were helpful -- some more than others. The concepts for mechanical engineering -- mostly just Newton's three laws -- didn't really stick with me, but when they appeared later in my schooling, I was able to say, "I've seen that before!"  FEMME Academy in electrical engineering was by far the most helpful for me.  I learned a great deal in the class, a lot of which was I used later in my academic career.
    Did the FEMME classes build your confidence when you returned to your school?
    The classes definitely strengthened academic concepts and, in many cases, introduced topics that would be covered during the school year at a later date. The confidence came from knowing that I had already studied a certain topic.
    Talk about your ethic background and what effect, if any, that had on your education?
    I am Filipina.   I attended public schools in Elizabeth, NJ, an extremely diverse urban city (more than half of the population was Hispanic), so teachers rarely stereotyped students based on race. In my town, I like to think of myself as a minority among minorities.  I've never experienced any discrimination.  I have, on a very small degree, experienced the "you're Asian so you must be smart at everything" stereotype.  But it's always said to me in jest, and I take such comments lightly.
    Did boys dominate discussions of math and science in your school?
    I've never found boys dominating math and science discussions. I did speak up in class a lot.  I've also never known any girls to act dumb for male attention.  If anything, girls were trying their hardest to be smart. That might have been due to the fact I was in a Gifted and Talented program, where students were expected to excel.
    Did your high school teachers favor the boys in math and science classes?
    In my high school, the girls actually dominated academics. The Gifted and Talented students who attended Elizabeth High School were together as a class (we were blocked in such a way that we took the same academic classes), and there were 18 females and four males.  In addition, I attended the Elizabeth High School graduation for five years in a row and found that every single year the top 50 students were mostly female.  Also, the past three Elizabeth High valedictorians were female (Class of 2006 was Priscilla Molina; Class of 2007 was me; and class of 2008 was Angelica Ortiz).
    After graduating as class valedictorian you were accepted at MIT.  How is that?
    I love the entire college atmosphere at MIT.  I'm surrounded by people from all parts of the world with completely different backgrounds, but in the classroom we're in the same boat. We're all "drinking from a fire hose" as they say at MIT, and everyone there is extremely supportive. After college, I plan on getting my master’s degree and then work for a major company. I've just finished my freshman year as an undergraduate.
    Why'd you major in chemical engineering? 
    I'm majoring in chemical engineering because it just seemed right to me. During my high school years, I fell in love with chemistry in the general class, and then went on to AP chemistry. I continued to enjoy the subject immensely. Going into college, I said I’d major in chemistry, but I found that chemical engineering would suit my personality more. I'm much more interested in working through problems than just doing research.  I haven't had many classes in chemical engineering yet (Intro to ChemE will be my first class in the fall at the start of my sophomore year), but I'm sure I'll love it.
    You took other pre-college classes at NJIT that included students from top suburban school districts.  Were they ahead of you academically?
    I had two friends in my Physics Prep class (a non-FEMME summer program) who attended a science and technology high school in Millburn/Short Hills. The two, Mark and Todd, studied more advanced material in their schools.  So in the NJIT math class, they were put in the more "advanced" half of the class, while I was left behind. The summer program, however, is meant to teach new material and to enlighten students. Just because they were from a top school (whereas I wasn't), didn't mean I was any less intelligent. This was evident in the physics class. Physics was new to all of us, and at the end of the summer program, I received the Excellence in Physics award.
    Can your FEMME students compete with girls from top-ranked school districts?
    I completely believe my girls can compete with those from top districts. It's not that my girls are less intelligent -- not at all. It's that during the school year, they are held back in their education while others in their classes must catch up. The NJIT summer programs aren't to help students pass classes. The NJIT summer programs are to further the education of students who find joy in continuing their learning.
    (By Robert Florida, University Web Services)

    Women in Computing Society

    NJIT's Women in Computing Society Volunteers at Nearby STEM Academy for CSEDWeek



    Computer science major and Women in Computing Society member Krupali Patel (right) helps a student at the East Orange STEM Academy code a music video.

    “It was a woman who wrote the first code in history,” said NJIT graduate student Krupali Patel to an auditorium full of children at the East Orange STEM Academy. “There are a lot of women who’ve contributed immensely to the new ways and strategies that are now changing the world.” National Computer Science Education Week (CSEDWeek), it turns out, is an opportune time to school students on the contributions of women in tech and increase awareness about the disparities that plague the industry.

