• MSN
  • Hotmail
  • More
    • Autos
    • My MSN
    • Video
    • Careers & Jobs
    • Personals
    • Weather
    • Delish
    • Quotes
    • White Pages
    • Games
    • Real Estate
    • Wonderwall
    • Horoscopes
    • Shopping
    • Yellow Pages
    • Local Edition
    • Traffic
    • Feedback
    • Maps & Directions
    • Travel
    • Full MSN Index
  • Bing
  • msnbc.com sites & shows:
  • TODAY
  • Rock Center
  • Nightly News
  • Meet the Press
  • Dateline
  • Morning Joe
  • Hardball
  • Ed
  • Maddow
  • Last Word
  • msnbc tv
  • Home
  • US
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Tech & science
  • Travel
  • Local
  • Weather
Advertise | AdChoices
  • Recommended: Anxious Greeks withdraw almost $900 million in one day
  • Recommended: Hundreds evacuated as wildfires spread in Arizona
  • Recommended: Bottles, binkies and sippy cups: Dr. Nancy Snyderman's safety tips for parents with young children
  • Recommended: Executive who oversaw $2 billion trading loss at JPMorgan Chase leaves
A narrative of the broadcast day and a window into the editorial process at NBC Nightly News
  • ↓ About this blog
  • ↓ Archives
    • Icons Email E-mail updates
    • Icons Twitter Follow on Twitter
    • Icons Feed Subscribe to RSS
  • 6
    May
    2012
    5:12pm, EDT

    At one school district, the motto is BYOT - Bring Your Own Technology

    Two years ago, Forsyth County School District outside Atlanta launched a technology program, encouraging students to BYOT – bring your own technology. NBC's Rehema Ellis reports.

    Craig Stanley, NBC News writes

    iPhones, Nintendos and Kindles — devices synonymous with "fun" — are taking a new role in the classroom, thanks to a new trend in education called Bring Your Own Technology – or BYOT.

    BYOT programs — like the one at Georgia’s Coal Mountain Elementary School — encourage students to bring in their own personal mobile technology — including iPads, Kindle Fires, netbooks — even gaming devices — to use during class.

    “It’s really a simple thing,” says Tim Clark, District Technology Specialist for Forsyth County School District. “Kids have technology in their pockets and [are] taking them to school, but trying to hide them from teachers and from their parents. What we’re trying to do is have the kids take them out of their pockets and use [them] for instruction.”


    Technology can be incorporated into lessons in various ways — serving as a research tool, providing access to educational games and allowing students to create multimedia presentations. Clark says students who don’t have their own devices, or opt not to bring them, can use district-owned laptops and electronic resources.

    He says the program encourages participation and interaction because “it’s not a solitary type of activity where every child is buried in their device … it increases collaboration. It increases communication with the teacher. The teacher sees immediate feedback from the student’s work and the students are able to overcome other difficulties.”

    Tracey Abercrombie, a fifth grade teacher at Coal Mountain, has been impressed with the program in general and praises the difference it has made with her special education students. “I’ve got one [student] who has trouble getting [information],” Abercrombie says. “He can get the ideas formed but there’s a bit of difficulty getting them out verbally. There’s something about typing it, having it come up on that screen. All of a sudden the barrier is gone.”

    Clark says incorporating students’ personal devices in the classroom not only enhances learning, but teaches responsibility. “All of this is putting the responsibility on the shoulders of the students and [we’re] also trying to teach them and guide them to use their devices more effectively…not only taking care of their device and being careful not to drop it, but also wanting to make sure they know where it is at all times so it’s not stolen. [Using] it appropriately so they don’t post inappropriate pictures, so they don’t text inappropriate message to each other.”

    Those involved with the program say students aren’t the only ones with something to gain from BYOT. For example, Clark says teachers “can learn alongside their students instead of having to determine all of the ways that their students should learn … they get to ask questions and discover all these new uses of the devices themselves."

    Abercrombie agrees and has seen her teaching style change since the program began.

