Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta School. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta School. Mostrar todas las entradas

sábado, 17 de octubre de 2020

Bezos Academy, funded by Jeff Bezos’ $2B ‘Day One Fund,’ launches first free school in Seattle area

The Day 1 Academies Fund is gearing up to open the inaugural school in its new network of full scholarship Montessori-inspired preschools in underserved communities.

The nonprofit, backed by Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos’ $2 billion Day One Fund, will open a new school on Oct. 19 in Des Moines, Wash., just south of Amazon’s Seattle headquarters.

Bezos first unveiled the Day One Fund two years ago, setting aside $2 billion for the “Day 1 Academies Fund” and the “Day 1 Families Fund,” which addresses homelessness.

The Academies Fund will directly operate the schools for children 3-5 years old using “the same set of principles that have driven Amazon,” according to its website.

“Most important among those will be genuine, intense customer obsession,” the website reads. “The child will be the customer. ‘Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire.’ And lighting that fire early is a giant leg up for any child.”

Here’s more about how the fund picks communities to open up its schools:

In selecting communities for our preschools, we consider a wide range of data, including income levels, participation in free and reduced-cost meal programs, and gaps in access to licensed childcare providers. We also look for local organizations and businesses that understand the needs of their community members and are excited about the prospect of hosting a tuition-free, high-quality preschool in their neighborhood.

Mike George, an ex-Amazon vice president who oversaw some of the company’s most successful products, is leading the Academies Fund. George retired from Amazon in July 2017 after nearly 20 years at the tech giant, where he held multiple leadership positions spanning hardware to HR. He was most recently vice president of Echo, Alexa, and the Appstore.

Wesley Homes, a retirement community and facility provider, partnered with the Academies Fund to help open the Des Moines location.

The Day One Fund last year announced initial grants from the Families Fund for organizations that aim to prevent and reduce homelessness.

“Day One” is a reference to Bezos’ mantra at Amazon, that it’s essential to approach every day with the enthusiasm and energy of a new venture because it’s “always Day One.”

Bezos, himself a product of Montessori education, last year announced a separate $10 billion fund to fight climate change.

With Amazon’s market value soaring past $1.5 trillion, Bezos has become the richest person in the world, with an estimated net worth of more than $175 billion, positioning him to make a major impact on the world impact with his new philanthropic pursuits.

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viernes, 31 de julio de 2020

Seattle schools leader recommends remote-only classes when school resumes in September

Toys lie where they were last played with at a closed playground in Seattle. (GeekWire Photo / Kurt Schlosser)

The superintendent for Seattle Public Schools Wednesday announced that she supported continuing entirely remote instruction when school resumes in September. The district previously favored a hybrid approach of some in-person classes and some online learning.

The school board will vote on the recommendation from Superintendent Denise Juneau at its regular meeting on Aug. 12. The district has approximately 54,000 students.

In an announcement the district said it would “continue the remote learning model until the risk of significant transmission of COVID-19 has decreased enough to resume in-person instruction.”

In a statement Juneau said, “The current trajectory of infection in King County and the most recent data and information from public health makes it clear that resuming school in-person this fall is impossible.”

The Lake Washington School District, which includes the city of Redmond and Microsoft’s headquarters, is giving families the option of a hybrid approach or all-remote learning, as is the Tacoma School District south of Seattle. The Bellevue and Renton school districts, both located east of Seattle, announced Wednesday afternoon to do remote learning for at least the start of school.

The American Association for Pediatrics and the National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine have advocated for reopening schools for in-person instruction in combination with safety precautions.

On Monday, the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Washington state rose 71% over the past week, reaching a new weekly high of more than 6,800 reported cases, according to GeekWire’s calculations from state Department of Health data. State officials have called it an “explosive situation.” Younger children, however, appear less likely to contract and spread the disease. The state reported that 11% of the current cases are in 0-19 year olds, which lumps together elementary-age kids and teens.

The decision to resume school with only remote learning is supported by the Seattle Education Association, which is the teachers’ union, and the Principals Association of Seattle Schools.

The district is pledging to make improvements in its online education. That includes:

Teacher training in order to provide live instruction for students.Consistent, predictable scheduling using common platforms. (One often heard complaint about the spring’s online learning was the number of different educational platforms used made tracking assignments and instruction extremely challenging for students and parents.)Providing specialized support for students that qualify for extra help.Racial equity training for educators.An effort to provide support for childcare and at-home learning by working with the parent-teacher association, the city and community partners.Providing meals for students and families in need.

Editor’s note: Story has been updated with new information from other Puget Sound-area school districts.

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sábado, 25 de julio de 2020

Highlights from Bill Gates’ CBS interview on return to school, COVID-19 vaccine conspiracies, more

Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates speaks at the University of Washington in Seattle. (GeekWire Photo / Kevin Lisota)

Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates addressed various coronavirus-related topics in a 30-minute interview with CBS News’ Norah O’Donnell that aired Wednesday.

Gates, a global health expert, has been commenting on the pandemic’s progress almost weekly from his Seattle-area home base via video links with media outlets ranging from TED to CNN to Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show.”

