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Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
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Arts Organizations and Digital Technologies | Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project

A survey of a wide-ranging mix of U.S.-based arts organizations shows that the internet, social media, and mobile connectivity now permeate their operations and have changed the way they stage performances, mount and showcase their exhibits, engage their audiences, sell tickets, and raise funds.

 

These organizations are even finding that technology has changed the very definition of art: 77% of respondents agree with the statement that the internet has “played a major role in broadening the boundaries of what is considered art.”

 

“For most of these organizations, technology suffuses their operations and their engagement activities with their communities,” noted Kristen Purcell, research director at the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project, and a co-author of the report. “They are using the technologies to expand their offerings, grow and diversify their audiences, and bring technology users into the act of creating art itself.”

 

Some 1,244 arts organizations that have received funds from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) in recent years took this survey.

 

Click headline to read more and access hot link to download report--

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Digital Media Creation Learning, Production & Distribution Centers are coming online around the World to fill the Need for Content
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Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
December 31, 2025 6:01 PM
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California Petitions FCC to Restore Funding for Off-Campus Wi-Fi | by Jericho Casper | BroadbandBreakfast.com

California Petitions FCC to Restore Funding for Off-Campus Wi-Fi | by Jericho Casper | BroadbandBreakfast.com | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it

WASHINGTON, Nov. 20, 2025 – A California regulator has formally challenged the Federal Communications Commission’s decision to eliminate E-Rate funding for off-campus Wi-Fi programs.

 

FCC’s September rollback of hotspot and school bus Wi-Fi support is ‘abrupt and unfounded" and "is based on a faulty interpretation of Section 254 of the Communications Act", the CA Public Utility Commission says. 

 

 

 

 

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Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
December 31, 2025 4:47 AM
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Palmer's House of Toys | by Dee Davis | DailyYonder.com

Palmer's House of Toys | by Dee Davis | DailyYonder.com | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it

At 17 I was the Santa Claus for the Walkertown section of Hazard. Rick Rosanova, the news guy at Channel 4, was Santa at the new Sears in the old bowling alley in another part of town, Lothair. And Bill Douglas was the city’s main Santa from Backwoods to Big Bottom.

 

He had a $1,000 velvet Santa outfit (in 1968 dollars) with black calfskin boots and jingle bells on a leather strap. His fake beard was combed human hair and in addition to that he could play the harmonica and jig dance. Value add-ons at anyone’s Christmas party.

 

I worked at Palmer’s House of Toys, a more humble operation. I had a belly pillow and a stringy white beard-wig combination that I had to enhance by putting white shoe polish on my sideburns so my hair would not show through the gaps. The outfit was thin red corduroy, and instead of boots I had plastic covers to slip over my shoes to affect an illusion of boots.

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Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
December 31, 2025 4:29 AM
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Sea Dragons of Nevada Brought to Life | by MsSusanB | ItsNewsToYou.me

Sea Dragons of Nevada Brought to Life | by MsSusanB | ItsNewsToYou.me | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it

Most fossil fans are familiar with the spectacular Jurassic marine reptiles found by Mary Anning along England’s Dorset Coast in the early 1800s, but few are aware that their predecessors – gigantic Triassic ichthyosaurs (250-201 mya)– have been emerging from the central mountains of Nevada’s Great Basin for the last 125 years.

 

A beautiful exhibition – Deep Time: Sea Dragons in Nevada – shines a spotlight on these magnificent extinct creatures, brings them to life through life-size animations, and tells stories of scientific discoveries at the Nevada Museum of Art in Reno through January 11, 2026

 

The art museum reunites the state’s stunning Triassic marine reptiles from museum collections across North America, and couples this with an engaging walk through 200 years of paleo-art history starring these enigmatic Mesozoic “sea dragons.”