    “I thought my role was give them all the knowledge that I’ve got about something and use that textbook and my knowledge together," Abercrombie said. "Now I realize that’s not my job at all. My job is to facilitate them. My job is to point them in the right direction, give them the tools they need and — wow — they can do so much more.”

    Before launching BYOT in Forsyth County Schools, teachers and administrators explained the program’s structure and ground rules to parents and students. At first, Kara Laurie, who has two children at Coal Mountain Elementary, was apprehensive about allowing her kids to bring their devices to school. She says her initial reaction was that it “was a horrible idea … I had the normal parent concerns, you know, are things going to get broken? Are they going to get lost or stolen? And what about those kids that don’t have technology that they could take to school?”

    But as the program got underway, she saw “how much the kids were able to do with it in the classroom. I found that it was a phenomenal idea.”

    “We had to sit down as a class, as a team, and really define our rules because [the students are] used to using it any way at home,” Abercrombie says. “They’re used to … putting everything on Facebook, so we had to have a little talk about … different ways to use these devices in school.”

    Amy Anderson, another parent of two, was comforted by the district’s approach to the program. Her fourth grader uses a netbook in class, while her first grader has a Nintendo 3DS. “The administration "set some very clear ground rules at the beginning and we had to sign an agreement as parents and they had to sign an agreement as students that they would only stay on,” Anderson recalls. The students "have to be on the school network which has all of the filters. If they don’t abide by those, if they use them when they are not supposed to, if they use them incorrectly, then they lose that privilege of being able to bring it in.”

    In 2010, seven schools in Forsyth County School District began BYOT programs. This year, all 35 of the district’s schools are participating. While it is a relatively new idea, BYOT already exists in schools across the country, in states like Texas, Minnesota and Ohio.

    Clark says the district has received positive feedback, along with interest in the program.

    “I’m receiving messages from other districts that would like to come and see the implementation of bring your own technology in their schools … we recently held a tour of BYOT in our district … we had over 100 visitors on that tour. They were not only other districts, but also vendors wanting to understand how it’s impacting [the students].”

    As far as student reaction, Clark says “the students love it…[they] have their devices, they’re learning how to use them in a more responsible way, and they’re being critical thinkers and very creative with their devices in ways that they never would have used them on their own.”

    136 comments

    Well, as a college teacher, I find that technology in the classroom is distracting. Students don't know how to listen anyway, they hear and do what they want in between watching their cell phone messages, calls, all interrupting.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: technology, texas, education, rehema-ellis
  • 10
    Mar
    2012
    12:44pm, EST

    Using books to build community

    A Wisconsin man is credited with starting a budding trend that is bringing an old fashioned way of accessing literature to people living in an Internet world. NBC's Rehema Ellis reports.

    By Rehema Ellis, NBC News education correspondent

    Follow @nbcnightlynews

    MADISON -- Three years ago Todd Bol came up with an idea to remember his mother, a teacher who had loved books and encouraged people to read.  At his home in Hudson, Wisc., he built a box, made it waterproof and filled it with books.  It looked like a miniature one-room schoolhouse, with a sign underneath that said “Free Book Exchange.” Bol put it on a post outside of his house and invited neighbors to take a book, and return a book. 

    That’s when something happened Bol says he never could have imagined.

    “People of all ages, men, women, kids came up and just loved the library,” he said.  “They got excited and they started coming up to me saying, ‘I’ll build one, do you need books?’”   


    The idea has mushroomed.  Bol now encourages people to visit his website for suggestions on how to build their own library.

    Today there are Little Free Libraries in at least 28 states and six countries including Ghana, Australia and Afghanistan. And people from more than a dozen other countries have expressed interest, Bol said.

    On Bol's website he offers suggestions on how to build the libraries and sells kits for a fee starting around $100. Money donated to his non-profit helps build libraries in needy communities and developing countries. The website says, "If you need help let us know.  Don't let money get in the way."  

