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Sunday, March 27, 2022

Five New, Notable Education Products From SxSW Edu - Forbes

A few weeks ago, I had the privilege of moderating a panel at SxSW Edu in Austin.

And like all good education conferences, SxSW had a large exhibition space in which education companies could share their wares and meet and greet. Naturally, I walked that hall a few times. Of the dozens of companies and products I saw, here are five that stood out to me as unique and potentially impactful.

Alee – Alee produces in-depth, high quality teaching supplements and supports around great literature, great books. You may remember those. They were the original education technology.

What I like about Alee is that, though it’s a tech-enabled product, it’s focused on actual books – helping teachers be better at opening their pages and life lessons to students. I also like that it’s focused on teaching, helping teachers be better – not adding content, but enhancing quality of proven content. More education products and companies should have that focus.

PIPs Rewards – PIPs is a community, civic and good-works engagement system for colleges and college students. It incentives and rewards doing good things from recycling to tutoring, helping students set good examples and create strong habits. It’s sunshine and apple sauce.

I like PIPs not just because its focus is on doing good and being good but because it may offer real and long-term potential to the persistent issues of student engagement, inclusion and persistence. It’s up and running at the University of Colorado, Boulder and if colleges figure out how to use it, if they can unlock its potential, PIPs is probably the type of deal where everyone wins.

NextGen News – NextGen is an online content creation platform and service that enlists young people to deliver news to young people, with messages and ideas specifically for young people. Think of a teacher-created, age-appropriate newscast done by students, grades three to five and six to eight.

I remember seeing platforms and ideas such as NextGen before – news for students, by students. I still like it as a concept and think anything with the potential to increase engagement and interest with current events can be a valuable educational tool. Not only that, it’s fun. School should be fun.

Anton – This K-6 learning app is the rage in Europe. It’s simple, clean and engaging and, this is important, it’s free for teachers. Not even ads. It’s not just a content hub though, as it allows teachers to assign lessons to student groups and track their progress.

It’s difficult for education companies, and startups especially, to prove their products work. But Anton’s use rates overseas are eye-catching. So, something must be working. They are new to U.S. and I like the idea of trying something that’s already proven instead of building from scratch all the time. Moreover, because it’s big in Europe, the built-in language versatility is a great value too.

DisruptED – DisruptED is an early reading and literacy product embedded with AR and VR tools. Young readers use headsets - or folded boxes that snug over the face and use an existing smartphone – then they use DisruptED’s books. When the books are read though the AR/VR devices, the books come alive. Creatures run, fire tucks roll – it’s like reading a book while being inside it.

I like it because it’s fun and addictive and a great use of AR technology to add unusual richness to a fundamental learning block. It makes books active and exciting at an important time for young learners.

Moreover, I also like that the DisruptED technology is not connected – they don’t log data on their readers and you don’t need to access their systems and platforms to use it. Get the books, connect your tech and you’re good. Give me more education technology that requires neither connection nor subscription, stuff that can work well on its own.

Because I saw these products and companies at the education equivalent of a trade show, I don’t have much insight about the companies themselves – only their products.

But products still matter and these products are pretty great. Having seen and piloted and written about hundreds of education product and tools and platforms and solutions, maybe that means something. Even if it doesn’t, it is great to see ideas and solutions make their way to the marketplace.

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Five New, Notable Education Products From SxSW Edu - Forbes
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Wilson Drives in Five, Hofacker K's Eight in Clarkson's 7-4 Win at Union - Clarkson Golden Knights

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Wilson Drives in Five, Hofacker K's Eight in Clarkson's 7-4 Win at Union - Clarkson Golden Knights
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Five things to watch for in the Canadian business world in the coming week - Coast Reporter

TORONTO — Five things to watch for in the Canadian business world in the coming week:

Budget date?

Observers will be watching Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland for a date for the upcoming federal budget. The government spending plan comes after the minority Liberal government secured the support of the NDP last week in exchange for promises for movement on pharmacare and dental care.

Dollarama results

Dollarama will release its financial results for its fourth quarter before the start of trading on Wednesday and hold a conference call with financial analysts. In its third quarter, the discount retailer saw its profit rise more than 10 per cent compared with a year earlier as its sales rose 5.5 per cent. 

