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Editors' Note

Turning Middle School Inside-Out

Middle grade educators are constantly finding strategies to reach outside their classrooms. This latest issue of Meridian celebrates the numerous ways technology allows educators to expand beyond the boundaries of place and time. In their pursuit of professional excellence, teachers have turned to the Internet to seek out development opportunities. Two of our feature articles, Middleweb: A Dynamic Internet-Based Professional Learning Community, and, Science Teachers' Interest in Online, Self-Directed Professional Development Opportunities, explore this phenomenon. Further articles expand the middle school experience for students through the use of computer technologies. The practitioner articles in this issue looks at a variety of approaches to learning that challenge the limits of language arts, social studies, and service learning with technology. Students reach into their subjects and produce multimedia, maps and virtual histories transporting their work from inside the classroom walls out to the world.

The Living Article continues to thrive in this issue with Jackie Gottlieb's discussion of Universal Design as a way to combine accessibility with usability for all users. This article began its life in the Winter 2002 Issue with Alan Foley's discussion of accessible web design and its affect on people’s use of technology. We welcome additional responses to the living article. Please read the Living Article Introduction for information on participating in this growing commentary on accessible design and technology.

While publishing an online journal is no longer a novelty, we are still struggling to take advantage of all the opportunities multimedia offers. This issue, more than any to date, pushes the limits of a scholarly journal by including video, student presentations and much more. To assist future authors, we have revised our guidelines for submission to include strategies and suggestions for including features such as video, sound, and other multimedia including Flash™ and PowerPoint™. Our readers who feel they have experiences, research or even practical applications of technology in the middle schools to share are invited to submit manuscripts to Meridian.

This issue of Meridian offers new approaches to professional development and to classroom practice. The issue itself is a testament to the concept of virtual work and collaboration as Beth currently works and lives in Asheville, North Carolina and Shannon works and lives in Raleigh, North Carolina, over 250 miles away. We encourage our readers to explore the possibilities of collaboration and virtual work. We often ask students to explore the world outside of the classroom through Web site visits, WebQuests and other Internet research however we often do not encourage virtual collaborations. Is this an area that we should be encouraging our middle school students to explore?

A very special thanks to Dr. Beckey Reed, our managing editor, and our advisors, Dr. Edwin Gerler and Dr. Lisa Grable, and the entire Meridian Editorial Board for all their continuing invaluable efforts, diligence, and leadership.

Elizabeth Snoke and Shannon White
Co-Editors, Meridian: A Middle School Computer Technologies Journal


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Meridian: A Middle School Computer Technologies Journal
a service of NC State University, Raleigh, NC
Volume 7, Issue 1, Winter 2004
ISSN 1097-9778
URL: http://www.ncsu.edu/meridian/win2004/ed_note.html
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