    You can find the little libraries not just in front of homes, but also outside of health centers, coffee shops, bike paths, bus stops and store fronts.   People are encouraged to send in a picture of their library so it can be posted on the website.  In return they get a "Little Free Library. Take a Book, Return a Book" sign to post on what they've built, as well as a Little Free Library Charter number.

    NBC News

    NBC's Rehema Ellis speaks with Little Free Library creator Todd Bol in front of one of his little free libraries, covered and designed
    with birch bark.

    Each library is unique. 

    "I've worked with people who will take pieces of their home or their old farm and they'll incorporate it into a library," Bol said.

    Some are made from old cranberry crates, or metal milk cartons, with hinges from old refrigerators.  In New Orleans, La., Bol said some libraries have been built using debris from Hurricane Katrina.  People will decorate them based on themes from their favorite books, such as “Jack and the Bean Stalk.”

    NBC News

    A local artist from Madison, Wisc., was commissioned to create a canine-themed Little Free Library designed to be installed near a dog park.

    And each one has become more than just a place for getting books and leaving books. Bol said the little libraries have fostered a greater sense of community.

    “There’s a primal need,” he said, “for people to be a part of their community.  We have people tell us all the time in seven days of having a Little Free Library I’ve met more people than I have met in 20 years in my neighborhood.”

    In Madison, Wisc., Meghan Blake-Horst put a little library in her front yard. "It's a continual conversation piece," she said. 

    NBC News

    Amy Poland walks by this little free library on the corner of her street in Madison, Wisc., every day.

    Terri Connolly Cronk, who also lives in Madison, said people in the neighborhood who never stopped and talked before are stopping now because of the library that rests on the corner of her property.  The library is not just encouraging readers, it's giving neighbors opportunities to get to know each other.

    Part of the allure of the Little Free Libraries, Bol said, is that you don’t need a library card.  There are no fees, no fines and no operating hours.  The Little Free Libraries are open for business 24/7.  So any time of day, people can get a book or share a book, hopefully a page turner.

    Now one can only imagine that in this age of electronic books, Todd Bol’s mother would have loved how his story to honor her is turning out.

    58 comments

    I absolutely LOVE this idea! We all have books laying around that we've read...this gives people an option to share. I bet we'd all be surprised at how many people would take advantage of this in our own neighborhoods. What a wonderful way to share someone's legacy!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, rehema-ellis, little-free-library, todd-bol, little-free-libraries
  • 27
    Jan
    2012
    11:28am, EST

    What we can all learn from formerly homeless teen Samantha Garvey

    By Rehema Ellis
    NBC News

    Follow @nbcnightlynews

     

    Samantha Garvey, the homeless teen who was a semifinalist in the prestigious Intel Science competition, told me this week her mother "has been crying a lot."  But unlike when the family was evicted from their home on New Year’s Eve, now she says it’s tears of happiness. After the news broke about how Samantha, 18, was able to stay focused on her studies even as her family was mired in turmoil, there has been an outpouring of admiration for her.  She attended the State of the Union address, appeared on “The Ellen DeGeneres Show,” and on “TODAY.”  Plus, there have been several offers to help her pay for college expenses. 

    What I learned this week from Samantha’s teachers and guidance counselors, however, is that this young woman who seems so poised in front of all the cameras did have moments when she struggled. 

    “She was always worried about her family.  She was always worried about her brother and sister and the stress it was putting on them,” said Karin Feil, Samantha’s Brentwood High School guidance counselor.

    Like any other senior, Feil told me, Samantha wondered, “‘How am I going to pay for prom? How am I going to get my yearbook? What about my class ring? What about my school pictures?”

    Feil said there were times when Samantha wanted to cut back on her studies and just get a job to help support her family. She  decided to stick with her first job, which is school,  hoping that somehow her needs would be answered. 

    Still, it’s been tough. 

    Despite the fact that both her parents have jobs (Samatha's father is a cab driver, and her mother is a hospital worker), they’re part of America’s working poor.  A few family hardships left them unable to keep up with the bills and they ended up homeless.  

