Concorso Internazionale ThinkQuest®
Anno 1999-2000
Un concorso in Internet per studenti dai 12 ai 19 anni
NEWS ThinkQuest News ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ThinkQuest 2000 e' in fase di chiusura ed a partire dal 4 Dicembre inizieranno le iscrizioni per il prossimo anno.Per motivi di sicurezza il meeting del Cairo e' stato sospeso a causa della situazione nel Medio Oriente e i gravi problemi in Palestina.Procede comunque la fase di giudizio tramite internet dei lavori Finalisti del concorso 2000.Ricordo che questo e' il secondo anno che i nostri ragazzi Italiani si fanno onore vincendo Mensioni Onorevoli, i lavori vincitori sono:Edizione 2000 Edizione 1999 ThinkQuest in Italia partecipa inoltre a premi nazionali come: Global Junior Challenge Premio Italiano per la Formazione "ALDO FABRIS 2000" La lista completa dei lavori partecipanti al TQ2000 e' all'indirizzo: La lista dei partecipanti Italiani a Tq2000 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ THINKQUEST e-NEWSLETTER Vol. 4 No. 2, October, 2000 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ CONTENTS IN THIS ISSUE: 1. ANNOUNCEMENTS ---)Finalists in the ThinkQuest Internet Competition announced! ---)New TQ web site design: Take a Look 2. ThinkQuest Awards Event 3. THINKQUEST IN THE NEWS ---) ThinkQuest Recognition: EdNet, Forbes Laud TQ as "Best" ---)ThinkQuest Team Recognition InvestSmart Selected as "Stop" on InfoSearcher TramLine 4. Partner's Post: Welcome to New ThinkQuest Partners 5. ELECTRONIC SCHOLAR'S NOTEBOOK Staying With It: Looking at the Team that Continues 14 Days in October: The Cuban Missile Crisis ----------------------------------------------------- 1.ANNOUNCEMENTS ---) Finalists in the TQIC announced! After the many months of production and anticipation, the teams that produced finalist sites can see their work highlighted. Congratulations! Look at: http://www.thinkquest.org/tqic/finalists_2k.html The ThinkQuest Library has an infusion of excellent sites that show imagination, scholarship, and design ingenuity. All who finished are Winners, and have shared their knowledge with learners globally. All who finished are Winners ---applause for you, too. --------------------- ---) New TQ Web Site Design: The ThinkQuest Web Site has recently undergone some changes. The most noticeable is that My ThinkQuest has become integrated with the rest of the web site and no longer launches a separate window. This will make it easier for users to login and to easily access information from all areas of the site. What is not visible but also important is that the entire back end of the system has been re-written, bringing you a database driven site using CSS and the latest HTML. This creates an environment that is better accessible to all users. Comments and suggestions are welcome using our helpdesk at: http://www.thinkquest.org/help/ask_question.html ----------------------------------------------------- 2. ThinkQuest Awards Event and Conference Postponed
The ThinkQuest 2000 Award Event and Educational Conference will not be held on November 11-14, 2000, as was planned. At this time of global unrest, it is inappropriate to be holding a celebration, but we look forward to being able to recognize the accomplishments of the outstanding ThinkQuest 2000 participants during the coming year, and continuing our conference activity. A revised judging process will be put into effect and all the ThinkQuest finalists will be contacted shortly, with that information. "This is the time when the goals of kids learning together over the Internet are even more important," said Dr. Terry Rogers, president and CEO of Advanced Network & Services, the non-profit corporation that founded ThinkQuest. "We must look beyond the current situation and show how our young people can work across ethnic and geographic boundaries towards a brighter future. Our ThinkQuest partner, RITSEC has been so committed to technology and education, and has done an outstanding job of organizing this Event. Cairo is and will remain an important regional center for ThinkQuest activities and as a location for future events. "There is much to do as we strive to reach our objective of 1 million ThinkQuest participants, worldwide, by 2005," said Lisa Ernst, Executive Director of ThinkQuest. "We will continue to work with our global partners, such as RITSEC, to bring education and technology to students everywhere." More:http://www.thinkquest.org/announcements/10_17_00.html ----------------------------------------------------- 3. THINKQUEST IN THE NEWS ThinkQuest Recognition: EdNet, Forbes Laud TQ as "Best" ---)EdNet Awards honor companies and non-profit organizations that have made significant contributions to education or industry growth. EdNet recognized ThinkQuest as best in the non-profit area. More than 150 entries, were received this year which was the the largest in the history of the awards program. For more information: More: http://www.thinkquest.org/news/092500.shtml --------------------- ---) Forbes: ThinkQuest Best in The Good Life/Parenting >From the Forbes Fall Issue: The Best of the Web: "The average price per megabyte of disk drive storage has fallen from $11.54 in 1988 to about two cents last year. Thank goodness. Because, in our opinion, most of what's being published on the Web is a waste of storage space. To help keep your memory from getting clogged, Best of The Web editors have sorted through thousands of Web pages to come up with our fall list of the top 300 sites. " ThinkQuest's description in Forbes noted the Best aspect as "Breaking down cultural barriers by fostering teamwork over the Web. It's the Web at its innovative, global best. Price: Free" More: http://www.thinkquest.org/news/awards.shtml ----------------------------------------------------- . THINKQUEST