    A weeklong celebration originally conceived by the Computing in Core Coalition and held in recognition of the birthday of computing pioneer Admiral Grace Murray Hopper, CSEDWeek highlights the ever-evolving role of computing, inspires interest in computer science and reexamines the ways in which it’s taught and presented on all grade levels.

    Code.org organizes the annual campaign, which took place Dec. 7-13, 2015 and is supported by 350 partners and 100,000 educators worldwide.

    At the STEM Academy, which serves students in sixth through twelfth grades in East Orange, N.J., Patel and fellow Highlander Chaitasee Pandya (who is also a Google Student Ambassador), both computer science majors and members of NJIT’s Women in Computing Society (WCS), treated the lively scientists, technologists, engineers and mathematicians in the making to a star-studded video featuring will.i.am and Mark Zuckerberg pontificating on the importance of computer programing.
    Additionally, the two computer science advocates enlightened the students on the influence of female engineers working at popular companies, like Google, Microsoft, Snapchat, Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.

    Following the assembly, Patel and Pandya paid a visit to computer science teacher Barbara Froehlich’s Intro to STEM class for a little one-on-one interaction with her students as part of Code.org’s Hour of Code, a global movement that introduces coding to all ages during CSEDWeek.

    “I’m trying to show my students that the “T” in STEM is not just about using the technology but how to create the technology as well,” said Froehlich, who graduated from NJIT in 2001 with a B.S. in computer science.

    “I only have the freshmen for a quarter,” said Froehlich, “but in that short time, I can see the shift in their understanding and comfort level. They’re gaining their confidence with being able to code. When they first come in, they’re intimidated. By the time they leave, they say they love it.”

    In case you haven’t noticed, coding has gone mainstream.

    In 2014, President Obama became the first president to write a computer program.

    Last year, the White House hosted a Computer Science Tech Jam to kick off CSEDWeek, which was attended by WCS president and founding member Jinisha Patel.

    And right here in Newark, a flurry of NJIT coding programs has taken off.

    From Art of Code, a new workforce-training program that provides 144 hours of coding instruction to unemployed Newarkers to Newark Kids Code, an educational initiative (instructed by current NJIT students) designed to introduce digital and computer technologies to disadvantaged youth, NJIT continues to help spark a long-overdue change to right the imbalance of the STEM workforce.

    “It’s so important to show diversity in computer science,” insisted Froehlich. “Everybody can learn to code, and there’s communication and collaboration involved. NJIT is doing some great work with changing the perception of the industry. Having these two smart, young women visit our school demonstrates to our students that not only women—but other underrepresented minorities—are out here programming, too.”

    The school visit is part of the Building Recruiting and Inclusion for Diversity (BRAID) initiative to expand outreach to high school teachers and students to modify introductory computer science courses and broaden participation among women and students of color. NJIT's participation in the three-year BRAID project is managed by College of Computing Sciences professor James Geller.

    By Shydale James

    sjames@njit.edu

    Monday, February 1, 2016

    What is the "Search Bar?" Where is It? ...


    https://classflow.com/activfoundation/resource/downloadResourceFile?resourceId=a61cdf6fbb584d8c863515d24ab0745c&resourceFileType=CONVERTEDDo Now: Search for the definition for the Word of the Day and capture it in citelighter, then paraphrase it in your own words.  
    Word of the Day: Search Bar

    Watch:1.2 Filter image results by color
    Complete Activity 1.2



    Read: All About Online Search
    Download: Search Better.pdf
    Read: Google Search Tips
    Google Search Tips.pdf  
    Google Search Features Video

    Question of the Day:

    1. Read the Tutorial at: http://www.gcflearnfree.org/digitalskills/searchbetter/all-about-online-search
    2. Download and answer the questions on the worksheet.
    3. Save and turn in at Engrade.com
    4. Sign up for https://delicious.com/ and put your user name here.
    5. Write a BLOG post about the advantages of using bookmarks and cloud-based bookmarks. Why should you use bookmarks especially cloud-based bookmarks?
     Digital Skills
      
    Power Search
     
    Daily Objectives:  Students will read, discuss and analyze information from articles, analyze, and think critically about online context, using written (Blog post), graphic, pictorial, or multi-media methods, with a student performance at the basic level or above and 6 out of 12 on the project rubric.