    “My parents, they always said, ‘Keep your head up. If you look down and you just keep moping, nothing’s gonna come out of it.’ And I always took that to heart. And I just kept a positive mentality,” Samantha told me.

    It’s a remarkable story of perseverance. 

    But even as we’ve celebrated Samantha, we haven’t heard much about the many other families who are just like hers.  According to the latest figures from the Department of Housing and Urban Development an estimated 567,340 families were living in shelters in 2010. More than 141,600 children were in shelters on a single night.

    Once a family loses its home, finding another one can be difficult. Often landlords want the first month’s rent along with the last month and a security deposit. 

    Samantha’s family, however, has gotten help from New York’s Suffolk County Office of Social Services.  The agency offered them an affordable house through a regular county program that helps about 40 families every month move out of shelters.  County officials say the need is growing every day.  At some point, Samantha’s family will move on, and the county will use their space to help someone else. But it’s not clear how long it will take the Garveys to regain their footing. 

    While there have been offers to help Samantha pay for college, scholarship money cannot be used to pay old family bills. The Garveys have got to figure out a way to clear their debt if they hope to really get back on their feet. 

    Meanwhile, Samantha learned this week she was not chosen as a finalist in the science competition.  But the attention showered on this 18-year-old  has given her and her family a much needed boost and every reason to believe they’ve got a winning future ahead.

     

     

    2 comments

    Great story, glad she and her family will get help thanks to donors. She's an inspiration to the many kids that are finding themselves in the same situation. Keep your head up, and don't give up on your dreams.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: rehema-ellis, samantha-garvey
  • 30
    Nov
    2011
    12:46pm, EST

    The Waldorf Way: Silicon Valley school eschews technology

    By Rehema Ellis
    NBC News

    From the moment you walk into the Waldorf School of the Peninsula there are clear signs that something different is happening.

    Allysun Sokolowski, a third-grade teacher,  greets each one of her 29 students by name and shakes their hand as they enter the classroom. It's easy for her because she's known these kids at the Los Altos, Calif., school for a while.

    "I've been teaching the same children from first grade, second grade and now we're in third grade. And I will teach these children all the way through eighth grade," she said.

    It's the Waldorf way.

    Teachers establish a strong bond with students. As a result, Waldorf teachers quickly point out there's no need for tests or grades.

    "I don't need grades to know how well they're doing," said Sokolowski. "I know their strengths, I know their weaknesses. I know what will be hard for them and where they will shine. I'm their teacher with a capital 't.'"

    The intense student-teacher connection might help explain why students from elementary to high school are thriving. The school boasts a nearly perfect graduation rate.

    Despite being in the heart of Silicon Valley, Waldorf students are not caught up in the gadget frenzy that has consumed so many other school children nationwide. Computers are not used in the elementary school and they are used sparingly at the high school level. Teachers say they're not anti-technology, but, as they put it, they're just in favor of healthy education.

    Read the New York Times’ report on the Waldorf school

    "I'm concerned that if we say we need technology to engage students we're missing the fact that what engages students is good teachers and good teaching," said Lisa Babinet, a Waldorf math teacher.

    I asked a group of high school students if they misssed having computers and iPads as part of their lessons they all emphatically said "No."

    The San Antonio Elementary School focuses on technology and feels it helps close the achievement gap in under-served communities by getting students ready for the digital age.

    "I don't think we're gonna be left behind at all because it's not like we're not a part of technology at all," said sophomore Isabelle Senteno. "We are a part of it, we just don't incorporate it in the lessons."

    Jack Pelose, a freshman who transferred to Waldorf from a school that used a lot of technology, said he noticed the benefits of not using computers in class. "My cursive has gotten a lot better since I've been here," he said.

    "Everything about technology is so easy to pick up and use nowadays," added senior Zach Wurtz added. "The companies design it so anyone can use it when they choose to."

    The students talked about being annoyed sometimes when they hang out with friends who are not Waldorf students, who spend a lot of time on social networking sites and texting.

    Video: At another Silicon Valley school, iPads are in vogue

    One Waldorf student said he sometimes has to ask his friends to put down the gadgets so they can just talk.

