Subject:  new online journal on technologies
for learning.

Regards, 
Kerry McNamara

********************************************

We are pleased to announce the launching of TechKnowLogia, an
International Online Journal of Technologies for the advancement of
Knowledge and Learning.

TechKnowLogia is published bimonthly by Knowledge Enterprise, Inc., in
collaboration with UNESCO, OECD and GIIC. You can find us at:
http://www.TechKnowLogia.org, and subscription is FREE.

Just register, and you can enjoy the site's unique capabilities as well
as the wealth of informative and engaging articles ( all 27 of them!)
written by top experts in the field of technology and learning.  And
once you subscribe, you will receive an email from us (including an
annotated table of contents) every time a newissue is posted.

The Journal's editor-in-chief, Dr. Wadi D. Haddad, is recognized
worldwide for his expertise and long and diverse experience in the field
of education and technology.  He is President of Knowledge Enterprise,
Inc., a commissioner of the GIIC, former Director and Deputy Corporate
Secretary of the World Bank, and Special Adviser to the Director-General
of UNESCO.

TechKnowLogia provides policy makers, strategists, practitioners and
technologists at the local, national and global levels with a strategic
forum to share policies, strategies, experiences and tools in harnessing
technologies for knowledge dissemination, effective learning, and
efficient education services. It also reviews systematically the latest
systems and products of technologies of today, and peeks into the world
of tomorrow. Please visit our site at http://www.TechKnowLogia.org to
learn more about the Journal's exciting features, departments, and
editorial policy.

For your information, we have included below the annotated Table of
Contents of Introductory Issue I.

We hope that TechKnowLogia will meet your needs as a source of knowledge
and inspiration. To extend the benefits to others, please pass on this
announcement to your colleagues, co-workers or anyone whom you think may
be interested in this Journal.


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ANNOTATED TABLE OF CONTENTS- INTRODUCTORY ISSUE 1
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EDITORIAL

1. TechKnowLogia: It Is About Knowledge and Learning
By: Wadi D. Haddad, Editor

TechKnowLogia is a forum for dialogue and sharing of knowledge and
experiences, and an instrument to encourage thinking "outside the box."
The editor-in-chief outlines the context, raison d'etre and editorial
policy of the Journal.

FRONTLINE

2. The Information Age: A Triumph of Knowledge, Not Just A Triumph of
Technology
By: Federico Mayor, Director-General of UNESCO

Not only can education use technology, it can define technology's uses
in ways which reinforce creativity, empowerment and equality.

3. The View from the Private Sector: Development Challenges and
Opportunities
by: W. Bowman Cutter, Steering Committee Chair, GIIC

As a public policy maker, a practitioner in the field of information,
and a business decision-maker, Cutter sees a variety of technology
investments and technology possibilities for education in the
information age.

4. The Thread of A Great and Long Tradition
By: James Johnson, Deputy Director, GIIC

Several threads of technology development, seemingly disparate, are
being woven together, often accidentally, to produce the unprecedented
opportunities which we, on this eve of a new millennium, have to educate
the coming generations and to spread learning and knowledge to all.

5. Information Literacy: How Does It Differ From Traditional or Computer
Literacy?
By:Taizo Nishimuro, President, Toshiba Corporation

Information technology, in particular the Internet and the web, have
introduced a new society where people can share information freely,
anywhere, at anytime, across the globe. Now the skills required are not
merely how to use computers or how to get information.

6. TechKnowNews
Technology Translates Real Speech # Online University Gets Accredited #
Hong Kong: All Teachers Must Be On Net by Next Year # Sowing
Technology's Seeds in Developing Countries

TECHNOLOGIES AT WORK

7. New Technologies for Human Resource Development: What Works; What
Makes Sense?
By: Alexander J. Romiszowski, School of Education, Syracuse University

This article presents a synthesis of current uses of computers and
telecommunications in education and training, and focuses on the use of
computer networks in professional education, corporate training and
human resource development.

8. Before The E-Mail There was The P-Mail: Distance Learning by Postal
Correspondence
By: Sonia Jurich

Correspondence education filled the gaps of an educational system that
was either too small to absorb the increasing demand, or too rigid to
respond to the needs of a society in transformation. Even in this
technologically advanced era, correspondence studies serve both as an
adjunct to the regular educational system and as an innovator.

9. Radio: Wiring the Schools with Wireless
By: M. Irene Oujo

This article describes the potential of broadcast and interactive radio
instruction and relates a specific example in Costa Rica whereby radio
is used to enhance rural multigrade classrooms.

10. Mexico's Telesecundaria
By: Claudio de Moura Castro, Laurence Wolff and Norma Garcia,
Inter-American
Development Bank

Throughout its thirty years of operation, Mexico's TV-based educational
program, Telesecundaria, has been hailed as an innovative and
well-managed program, geared to the poor. This article describes what
Telesecundaria is, how it works, what it costs, and why it is
successful.