BlackBerry results

BlackBerry Ltd. will report its fourth-quarter financial results after the close of trading on Thursday and hold a conference call with financial analysts. In its third-quarter results the company said its net loss increased to US$144 million as revenues fell 32 per cent. The loss included a non-cash accounting adjustment to the fair value of the convertible debentures as a result of market and trading conditions. It also lost US$33 million on an adjusted basis, compared with an adjusted profit of US$58 million a year earlier.

Economic report card

Statistics Canada will give its reading on how the economy fared to start the year. The agency will release gross domestic product by industry figures for January on Thursday. Its preliminary estimate for January was that the economy grew 0.2 per cent. StatCan said the economy grew 4.6 per cent last year and at an annualized rate of 6.7 per cent in the fourth quarter.

Calgary home sales

The Calgary Real Estate Board is expected to release is March home sales figures on Friday. The city hit a sales record in February as the number of homes changing hands surged 80 per cent and new listings climbed 63 per cent. The average home price also rose 13 per cent to $547,720.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 27, 2022.

The Canadian Press

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Five things to watch for in the Canadian business world in the coming week - Coast Reporter
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Johnny Gaudreau puts up career-high five points as Calgary Flames crush Edmonton Oilers - The Globe and Mail

Calgary Flames center Elias Lindholm, left, celebrates his goal with left wing Johnny Gaudreau during the third period against the Edmonton Oilers at Scotiabank Saddledome on March 26.Sergei Belski/USA TODAY Sports via Reuters

A big offensive display propelled two Calgary Flames players into the top five in NHL scoring.

Matthew Tkachuk had two goals and two assists and Johnny Gaudreau had a career-high five assists to lead the Flames to a wild 9-5 victory over the Edmonton Oilers Saturday.

Gaudreau’s 90 points on the season ranks him third behind Connor McDavid (97) and Leon Draisaitl (94), who netted a hat trick in defeat. Tkachuk’s 82 points has him tied for fifth.

Both players are riding hot streaks. Tkachuk (four goals, seven assists) and Gaudreau (three goals, eight assists) have combined for 22 points in the last four games.

“The big line was the difference,” said Flames coach Darryl Sutter. “They had a good night and they’ve been good at five on five all year. There’s something to be said about the difference between goals for and goals against when you’re on the ice.”

“That was a lot of fun,” said Gaudreau. “I’ve been here for a long time and this is the most competitive the Battle of Alberta has been since I’ve been here.”

Gaudreau and Elias Lindholm, who centres the line and scored twice Saturday, are tied for the NHL lead at plus-49. Tkachuk is fourth at plus-42.

It’s a distinct point of separation between Calgary’s big duo and the big duo of its provincial rival. Gaudreau and Lindholm were both plus-four on Saturday.

Meanwhile Draisaitl was a minus-four – despite the three goals and an assist – as was McDavid, which was a career-worst for him. On the season, Draisaitl is plus-16 and McDavid is plus-14.

Tied 4-4 early in the second, the Flames took the lead for good on a pair of goals less than three minutes apart from Tkachuk.

At 5:06, Gaudreau muscled his way past Evan Bouchard to retrieve a loose puck. He then spun and sent a pass into the slot to a wide-open Tkachuk, who sent a shot through Mikko Koskinen’s pads. That ended the night for Koskinen, who was replaced by Mike Smith after giving up five goals on 12 shots.

“He plays a complete game, it’s not about goals and assists always,” Sutter said about Gaudreau. “You’ve got to play the whole game. He’s our best checker. I’ve said that lots.”

It didn’t start off any better for Smith. At 7:39, McDavid’s turnover allowed Gaudreau to find Tkachuk in behind the defence.

“It’s not on our goalies. It’s on us,” said Draisaitl. “It’s an off night. Not good enough, obviously. Starts with me. I have to be a lot better.”

Draisaitl’s third of the game at 9:18 of the second on a two-man advantage, his 47th of the season, brought to the ice over 50 hats from the boisterous Oilers supporters scattered throughout the red-clad crowd.

But they would get no closer in the game played before a raucous crowd of 19,289, Calgary’s first sellout since Feb. 21, 2020 against Boston.

There were competing chants of “Here we Go Oilers,” responded to with “Oilers Suck” early in the game. Then in the third came chants of “We want 10″ from the home fans who all rose to their feet as the game approached the final buzzer.

“Pretty cool when you got a standing ovation with a minute or two to play,” Tkachuk acknowledged.