    And if you're wondering, like I did, how the Waldorf education translates in the outside world, Laila Waheed, a graduate now in her first year of college, offered some insight.

    Waheed, 18, has a laptop but never takes it to lectures. She takes notes by hand -- like she did at Waldorf -- and she later transfers her notes into her computer. It's a form of studying, she said.

    "If you stood at the back of the classroom and looked at every screen, at least half of them would be on Facebook," Waheed said of all the other students who are typing away on their laptops during lectures.

    "A Waldorf education gives you a foundation to say, 'OK, I can put my phone in my bag. I can have a half-an-hour conversation with a person. I don't need to be totally connected all the time,'" Waheed said. "And that's more valuable for making personal connections that will last longer than the next text you're going to get."

    It sounds like something a Waldorf student would say. But it’s also a sentiment echoed by her father, an engineer manager at Cisco.

    "I don't think anyone is debating the value of technology and the use of computers," Muneer Waheed said. "There is no going back. This is the future."

    But he and his wife have been clear about wanting the mostly technology-free zone that Waldorf provides for their two children.

    "They need the environment and the foundation to develop and get their core values -- the love of education and their own passion," he said. "That's what's going to stay with them. The computer is just a tool."

    Should technology be used in schools to help students learn?

    See more of Rehema Ellis' reporting on NBC's Nightly News with Brian Williams Wednesday evening.

    Results with 105 short comments
    Total of 3,277 votes - click on the "Display Comments" bar below to sort comments

    29.7%
    Yes
    974 votes
    70.3%
    No
    2,303 votes
    Display Comments:
    No

    My three Waldorf educated children are articulate, well-spoken, polite, creative, and well above grade level. What more could a parent want

    • 10 votes
    #1
     - kbwright
     - 3:37 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    No

    We're proud parents of three children attending the Cincinnati Waldorf School-the best gift we could ever give them and us!

    • 4 votes
    #2
     - CMM-4637544
     - 5:03 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    No

    Human wisdom/intelligence FIRST to fully develop inner confidence in their own ability. With technology, it's the "smart" board that knows.

    • 7 votes
    #3
     - Catherine Carter
     - 6:33 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    No

    This is a lot like what it was like for me in school. We did not use computers as an everyday thing, but used them as tools.

    • 4 votes
    #4
     - SeattleDolt
     - 7:31 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    Yes

    Like it or not technology surrounds us. Our modern times require at least a basic knowledge of the internet and computing.

    • 6 votes
    #5
     - Phil Johnson
     - 7:34 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    No

    I've written a book with the blueprint of a new school system. The book supports what Steve Jobs believed - technology can't fix education.

    • 6 votes
    #6
     - Laura Froemling
     - 7:35 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    No

    The most important people you meet, are those around you in real life, not some social networking site.

    • 2 votes
    #7
     - IBuyChinese
     - 7:46 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    No

    As a high school teacher in a district with a one-to-one program, I find laptops distracts from education more than they add to it.

    • 6 votes
    #8
     - Carl Anderson-3205010
     - 7:51 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    Yes

    Technology should be used to HELP not REPLACE teaching. Teaching to test has already gutted education enough.

    • 8 votes
    #9
     - givemeabook
     - 7:52 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    Yes

    My vote is yes if the technology makes sense and is a proven to enhance the learning experience. Otherwise No.

    • 2 votes
    #10
     - DanUSA
     - 7:58 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    No

    Too much input. Technology is a money maker & has nothing to do with education. I've seen kids w/iPads and they just surf around in class.

    • 1 vote
    #11
     - trajan8
     - 8:07 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    Yes

    Technology is not what is effecting education so negatively. Education has been watered down from the "no child left behind act". Teach

    • 3 votes
    #12
     - jrion
     - 8:08 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    No

    Prime example is kids turning in homework done in the texting language. How proud their politicians are at gutting education at every turn.

    • 1 vote
    #13
     - trust2112
     - 8:10 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    No

    Technology today is extremely easy to pick up and learn. There is no good reason for it's use in early education.