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December 29, 2025 1:46 AM
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Studying philosophy does make people better thinkers, according to new research | by Michael Vazquez, UNC Chapel Hill & Michael Prinzing, Wake Forest | TheConversation.com

Studying philosophy does make people better thinkers, according to new research | by Michael Vazquez, UNC Chapel Hill & Michael Prinzing, Wake Forest | TheConversation.com | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it

Philosophy majors rank higher than all other majors on verbal and logical reasoning, according to our new study published in the Journal of the American Philosophical Association. They also tend to display more intellectual virtues such as curiosity and open-mindedness.

 

Philosophers have long claimed that studying philosophy sharpens one’s mind. What sets philosophy apart from other fields is that it is not so much a body of knowledge as an activity – a form of inquiry. Doing philosophy involves trying to answer fundamental questions about humanity and the world we live in and subjecting proposed answers to critical scrutiny: constructing logical arguments, drawing subtle distinctions and following ideas to their ultimate – often surprising – conclusions.

 

It makes sense, then, that studying philosophy might make people better thinkers. But as philosophers ourselves, we wondered whether there is strong evidence for that claim.

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December 28, 2025 4:12 AM
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The Germanic Invaders Of England – 2. The Angles | DarkAgesHistory.com

The Germanic Invaders Of England – 2. The Angles | DarkAgesHistory.com | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it

The story of the Angles and their invasion of Britain is a fascinating chapter in the history of England, marking the transition from post-Roman Britain to Anglo-Saxon England. This tale of migration, conquest, and cultural transformation would shape the destiny of the British Isles for centuries to come.

Origins of the Angles

The Angles were a Germanic tribe originating from the Angeln peninsula in modern-day Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. Along with their close relatives, the Saxons and Jutes, the Angles were part of the broader group of North Sea Germanic peoples.

 

Archaeological evidence suggests that the Angles had a well-developed society in their homeland, with a mixed economy based on agriculture, animal husbandry, and trade. They were skilled metalworkers and boat builders, traits that would serve them well in their future adventures across the North Sea.

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December 27, 2025 9:44 PM
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The Ancient Irish Brehon Laws: A Sophisticated Legal System Ahead Of Its Time | DarkAgesHistory.com

The Ancient Irish Brehon Laws: A Sophisticated Legal System Ahead Of Its Time | DarkAgesHistory.com | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it

The Brehon laws of ancient Ireland stand as a testament to the rich cultural and legal heritage of the Emerald Isle. This sophisticated system of jurisprudence governed Irish society for over a thousand years, from the Celtic era until the 17th century when it was finally supplanted by English common law.

 

Far from being a primitive set of rules, the Brehon laws were a complex and nuanced legal code that addressed various aspects of Irish life, from property rights to social status, and even beekeeping.

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December 26, 2025 4:13 AM
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'What the heck is this?' James Webb telescope spots inexplicable planet with diamonds and soot in its atmosphere | by Elizabeth Howell | LiveScience.com

Scientists using the James Webb telescope observed a distant exoplanet with an atmosphere of soot and diamonds, challenging all explanations.

 

The Jupiter-size world, detected by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), doesn't have the familiar helium-hydrogen combination we are used to in atmospheres from our solar system, nor other common molecules, like water, methane or carbon dioxide.

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December 25, 2025 10:24 PM
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How the character and traditions of Santa Claus evolved over centuries | by Stephanie Sy & Mary Fecteau | PBS News Hour | PBS.org

How the character and traditions of Santa Claus evolved over centuries | by Stephanie Sy & Mary Fecteau | PBS News Hour | PBS.org | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it
This Christmas, many children welcomed a familiar visitor – a jolly man in a red suit and a sleigh full of gifts. But the bearded figure Americans recognize today as Santa Claus is a relatively modern creation, shaped over centuries by folklore, art and evolving tradition. Stephanie Sy reports. And a warning for parents and younger viewers: this story contains some spoilers about Santa Claus.
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December 25, 2025 1:55 AM
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After Brown shooting, campus grapples with what steps to take next | by Anthony Brooks | WBUR News | WBUR.org

After Brown shooting, campus grapples with what steps to take next | by Anthony Brooks | WBUR News | WBUR.org | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it
In the aftermath of what remains a rare event — a shooting on a U.S. college campus — many are left scared, vulnerable and unsure of what's next.
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Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
December 25, 2025 12:22 AM
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The Hidden Crisis: How America Fails to Protect Its Children | by Colin Greer and Reynard Loki | Observatory.wiki

From child labor to trafficking—and even foster care, sports, and detention—institutions meant to protect children often cause the greatest harm. 

