education & tech

Learning, Knowledge, Tech, Social Media

Education + Tech

TonNet is a 30-something educator, writer and blogger. He manages Education and Technology , which was created to build hope that Education still can make you rich not only spiritually but economically. 'TonNet' is Milton Ramirez. He has a Doctorate in Education from Loja National University (UNL, Ecuador), and he hails from NYC. For any questions, tips or concerns please e-mail us to: contact [at] miltonramirez [dot] com

Who's TonNet

If you are a regular at Education & Tech, you shall remember that I'd written a post almost everyday since 2003 and before, it even had different names such as Blog For Spanish Readers, BPLE, and so. You'd find posts in Spanish because that's how this blog started. Education & Tech covers tender questions of human living and rougher matters rotting the educators core.

Vagina Is Still a Taboo Word

I am not in the list of the 100 Most Prolific Bloggers but I have the right to speak in name of our costumes and our society. Rose DesRochers has ponted it out in a situation where three high shool girls from Lewisboro, New York were suspended for using the word vagina at a public reading of the Vagina Monologue. We are pushing and asking the same as Saskboy. The challenge is every blogger to use the word 'vagina' in a blog post title! Please for those visitor coming for porno, this is not a Telus place!

At what level the Open Source had influenced on education? The answer is in this post which mentions what's going on in the MIT fields: Open source and open access resources have changed how colleges, organizations, instructors, and prospective students use software, operating systems and online documents for educational purposes. And, in most cases, each success story also has served as a springboard to create more open source projects.

Please, pass this post and help our society understand that the problem are not the words but the meaning of such words as in vagina. Open Source for this matters? No need but we still have a long way to go in education and particularly in sexual education.

More featured headlines:



Print Post

0 comments:

Post a Comment