    • 1 vote
    #14
     - VT - Baker
     - 8:15 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    Yes

    Everything in moderation. I'm a computer teacher and I feel there are diminishing returns when over-saturated, but there ARE benefits.

    • 3 votes
    #15
     - PLM-4639180
     - 8:17 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    Yes

    ...but not at the expense of learning basic skills everyone should have!

    • 2 votes
    #16
     - absolutelyright
     - 8:17 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    No

    Nope, distracting

    • 2 votes
    #17
     - mdsj
     - 8:21 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    No

    No doubt that some use the technology to goof off while they are supposed to be listening. School is about learning more than how to log on

    • 3 votes
    #18
     - EEK the EEK
     - 8:22 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    Yes

    Yes, but only when it's used as a TOOL and not a replacement for use of one's own wits and imagination.

    • 1 vote
    #19
     - catgoddess
     - 8:24 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
    Yes

    I think for my daughter, The Waldorf education blended with technology would be the best!

      #20
       - Edward-768429
       - 8:27 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
      No

      The majority of students do not need adaptive technology. Save that for special ed and teach the students how to reason instead.

      • 2 votes
      #21
       - Anne-297812
       - 8:28 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
      Yes

      if the students do not have test or grade then how do the students compare to regular schools education level !

        #22
         - prestwood
         - 8:28 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
        Yes

        You have to use ALL available tools. Totally rely on them... NO!.... Use, YES!

          #23
           - Rodentrack
           - 8:34 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
          No

          Please don't waste my tax dollars on trendy products with no proven record in education.

          • 1 vote
          #24
           - Big Trouble
           - 8:36 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
          No

          I taught a 7th grade class in the 50's and 60's and we did not have computers at that time. We did fine without them, and no texting..

          • 1 vote
          #25
           - Fred Moore-450151
           - 8:43 pm EST on Wed Nov 30, 2011
          Jump to short comment page: 1 2 3 ... 5

          93 comments

          The human brain is the greatest computer available to humankind! Let's learn to use it!

          Show more
          Explore related topics: technology, education, rehema-ellis, waldorf-school
        • 2
          Nov
          2011
          5:56pm, EDT

          Shanghai kids show intense spirit for learning

          Susan Kroll/NBC News

          By Rehema Ellis
          NBC News Chief Education Correspondent

          Before I arrived in Shanghai, I had this image of people obediently doing what they were told because that's what happens in Communist China, right? I thought that would explain how Shanghai's 15-year-olds managed to beat their competition - including the United States - on international tests in reading, math and science. They did so well on the tests, I thought, because the government gives them the tools they need. They are admonished by everyone around them to study hard and they do.

          I saw some of that when I visited Yucai High School in Shanghai, where I met a young student, Xing Hao, who actually took the international tests.

          "The math is not very difficult," he said in perfect English, "because I studied."

          But Xing Hao went on to say he was self-motivated to study hard because his goal is “to organize to protect ocean creatures so [he has] to study to attend a good college to make [his] dream come true."

          China's college entrance exams are grueling and are viewed as the gateway to adult success. In Shanghai, a city of 23 million people - almost three times the size of New York City - there is a lot of competition and students had better be prepared. But beyond a commitment to work hard, what I found in China is that Shanghai's academic success is rooted in a national culture that embraces education as a real asset.

          It should be mentioned, however, that the academic success in China's largest city has not yet spread to the vast rural areas such as Loudi in Hunan Province, about 1,000 miles from Shanghai. There, I visited an elementary school surrounded by rice paddies. The buildings were in disrepair. Children sat at worn out desks and worked with broken pencils and pens.

          Susan Kroll/NBC News

          But their spirit for learning was intense and inspiring. Twelve-year-old Wang Zhihong told me her parents and grandparents want her to be a doctor. The harsh reality is that only 25 percent of rural Chinese kids go to college, versus 80 percent in Shanghai and 70 percent in the United States. But Zhihong and her family know nothing about those numbers and their dreams are still big.