 

There’s an invisible emergency in America: children toil in slaughterhouses, factories, and fields—night and day, unseen, unprotected, and endangered. A century ago, reforms such as compulsory schooling and restrictions on child labor marked a historic advance, shielding children from exploitation—a model still emulated worldwide. Yet today, austerity budgets, systemic neglect, and the ideology of “rugged individualism” are eroding those protections.

Child labor violations surged 31 percent between 2019 and 2024, according to the Department of Labor.

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December 24, 2025 12:50 PM
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eduroam – Student Broadband Access | by Doug Dawson | POTs & PANs

eduroam – Student Broadband Access | by Doug Dawson | POTs & PANs | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it
The largest WiFi network you may have never heard about is eduroam. This is a global WiFi roaming network operated by and for the educational community. The eduroam network is huge and is currently available at 38,000 locations in over 100 countries and territories. In 2024, the network logged 8.4 billion authentications of users joining…
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Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
December 24, 2025 12:59 AM
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Americans Won’t Ban Kids from Social Media. What Can We Do Instead? | by Jay Caspian Kang | NewYorker.com

Americans Won’t Ban Kids from Social Media. What Can We Do Instead? | by Jay Caspian Kang | NewYorker.com | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it

Jay Caspian Kang on Australia’s social-media ban for young people under sixteen, on free speech, and on the U.S. movement to restrict kids’ access to technology.

 

Free-speech norms and powerful tech companies make legal restrictions unlikely—but social changes are already taking place.

 

et’s say, for the sake of the following discussion, that we agree on the following:

  1. Teen-agers have First Amendment rights.
  2. Social media has become the place where people, especially young people, express their views.
  3. Social media is very bad for kids.

The question, given these facts, is: How much are we willing to restrict the free speech of teen-agers in order to protect them from the ills propagated by social-media companies?

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December 23, 2025 5:42 PM
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'Cruel, Unnecessary, and Irresponsible': Trump Admin to Resume Garnishing Wages of Student Borrowers

'Cruel, Unnecessary, and Irresponsible': Trump Admin to Resume Garnishing Wages of Student Borrowers | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it
One group noted "the irony of a billionaire being in charge of collecting pennies from debtors."
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Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
December 31, 2025 5:53 PM
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Libraries and Schools Urge FCC to Restore Off-Campus Wi-Fi Support | by Jericho Casper | BroadbandBreakfast.com

Libraries and Schools Urge FCC to Restore Off-Campus Wi-Fi Support | by Jericho Casper | BroadbandBreakfast.com | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it

WASHINGTON, Dec. 30, 2025 – Library and education advocates urged the Federal Communications Commission Tuesday to reconsider its rollback of federal support for off-campus Wi-Fi hotspots and school bus connectivity.

 

The filings respond to petitions for reconsideration of the FCC’s Sept. 30 order rescinding earlier decisions that had allowed schools and libraries to use E-Rate funds for hotspot lending and Wi-Fi on school buses.

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December 31, 2025 4:43 AM
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Q&A: 2025 National Teacher of the Year | by Kim Kobersmith | DailyYonder.com

Q&A: 2025 National Teacher of the Year | by Kim Kobersmith | DailyYonder.com | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it

Ashlie Crosson was named the 2025 National Teacher of the Year for the Council of Chief State School Officers. A first-generation college student, she teaches English and journalism in rural Mifflin County, Pennsylvania, where she also grew up.