TEAMS IN THE NEWS ---) InvestSmart Selected as "Stop" on the InfoSearcher TramLine InvestSmart [http://library.thinkquest.org/10326/ ] } is one stop on the InfoSearcher Tram Ride: a tool for seeing web sites critically. Get on the train at: http://www.infosearcher.com/cybertours/tours/tour02/_tourlaunch1.htm This site, available in the ThinkQuest Reference Desk, helps teachers stay current. Pam Berger has "pre-selected Web sites so you can experience the Web first hand and learn how to use the Internet to create active, engaged learners." Also featured in the current issue is "A Day in the Life of a Cybrarian: 36 hrs = 1 Day Spend a day with a Cybrarian and see how an online virtual environment supports collaboration, teaching and the inquiry process.". A high school's cybrarian is profiled in this engaging article. More: http://www.infosearcher.com ----------------------------------------------------- 4. Partner's Post: Welcome to New ThinkQuest Partners Check:http://www.thinkquest.org/news/news_clips.shtml for the latest news about Partners. ThinkQuest now has 100 partner organizations throughout the world and the United States. The most recent additions are: Oman: Qurum Business Group, Khalid A. Alhosni, <kalhosni@qbg.com> Taiwan: Taiwan School Net, Yue-Chane Hsing, <yuechane@kidscareforkids.org> Benin: ORIDEV, Ken Lohento, <kenloh@h2com.com> Indonesia: Kreston International Indonesia, Eddy Pianto, <kap_eddy@indo.net.id> Ukraine: Lviv Institute of Management, Vita Loboda, <vita@cscd.lviv.ua> Recent additions in the United States are: New Hampshire: Departement of Education, Cathy Higgins <chiggins@ed.state.nh.us> South Carolina: Department of Education, Tami Clyburn, <tclyburn@sde.state.sc.us> Virginia: Inst. for Teaching Through Technology and Innovative Practices, Longwood College, Carole Inge, <cinge@longwood.lwc.edu> American Samoa: Department of Education, John Ludgate, <johnl@doe.as> ------------------ Check http://www.thinkquest.org/partners/partner_menu.php3?type=us for contact information on the US partners, and http://www.thinkquest.org/partners/partner_menu.php3?type=nation for the latest contact information on National Partners. ----------------------------------------------------- 5. ELECTRONIC SCHOLAR'S NOTEBOOK (c) Patricia Libutti, Ph.D., Cybrarian, ThinkQuest Programs Staying With It:Looking at the Team that Produced " 14 Days in October: The Cuban Missile Crisis " [ http://library.thinkquest.org/11046/ ] While looking at sites in the Library, I noted several teams had made a definite effort to maintain their sites, long after the competition year had passed. Knowing that both technology and teenager's lives move at about the same rapid pace, I was intrigued by the dedication to maintaining these sites, as well as the issues involved in such an extension of effort. Since this is October, one site: "14 days in October: The Cuban Missile Crisis" launched in 1997, was followed. Thirty-eight years ago, October 15, 1962, marked the beginning of this conflict.The site maintainers, Kurt and Ben, are both in college now.Their section on Site History traces the evolution from a freshman term paper to as site still active after four years. Hurt Wiersma (KW) responded to the Electronic Scholar's (ES) request for a virtual interview and passed on this wisdom: ES: WHY have you decided to maintain your site? KW: I believe that we have some obligation to keep the site active if we are to consider it one of the best web site on the topic on the Internet, which I believe it is. This doesn't mean we are updating it every day. Certainly we want to add more interactive elements now that we are more experienced with stuff like PHP and MySQL. It is also nice to keep it updated with the latest design trends like style sheets and basic javascript which we haven't done as good a job keeping up with.It is a nice resume builder to show future employers that you know how to build a great web site. ES: What have you learned about the task of maintaining a site? KW: If you design your site correctly from the beginning and take maintenance into account you can save yourself a TON of time down the road. Things like server-side includes and linked javascripts and style sheets are key elements. This way if you want to make changes to pieces of code that exists all over the site you can just change one file and then it automatically appears on all the other pages. ES: What is rewarding for you in maintaining this site? KW: We added an interactive discussion board which is used by many people on and off throughout the past couple of years. We have had high school students, undergraduate students, graduate students, and college professors from all over the world email us comments or questions. ES: What would you give as advice to teams that are thinking ahead about maintaining their site? KW: Use server-side includes and linked javascript and style sheet files.Separate as much of the navigation HTML as you can into header and footer include files. Back when we created this site neither one of use had access to any web programming tools. Now there are all sorts of well developed, for the most part free, easy to learn tools like PHP that can make creating and maintaining dynamic web sites so much easier and more powerful. Definitely look into using these great new tools if you are interested in creating a great educational web site. Also do careful planning and design when you are first starting the site. Believe me, it will pay off in the end! ES: Thank you, Kurt --- Team 2000, look carefully at the advice! TQ would like to see your sites well kept for a long time Next Month: From a Coach's Point of View: The Site That Kept on Growing ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ThinkQuest 