Here are the key takeaways from his interview with CBS News (comments edited for brevity and clarity):

On if we’re witnessing a “disaster” he alluded to previously if certain steps weren’t taken: 

Bill Gates: “There’s a lot of things we can go back and say, why wasn’t there a federal testing plan, why didn’t we get the turnaround on the testing down, why aren’t we getting tests out to low-income minority communities? Serious mistakes were made, some of which were because we didn’t understand the virus very well. The understanding about the importance of masks came later than we wish it had. And then the U.S. had the lowest compliance with mask use of any country. We didn’t have the leadership message there. We have a lot of regrets, but we do have innovations in the pipeline that should reduce the death rate, and eventually by the end of next year get us out of this terrible situation.”

On what needs to be done immediately: 

Gates: “Some of the policies were a mistake. Opening up bars — the economic benefit versus the infection risk of a lot of activities like that made it a mistake. Now, in most of the U.S., we need to absolutely avoid those things. We need to distance, we need to use maks. We’ve seen that in Europe they had the dramatic fall-off. It didn’t spread into the other communities and that’s because their leadership communicated with a clear voice and their scientists were encouraged to go on TV instead of banned. So the population benefitted and the death rate in those countries has gone down very dramatically.”

On the state of COVID-19 testing: 

Gates: “The lag times that we have today are completely unacceptable. It’s making most of our tests pretty much worthless.”

On whether President’s Trump’s claim that the U.S. has the “best mortality rate” in the world is factually correct: 

Gates: “Not at all, not even close. By almost every measure, the U.S. is one of the worst. I think we can change that, but it’s an ugly picture.”

On children returning to school: 

Gates: “Fortunately, the actual number of young people who get sick is pretty modest. The big challenge is how to get the teachers and staff in and to avoid those kids being a source of infection as they go back into their households. … By 2021, which is a long time, I think we’ll have things under control enough.

“It’s extremely important [that kids return to school]. And so no one should think that this a totally political thing where it’s black and white. … We’re kind of stuck on the ‘open them up completely’ vs. ‘hey, if there’s any risk, I don’t want to go work there.’ Those are two extreme positions. It’s time for a discussion where it’s not this black and white, go in everyday versus not going in at all.”

On if he’d send his children to public school during the pandemic:

Gates: “If a school is being careful, then yes. Now, if they live in a multigenerational household where you have old people that they are exposed to, you have to look at how hard it would be to reduce the grandparents’ exposure to those kids. If you live in a single generational household and have a school that is being careful, then I do think it’s reasonable to say that my kid can get that educational opportunity, particularly as the kids are younger. People have freedom to make choices here, but we do need to remember it’s mostly transmission into the older people that drives these really horrific deaths per day.”

On who gets the COVID-19 vaccine first: 

Gates: “That’s in discussion. Clearly the U.S., by funding factories in the U.S., will get priority. But if we can have other factories … and this is where the U.S. government’s traditional generosity in global health will be needed, our foundation will be needed, and other countries. We want to make sure we don’t have people dying just because they can’t afford to have access to the vaccine.”

On how many doses of a COVID-19 vaccine people will need: 

Gates: “None of the vaccines at this point appear like they’ll work with a single dose. That was the hope at the very beginning. …We hope just two [doses], although in the elderly, sometimes it takes more. Making sure we have lots of elderly people in the trial will give us that data.”

On concerns with a growing anti-vaccination disinformation campaign on social media: 

Gates: “It’s always a concern because vaccines are so key to keeping measles deaths down, helping us eradicate polio. Vaccines are so important. They’ve played the primary role in cutting childhood death in half over the last 20 years. So explaining how careful we are about vaccine safety is super important. During a pandemic I can understand people’s anxiety levels going up. But explaining what the testing is doing … we will need a lot of people to be willing to take the vaccine to stop the transmission.”

On conspiracy theories that accuse Gates of wanting a COVID-19 vaccine to plant microchips into people:

Gates: “There is no connection between any of these vaccines and any tracking type thing — at all. I don’t know where that came from.”

On a YouGov poll showing that 44% of Republicans surveyed believe Gates is plotting the microchip vaccination campaign:

Gates: “Some of these are deeply ironic. Our foundation is about reducing death and bringing equity to health. Yet the idea that we get accused of creating chips or the virus … I think we just need to get the truth out there. We need to explain our values so people understand why we’re involved in this work and why we’re willing to put hundreds or billions to accelerate progress. It’s a little unclear to me but I hope it will die down as people get the facts.”

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miércoles, 22 de julio de 2020

Crunchyroll nos invita a descubrir como MAPPA creo The God of High School en este documental

Una de las series que más pasiones levantan de toda la temporada es sin duda The God of High School, el Crunchyroll Original basado en la popular serie de WEBTOON de Yongje Park. La plataforma nos brinda la oportunidad de descubrir un poco más de cómo todo tomó forma, y es que Crunchyroll ha estado con MAPPA para traer a todos los fans de la serie un vistazo a la producción.

Conoce al equipo responsable del anime y escucha los comentarios del autor Yongje Park bajo estas líneas.

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