 

Our conversation below covers the importance of a global education in rural schools, the value of school journalism programs, and the pleasures of returning home.

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December 30, 2025 1:27 AM
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The Supreme Court Just Opened the Door to a New Era of Book Bans | by Suzette Baker and Amanda Jones | Time.com

The Supreme Court Just Opened the Door to a New Era of Book Bans | by Suzette Baker and Amanda Jones | Time.com | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it

The Supreme Court’s inaction hands governments new power to pull titles, and puts Americans’ First Amendment rights at risk.

 

Imagine that you decided to go to your local library to check out a book but you couldn’t find it on the shelf. You ask the librarian for help locating it, but they inform you it’s not available—not because someone else has checked it out, but because the government has physically removed it after deciding they don’t want you to read it.

 

This isn’t the plot of a dystopian novel, it’s the reality that the U.S. Supreme Court has allowed in its recent decision to not hear arguments in the book ban caseLeila Green Little et al. v. Llano County. In leaving the Fifth Circuit ruling in place,

 

SCOTUS effectively granted state and local governments in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas the authority to determine what materials you can and cannot read. This means people in these states do not have the same First Amendment rights as the rest of the country. And that should raise alarm for everyone. 

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December 28, 2025 4:16 AM
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The Germanic Invaders Of England - 1. The Jutes | DarkAgesHistory.com

The Germanic Invaders Of England - 1. The Jutes | DarkAgesHistory.com | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it

The story of the Jutes in Britain is an often overlooked chapter in the island’s early Dark Age history. While the Angles and Saxons tend to dominate narratives of post-Roman Britain, the Jutes played a significant role in shaping the cultural and political landscape of what would eventually become England.

Origins and Migration

The Jutes were one of the Germanic tribes that settled in Britain after the departure of the Romans in the 5th century CE. According to the Venerable Bede, an 8th-century English monk and historian, the Jutes were one of the three most powerful Germanic nations to settle in Britain, alongside the Angles and Saxons.

 

Traditionally, the Jutes were believed to have originated from the Jutland peninsula in modern-day Denmark. However, recent archaeological evidence has cast doubt on this assumption. Analysis of grave goods from the period shows strong links between East Kent, southern Hampshire, and the Isle of Wight, but little connection to Jutland. Some historians now suggest that the Jutes who migrated to Britain may have come from northern Francia or Frisia (now the Netherlands) instead.

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December 27, 2025 11:24 PM
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The Germanic Invaders Of England – 3. The Saxons | DarkAgesNews.com

The Germanic Invaders Of England – 3. The Saxons | DarkAgesNews.com | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it

The Coming of the Saxons

Traditional accounts, such as those provided by the 8th-century monk Bede, paint a dramatic picture of the Saxon arrival. According to Bede, the first significant influx occurred in 449 AD, when a British king (possibly named Vortigern) invited Germanic mercenaries to help defend against the Picts and Scots.

 

However, modern historians and archaeologists paint a more complex picture. Evidence suggests that Germanic peoples had been settling in Britain since at least the 3rd century AD, often as Roman auxiliaries. The “invasion” was likely a gradual process of migration and settlement rather than a single, dramatic event.

 

The Saxons, originating from what is now northern Germany and the Netherlands, were one of the main groups of these Germanic settlers. They were joined by the Angles from southern Denmark and the Jutes from Jutland. Together, these groups would come to be known as the Anglo-Saxons, though the term “Saxon” was often used more broadly to refer to all these Germanic settlers.

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December 27, 2025 4:34 AM
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The Afrofuturism of Kendrick Lamar | by Nettrice Gaskins | Medium.com

Raise my hands to a fallen sky, I fantasize
Me jumpin’ planets immortalized, I correspond…

 

…But I live in circadian rhythms of a shooting star — K. Lamar, “6:16 in LA”

 

Zeitgeist refers to a defining spirit or mood of a particular period of history as shown by the ideas and beliefs of the time. It’s one of my favorite words and concepts. As a PhD student in 2011 my research investigated a broad, transnational movement of diasporic African people working to attend to the prevailing spirit of an age.