11. Ghana: Networking For Local Development - How You Can Use A Computer
without Owning One
By:Mary Fontaine and Dennis Foote, The LearnLink Project, Academy for
Educational Development

One model for providing public access that is growing rapidly around the
world is the telecenter: a public place where people can come to use
computers when they need them. This article describes a project in Ghana
that is exploring the practicality of non-governmental organizations, or
NGOs, establishing self-sustaining telecenters.

12. Web Based Learning @ Development Countries
By: Gregg B. Jackson, Ph.D., George Washington University

Web-based instruction will revolutionize learning in developing
countries. Its impact is likely to be greater than the introduction of
printed books. This article will explain how the web can facilitate
learning in developing countries, its main advantages and disadvantages,
and its costs.

UNDER OBSERVATION

13. Instructional Technology -- Then and Now
By: Laurence Wolff, Inter-American Development Bank

In 1974, Wilbur Schramm and others at Stanford University completed a
major study on instructional technology. Twenty-five years later, the
conclusions of that study may still be relevant. This article presents a
matrix of conclusions from that study compared to tentative conclusions
for 1999.

14. The Impact of Video Technology in Education: From Here to Where?
By: Sonia Jurich

This article presents review of literature relating to the impact of
video technology in the different areas of learning, and the issues and
variables that must be considered in planning their integration into the
instructional process.

15. Does Hypermedia Accelerate Learning?
Gregg B. Jackson, Ph.D., George Washington University

The author summarizes a major review of experimental studies testing
hypermedia's impacts on learning.

PLANNING FOR TECHNOLOGIES

16. The Economics of Educational Technology
By: Jeffrey M. Puryear, Inter-American Dialogue

In assessing educational technologies, there are at least three kinds of
issues to look at: costs, effectiveness, and surrounding conditions.
Only when we look at all three can we determine whether a given
technology is suitable.

17. Computers in Schools: 10 Points to Avoid Past Errors
By: Claudio de Moura Castro, Inter-American Development Bank

The path to the successful use of computers in schools is full of traps
and pitfalls. This article discusses the challenges of bringing
computers to schools. It also proposes a strategy beginning with easy
applications of computers in education and progressively moving to more
difficult but more rewarding modes.

TECHNOLOGIES TODAY

18. Overhead Projectors
This article describes the advantages of using overhead projectors in
the classroom and how they can be used in conjunction with computers.

19. Educational Software Sampler
There are thousands of education software CDs that cover curricular and
non-curricular subjects. This issue reviews a sample of six educational
CDs that offer programs in mathematics, science, grammar, culture and
problem-solving.

20. WorthWhileWebs
By: Frank Method, Director, Washington Unesco Office

Each issue of TechKnowLogia will review selected web sites of interest
to readers. For the first issue, a range of web sites is presented,
responding to the diverse interests of readers.

TECHNOLOGIES TOMORROW

21. Roll Up Television: Watch It or Wear It!
Within five years or less, a new discovery can soon make your TV as thin
and as flexible as your handkerchief and you can roll it up and put it
in your pocket.

22. Electronic Books: The Future of Publishing?
By: James Johnson, Deputy-Director, GIIC

Fundamental to the education and learning enterprise worldwide is the
use of textbooks, reference books and other published materials by
teachers and students alike. This familiar teaching tool is undergoing a
substantial change. This article describes a number of electronic books,
and their uses and advantages.

23. Fiber-Optics -- Without the Fiber
Using beams of light to transmit information directly through the air, a
breakthrough optical networking system from Lucent Technologies will
dramatically boost the capacity of local data networks and extend the
reach of today's high-capacity fiber-optic systems - a basis for many
distance education programs.

PROFILES IN DEVELOPMENT

24. The Internet: A Global Explosion of A Military Brainchild
This article traces the evolution of the Internet from its limited
military use to a global network.

25. Global Information Infrastructure Commission
The Global Information Infrastructure Commission (GIIC) is an
independent, non-governmental initiative involving communications
related industry leaders from developing as well as industrialized
countries. GIIC's areas of focus are: Global Information Infrastructure
Development, Electronic Commerce, and Education in the Information Age.

26. AED: Academy for Educational Development
The Academy for Educational Development (AED) is an independent,
nonprofit organization committed to solving critical social problems in
the United States and throughout the world through education, research,
training, social marketing, policy analysis, and innovative program
design and management. AED works at the frontiers of new thinking, new
approaches, and new technologies.

27. An International OECD Study: Information and Communications
Technology and The Quality of Learning
By: Jarl Bengtsson, Counsellor and Head, The Centre for Educational
Research and Innovation (CERI)

This article introduces a major study being carried out in the OECD's
Centre for Educational Research and Innovation (CERI). The study is
mainly being carried out through three interconnected sets of activities
on: Software Quality, Market Issues, and Research and Evaluation.

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Web site: http://www.TechKnowLogia.org

E-mail: mailto:TechKnowLogia@KnowledgeEnterprise.org

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Knowledge Enterprise, Inc.
P.O.Box 3027
Oakton, Virginia 22124, USA

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