tailieunhanh - Departing Thoughts From an NIJ Director

Advanced digital competence: Learning strategies require the confident and critical use of ICT and an informed and critical attitude towards interactive media and digital information. Adolescents especially often lack these skills. Teachers need assistance in supplying their students with the necessary advanced digital skills to safely use social media environments. Special needs: Though Learning supports different learning paces and cognitive styles, thus generally empowering learners, it can also create and increase difficulties for students with physical or cognitive disabilities, or special learning needs. For example, text-based collaboration and knowledge building activities with wikis and blogs can. | I m proudest of the fact that when people around the J country say involved with something everyone knows it s of that NIJ is ì ỉỉiii. Ki Departing Thoughts From an NIJ Director high quality and has met high standards. Photo Jim Johnson Photography Professor Alfred Blumstein interviews Jeremy Travis on the occasion of Travis departure from NIJ. Photo Jim Johnson Photography. NIJ Director Jeremy Travis recently announced that he will be leaving the Institute after 5 2 years to become a Senior Fellow at the Urban Institute in Washington . On the afternoon of February 18 Mr. Travis sat down to discuss his tenure with esteemed criminologist Alfred Blumstein the J. Erik Jonsson University Professor of Urban Systems and Operations Research at the H. John Heinz III School of Public Policy and Management at Carnegie Mellon University. Professor Blumstein is a former dean of the Heinz School and is the Director of the National Consortium on Violence Research. What follows is an excerpt of the conversation between Mr. Travis and Professor Blumstein. AB Jeremy many of us are sorry to learn that you re leaving after one of the most impressive tenures as NIJ director. I think the world outside is really impressed with what s happened and what s been accomplished. What are you most proud of JT I m most proud of establishing NIJ s place in the world as an organization that s committed to science committed to independent research activities and particularly committed to finding relationships that are productive between researchers and practitioners. AB I think that s widely recognized as an important accomplishment. What s your sense of how likely that transformation is to continue What are some of the threats you see to its continuing And how do we ensure that it will continue JT Well the good news is that at the local level we are seeing new relationships between researchers and practitioners and policymakers that can t be stopped. And those relationships are evolving and .