 

Mark Dery coined the term “afrofuturism” to capture this movement in his 1994 essay titled “Black to the Future,” which explored why so few Black Americans wrote science fiction, a genre whose “close encounters with the Other — the stranger in a strange land” seem uniquely suited to the concerns of Black people around the world.

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December 25, 2025 11:35 PM
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Popular Christmas Traditions That Have Pagan Roots | by Ainsley Brown | AllThatsInteresting.com

Popular Christmas Traditions That Have Pagan Roots | by Ainsley Brown | AllThatsInteresting.com | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it

Christmas traditions like stockings and yule logs are beloved parts of the holiday season today, but they actually date back to pre-Christian Europe.

 

Aside from Easter, Christmas is perhaps Christianity’s most sacred date. As a celebration of Christ’s birth, the holiday is often rife with nativity scenes and holy hymns. However, many of the most beloved Christmas traditions actually have pagan roots.

 

Wreaths, mistletoe, holly, and yule logs all date back to pre-Christian times. Mistletoe was sacred to the Druids of the ancient Celtic world, and yule logs may have Baltic or Germanic origins.

 

Even the day we celebrate Christmas, Dec. 25, has nothing to do with the birth of Christ. The Bible never says when Jesus was born — and it likely wasn’t even during the winter. Instead, Dec. 25 may have been selected as the official date for Christmas to coincide with the pagan Saturnalia celebrations of ancient Rome, making it easier for Romans to accept Christianity as it spread through the empire nearly 2,000 years ago.

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December 25, 2025 3:32 AM
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Results from the 2025 annual loon count indicate the population in Maine is healthy and stable | by Nora Saks, Maine Public | WBUR News | WBUR.org

Results from the 2025 annual loon count indicate the population in Maine is healthy and stable | by Nora Saks, Maine Public | WBUR News | WBUR.org | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it
The latest numbers from the 42nd annual loon count indicate the population is stable and healthy. And since this kind of waterfowl is an indicator species, that's good news all around, says Tracy Hart, a wildlife ecologist with Maine Audubon.
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December 25, 2025 1:18 AM
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How 'Yule' went from animal sacrifice to Christmas carols | by Natalie Escobar | NPR.org

How 'Yule' went from animal sacrifice to Christmas carols | by Natalie Escobar | NPR.org | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it
Today, people consider "Yule" synonymous with "Christmas." But centuries ago, Yule meant something different — a pagan mid-winter festival, dating back to pre-Christian Germanic people.
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Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
December 24, 2025 10:40 PM
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NC County Board Dissolves Library Panel Over Refusal to Ban Trans Book | by Chris Walker | Truthout.org

NC County Board Dissolves Library Panel Over Refusal to Ban Trans Book | by Chris Walker | Truthout.org | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it
The action by county commissioners “shows a blatant disregard for the expertise of librarians,” one critic said.
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Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
December 24, 2025 4:20 AM
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Federal student loans are changing. Here's what to expect in 2026 | by Cory Turner | WBUR.org

Federal student loans are changing. Here's what to expect in 2026 | by Cory Turner | WBUR.org | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it
The SAVE Plan is ending and repayment options will change dramatically in the new year.
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Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
December 23, 2025 6:03 PM
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Opinion | CBS Killing a '60 Minutes' CECOT Segment Shows Why We Must Back Independent Media | by Dean Baker | CEPR.net

Opinion | CBS Killing a '60 Minutes' CECOT Segment Shows Why We Must Back Independent Media | by Dean Baker | CEPR.net | Schools + Libraries + Museums + STEAM + Digital Media Literacy + Cyber Arts + Connected to Fiber Networks | Scoop.it
If we want to get responsible media that does its job in reporting on the deeds and misdeeds of the rich and powerful, we need to look to fundamentally restructure the media.
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