          Back in Shanghai, students like Xing Hao are well aware that they are helping to enhance their nation's image. And yet, I saw something in Xing Hao and many of his classmates that wasn't just obedience to an idea. I got the sense that he really believes in the importance of learning. He didn't sound coached or rehearsed.

          He went on to say he'd like to have more free time "to expand [his] horizons." But he told me that pursuit of idle pleasures will come later - after he's taken care of the business of getting an education.

          For about 900 students at Yucai High School getting an education doesn't involve the latest high-tech tools. With about 40 students per class, I didn't see any Smart Boards or iPads in classrooms. I saw only one computer in the science lab. I did see many motivated and engaging teachers. Shanghai prides itself on teacher training.

          There were other indications that the Chinese society as a whole is genuinely interested in Shanghai students. From the gardeners at Yucai High who meticulously cared for the campus grounds dotted with Confucius statues, to the lunch room workers who served healthful dishes of rice, meat and steamed vegetables, to the security staff members who were polite and watchful, they all seemed focused on creating the best learning environment possible for kids.

          That environment creates little space for anything besides studying. At Yucai High students watch just 30 minutes of television a day during the school week. The program they watch is the news.

          Susan Kroll/NBC News

          By contrast, American students between the ages of eight and 18 spend an average of seven and a half hours per day using electronics, according to a study by the Kaiser Family Foundation. That's more than 53 hours per week.

          For those who wonder if the rigorous study habits make Chinese students robotic, unimaginative and therefore great test-takers but not great students - who have yet to invent their own Silicon Valley - some Chinese educators also wonder. Teachers told me the government is now encouraging schools and families to give kids more free time to be creative.

          The kids I met were already engaged in creative thinking. They were inquisitive and funny and always polite. During class breaks I saw them fooling around and making jokes. They asked me questions about American life, President Obama, rap music and Oprah. They also wanted to know what other countries I had visited and what life was like there and how it compared to what they learned in school about different places.

          Shanghai kids are studying how global events might have local consequences and it's not just because their government is telling them to. They are starting to think outside the box of preconceived notions that folks have of them. That's what prepared them to ace the international tests.

          There is a lesson there for all of us.

           

          Photos by Susan Kroll, NBC News producer

          12 comments

          Yotay amo

          Show more
          Explore related topics: china, education, shanghai, rehema-ellis
        • 10
          Aug
          2006
          2:34pm, EDT

          Understanding at Heathrow

          One of the things that we are discovering here at Heathrow Airport is that people are now being informed that there is going to be a new norm when you go to the airport. We thought that was already the case after 9/11, but today marks the beginning of another new reality people are going to have to get accustomed to when traveling. 

          Here at Heathrow Airport, Europe's largest airport, passengers are being told that they can only carry things on-board that can be seen through a see-through plastic bag. That means just the essentials like travel documents, passports, tickets. That does not include cell phones, laptops, or any electronic equipment at all.


          ..And no liquids. Many people are accustomed to getting on planes and carrying extra water, a soft drink, or coffee. As of today, that is not going to be allowed. We understand that is because authorities believe that this suspected terrorist plot included a bomb that could have been ignited with some liquid chemical component. Therefore, they have instituted these very stringent measures.

          Inside the terminal here people are anxious and want to know what is happening with their flights. Many flights have been cancelled and are not leaving here. And hundreds of flights have been canceled that were scheduled to arrive. People are also being kept outside the terminal until it is their check-in time – so that authorities can try to maintain control.

          It may surprise you, but it is also relatively calm in the terminals here. People apparently are understanding and, in some cases, appreciative of the strict security measures. Many are saying that if this is necessary to keep them safe, then so be it.

