“We understand technology and we understand education” stands out as just one of many hilarious claims in this article.
What News Corp. understands is the perversity of the American public school system. They understand how to market to a system that has traditional, too-close ties to a textbook publishing sector which uses public schools as a captive market.
And this was particularly Orwellian: 'If a child’s attention wanders, a stern “eyes on teacher” prompt pops up.' Because that's the way to make kids learn. Keep those eyes down, children.
I'm at SXSWedu this week and News Corp has spent a fortune advertising the Amplify platform here. They've demoed many of their educational apps and the content they're developing, and it actually looks well tailored to classroom needs. It's a shame that News Corp is just about the least trusted brand in the country, because any other organization—Amazon, Apple, Microsoft—would be much more well received and praised for innovating within an industry which needs it so badly. I don't trust News Corp with student data, but there are no other companies creating an end-to-end platform this ambitious.
I can't think of anything worse than having Rupert Murdoch involved in the education of future generations. Does anyone think this man has any intentions other than pure control over the psyche of a generation? He has proven his intentions with Fox News (an "entertainment" channel) and now we're going to let him into the schools?
If anything, this should be a wake up call for a competitor to rise to the occasion and ensure he does not establish control over this market.
It seems like a well-thought out platform that could work for school systems. It looks like News Corps funded some idealistic, passionate people to work out a solution that no other company seems to be attempting at the moment.
Amplify is one of the better concepts built on Android that I've seen. They even demonstrate using Intents to aid a student's workflow, and integration with Khan Academy.
It might someday be an entrenched drag on the education system like textbook publishers, but a vision of how technology can improve education is something we need. Right now a lot people are just incredulous that schools give students iPads. It's a low bar and hopefully Amplify raises it.
7 comments
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 25.4 ms ] threadWhat News Corp. understands is the perversity of the American public school system. They understand how to market to a system that has traditional, too-close ties to a textbook publishing sector which uses public schools as a captive market.
And this was particularly Orwellian: 'If a child’s attention wanders, a stern “eyes on teacher” prompt pops up.' Because that's the way to make kids learn. Keep those eyes down, children.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RQLj4XM9RLc
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-BSNKoVrnFo
If anything, this should be a wake up call for a competitor to rise to the occasion and ensure he does not establish control over this market.
Amplify is one of the better concepts built on Android that I've seen. They even demonstrate using Intents to aid a student's workflow, and integration with Khan Academy.
It might someday be an entrenched drag on the education system like textbook publishers, but a vision of how technology can improve education is something we need. Right now a lot people are just incredulous that schools give students iPads. It's a low bar and hopefully Amplify raises it.