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[csPiggers] FW: Today: The First-Ever White House Student Film Festival


Chronological Thread 
  • From: George Reese <reese AT illinois.edu>
  • To: <csPiggers AT lists.mste.illinois.edu>, <etoysillinois AT lists.mste.illinois.edu>
  • Subject: [csPiggers] FW: Today: The First-Ever White House Student Film Festival
  • Date: Fri, 28 Feb 2014 08:40:13 -0600
  • List-archive: <https://lists.mste.illinois.edu/private/cspiggers>
  • List-id: Social discussion of CS in K-12 <cspiggers.lists.mste.illinois.edu>
  • Organization: University of Illinois

Title: Today: The First-Ever White House Student Film Festival

J Sure there are some students who can work on this. Like the ones that just went to Bloomington. Others?

 

George

 

From: Secretary Arne Duncan, Department of Education [mailto:info AT messages.whitehouse.gov]
Sent: Friday, February 28, 2014 8:35 AM
To: reese AT illinois.edu
Subject: Today: The First-Ever White House Student Film Festival

 

 


The White House, Washington

Hello everyone,

The very best person to talk to about how modern technology is changing our classrooms isn't me, or even the President.

It's a student who is actually learning from those tools every day -- accessing school assignments online, watching video lessons to learn a new concept, or even talking directly with other students around the world with new technology.

That's why, a few months ago, the White House challenged students all across the country to create short films answering a simple question:

Why is technology so important in the classroom -- and how will it change the educational experience for kids in the future?

The response was overwhelming. And today, the 16 official selections are going to be screened at the first-ever White House Student Film Festival.

You're going to want to tune in for this one. Watch the official selections, then tune in today at 2:30 p.m. ET.

Watch Now

Today's going to be a fun day, but this event speaks to something much bigger.

That's because these students' films all illustrate the critical conversation about education in our country right now: the importance of connecting our classrooms.

The fact is that right now, only around 30 percent of our students have the high-speed Internet access they need for digital learning. That means millions of kids across the country aren't currently benefiting from the kinds of technologies that made the student films you'll watch today possible.

The President's ConnectED initiative is making sure that changes -- by connecting 99 percent of students to next-generation, high-speed broadband within five years.

Want to see exactly why that's so important? Just take a look at some of the incredible things kids can produce when they're connected.

See the official film festival selections, then make sure you're watching the event at 2:30 p.m. ET today.

Looking forward to continuing the conversation,

Secretary Arne Duncan
Department of Education

 

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  • [csPiggers] FW: Today: The First-Ever White House Student Film Festival, George Reese, 02/28/2014

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