          33 comments

          "Even that scenario," he said, "could lead to terror attacks — detonating bombs in an airport terminal, not on a plane." “You can carry a bag into the center of an airport with thousands of people around you before you are ever screened. That, too, must change,” he said. From MSNBC.co …

          Show more
          Explore related topics: rehema-ellis, airport-dispatches

        Browse

        • featured,
        • nnam,
        • nn,
        • list,
        • afghanistan,
        • making-a-difference,
        • nightly-news,
        • nbc-nightly-news,
        • north-korea,
        • brian-williams,
        • bp,
        • china,
        • gulf-of-mexico,
        • education,
        • kevin-tibbles,
        • satellite,
        • syria,
        • anne-thompson,
        • oil,
        • us-news,
        • military,
        • rehema-ellis,
        • lester-holt,
        • ed-flanagan,
        • richard-engel,
        • mark-potter,
        • ayman-mohyeldin,
        • us,
        • ipad,
        • missile,
        • diabetes,
        • russia,
        • ian-williams,
        • jim-maceda,
        • patrick-witt,
        • nbc-news,
        • oil-spill,
        • dr-nancy-snyderman,
        • iraq,
        • war,
        • space,
        • images
        Also
        Advertise | AdChoices

        Brian Williams

        Brian Williams is the seventh anchor and managing editor in the history of "NBC Nightly News," which represents the largest single daily source of news in America.

        Brian Williams Blogroll

        • NBC Nightly News Website
        • NBC Nightly News on Twitter
        • NBC Nightly News on Facebook
        • First Read
        • World Blog
        • Field Notes
        • Photos, behind the scenes, reporting
        • BriTunes

        Archives

        • 2012
          • May (34)
          • April (58)
          • March (60)
          • February (62)
          • January (56)
        • 2011
          • December (30)
          • November (36)
          • October (28)
          • September (23)
          • August (28)
          • July (34)
          • June (42)
          • May (54)
          • April (43)
          • March (50)
          • February (45)
          • January (52)
        • 2010
          • December (58)
          • November (52)
          • October (48)
          • September (50)
          • August (68)
          • July (43)
          • June (55)
          • May (47)
          • April (39)
          • March (38)
          • February (33)
          • January (45)
        • 2009
          • December (38)
          • November (36)
          • October (43)
          • September (39)
          • August (40)
          • July (54)
          • June (42)
          • May (39)
          • April (46)
          • March (48)
          • February (44)
          • January (48)
        • 2008
          • December (52)
          • November (57)
          • October (56)
          • September (45)
          • August (53)
          • July (54)
          • June (48)
          • May (52)
          • April (62)
          • March (48)
          • February (59)
          • January (64)
        • 2007
          • December (62)
          • November (70)
          • October (103)
          • September (124)
          • August (112)
          • July (108)
          • June (109)
          • May (99)
          • April (72)
          • March (92)
          • February (86)
          • January (81)
        • 2006
          • December (87)
          • November (89)
          • October (95)
          • September (75)
          • August (127)
          • July (110)
          • June (83)
          • May (87)
          • April (95)
          • March (93)
          • February (99)
          • January (176)
        • 2005
          • December (72)
          • November (113)
          • October (85)

        Most Commented

        • Panetta restricts F-22 flights due to oxygen system complaints (318)
        • Iranians feel the pain of sanctions: 'Everything has doubled in price' (288)
        • Teaching girls life lessons, on and off the ice (7)
        • Should teen football players be tested for Alzheimer's gene? (9)
        • Executive who oversaw $2 billion trading loss at JPMorgan Chase leaves (5)
        • Hundreds evacuated as wildfires spread in Arizona (5)
        • Download the Nightly News apps (5)
        • JPMorgan Chase discloses $2 billion in losses due to "flawed" hedging strategy (2)

        Other blogs

        • The Maddow Blog
        • The Last Word
        • Hardblogger
        • First Read
        • World Blog
        • Field Notes
        • Inside Dateline
        • Behind the Wall
        • The Ed Show
        • Morning Joe
        • Daily Rundown

        msnbc.com top stories

        3147,10
        © 2012 msnbc.com
        • Nightly News on msnbc.com
        • About us
        • Contact
        • Help
        • Site map
        • Careers
        • Terms & Conditions
        • MSN Privacy
        • Legal
        • Advertise
        Advertise | AdChoices