2000 Finalist Stories Include Website for Preserving Family History, 73-year Old Grandma Coach Winners to Receive Scholarships and Awards Totaling $1 Million ARMONK, N.Y. - A "how-to" website on preserving family history via the web, and a site on public speaking coached by a 73-year old grandmother are just two of the impressive stories coming from this year's ThinkQuest 2000 Internet Challenge. The program, which matches teens with peers from around the world to design educational Web sites, recognizes the winning students, coaches, and schools with scholarships and cash awards totaling almost $1 million. Outstanding ThinkQuest 2000 finalist sites include "The UnWritten: Saving Your Photo Stories for the Future", a guide for preserving family history written by three teenage cousins who found each other, learned about their shared history and documented detailed genealogy, through their ThinkQuest entry (http://library.thinkquest.org/C001313/). "The Art of Speech," coached by a 73-year old grandmother, is a must-see site for anyone planning to speak in public (http://library.thinkquest.org/C001146/). "Van Gogh at Etten: Sketches and Billboards" (http://library.thinkquest.org/C001734/), is another carefully crafted, and well-researched collaboration between teens in the Netherlands, Singapore and Nigeria. "The ThinkQuest Internet Challenge unites students from around the globe regardless of computer expertise - whether from inner-cities, suburban communities, or rural villages - in their dedicated initiative to create these wonderful educational tools that are used by millions," marvels Dr. Terry Rogers, president and CEO of Advanced Network & Services, the non-profit corporation that founded ThinkQuest. "With over 50,000 students having completed the ThinkQuest journey to date, we are working to include 1 million participants, worldwide, over the next five years." Selected from a pool of more than 6,800 students, only 70 students were chosen as finalists in this year's ThinkQuest Internet Challenge. Most teammates, who have never met in-person, use the Internet to complete their entries by coordinating their workloads to accommodate the members' diverse schedules, language differences, and radically divergent time zones. President Clinton cited ThinkQuest as a good example of a non-profit program helping to bridge the digital divide. The annual ThinkQuest Internet Challenge, a philanthropic and educational initiative, invites teams of students ages 12 to 19 to work together to create an interactive, well-researched Web site on an educational topic of interest to them. These teams work for more than eight months to gather data, conduct research, and learn about the Internet as an educational medium as they build educationally rich sites. Upon completion, the student-created entries become a permanent part of the ThinkQuest Library, which is made freely available to teachers, students, and Internet users across the globe. Applications for the ThinkQuest 2001 Internet Challenge will be accepted on-line beginning December 4, 2000 at www.thinkquest.org.
A panel of experts from the Internet Society conducts judging for the ThinkQuest Web site entries, looking for compelling and accurate educational content, technical excellence, interactivity, and imaginative use of graphics. In addition, teams are assessed on how members collaborate by sharing their individual knowledge, skills, and efforts. The ThinkQuest Internet Challenge usually culminates in an annual Awards Event with this year's gathering scheduled for Cairo, Egypt. However, due to recent global events, ThinkQuest and their Egyptian partner, the Regional Information Technology Software Engineering Center (RITSEC), have announced that the ThinkQuest 2000 Award Event would not be held as planned. "We are very proud of our finalists and will recognize the winners, but we also feel that it is inappropriate to convene at this time of worldwide unrest," added Dr. Terry Rogers. "It is our hope that ThinkQuest students with their global and positive attitudes will one day become the peacemakers and bridge-builders of tomorrow." Students participating in ThinkQuest programs learn invaluable skills, whether they are in grade school, college-bound or heading for a vocational career. Acquiring skills such as time and project management, and technical expertise, some ThinkQuest participants start their own businesses while still in high school, and contest winners use awards to pay for college tuition. About ThinkQuest: Since its inception in 1996, 50,000 young Web designers from 100 countries have participated in the not-for-profit ThinkQuest programs, competing yearly for more than $1 million in scholarships and cash awards for themselves and their schools. The challenge encourages collaboration, leadership, and critical thinking and helps raise students' self-esteem, along with their technological skills. Collectively these students, many of whom are new to technology, have created 4,000 Web sites on topics ranging from diplomacy to space exploration to growing up with epilepsy. These Web sites are found in the ThinkQuest Library at http://www.thinkquest.org, the most heavily trafficked educational destination on the Internet with an estimated 120 million hits, and 2.5 million unique users, per month. ThinkQuest 2001 is scheduled to begin December 4, 2000. Interested students should log onto www.thinkquest.org for details and rules in December. [EDITOR'S NOTE: For more information about ThinkQuest programs, B-roll, or to meet the amazing ThinkQuest participants, call 914-765-1134.] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ (C) Copyright 2000 Advanced Network & Services, Inc. All rights reserved. |
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