Mikael Backlund also scored twice for Calgary (40-17-8) with Chris Tanev, Oliver Kylington and Dillon Dube adding one each.

Derick Brassard and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins rounded out the scoring for Edmonton (36-25-5). McDavid had two assists, both on the power play.

Jacob Markstrom had 26 saves for Calgary to improve to 31-12-7. Despite giving up five goals, he had a huge stop in the third that was crucial.

After he robbed Evander Kane in front, the Flames pushed the puck up ice with Gaudreau setting up Lindholm for his second of the night to make it 7-5.

“I told Marky after the game, that’s the difference,” said Sutter. “There’s lots of goalies where the coaches yank them, or the goalie doesn’t play very good after that. Difference in a lot of teams are big saves and bad goals.”

Smith got the loss to fall to 7-9-2. He stopped 22 of the 26 shots he faced.

“We’ve spent the last five weeks or so trying to improve certain areas of our game, and I thought we got away from it tonight and we paid the price,” said Oilers coach Jay Woodcroft, who is 13-7-2 since taking over for Dave Tippett. “That stings. It’s nine even-strength goals against. Not good enough.”

The two provincial rivals split their four-game season series.

Edmonton wasted little time jumping into a 1-0 lead when Brassard deflected Bouchard’s point shot past Markstrom just 32 seconds into the game.

But the Oilers’ only lead of the night lasted less than five minutes.

Lindholm was sent in alone on a pass from Tkachuk and he went to his backhand, putting a shot under the crossbar.

The Flames than surged in front on goals 16 seconds apart from Tanev and Backlund.

Notes: Noah Hanifin played his 500th NHL game. At 25 years and 60 days, he’s the fifth youngest defenceman to reach that milestone in NHL history and youngest since 1994 … Flames centre Ryan Carpenter made his debut after being acquired from Chicago at the trade deadline. He centred a line with Milan Lucic and Trevor Lewis.

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Johnny Gaudreau puts up career-high five points as Calgary Flames crush Edmonton Oilers - The Globe and Mail
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Canadiens at Devils, March 27, 2022: Five things you should know - Montreal Gazette

Sam Montembeault will get the call in net with Montreal out of the playoffs and Jake Allen deserves a night off after making a career-high 49 saves against Leafs on Saturday night.

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The matchup: This is the second game in a back-to-back situation for each team, but it wasn’t planned that way. This game was originally scheduled for December, but was postponed because of COVID. The Canadiens were at home Saturday and shocked the Toronto Maple Leafs 4-2. The Devils were in Washington, where they dropped a 4-3 decision to the Capitals. This is the second of three meetings between the teams with the two worst records in the Eastern Conference. The Devils were 7-1 winners at the Bell Centre on Feb. 8 in Dominique Ducharme’s final game as head coach.

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It’s Sam’s turn: If Montreal was still in playoff contention — they were officially eliminated Friday when Washington beat Buffalo — you’d probably see Jake Allen make his sixth consecutive start. But the Canadiens aren’t going anywhere and Allen deserves a night off after he made a career-high 49 saves against the Leafs. Sam Montembeault will get the call and he’s hoping to erase the memory of his last start on March 15 against the Arizona Coyotes. He gave up four goals on 11 shots before he was pulled after the first period. He has a 7-13-5 record with a 3.71 goals-against average and .894 save percentage.

Missed opportunity for Hammond: It’s unfortunate Andrew Hammond was injured when the Canadiens traded him to the Devils last week because he might have stepped into the starting role in New Jersey. Instead, he’s on the injured reserve list along with No. 1 Mackenzie Blackwood (heel) and veteran Jonathan Bernier (hip). Nico Daws, a rookie from Germany, has captured the No. 1 role and he has a 7-7-0 record with a 3.06 goals-against  average. The Devils other healthy goaltender is journeyman Jon Gillies. He has a 3-10-0 record with a 3.80 GAA, but one of his wins was that Feb. 8 game in Montreal, where he stopped 30 of 31 shots.

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Injury bug hits Canadiens again: Montreal will probably be looking for some help from the farm as they embark on a four-game road trip. Forwards Michael Pezzetta and Tyler Pitlick both left Saturday’s game with injuries and the Canadiens are short of bodies unless they are quick healers. The only extra forward for the Toronto game was Mathieu Perreault and that means a call-up from Laval unless Martin St. Louis wants to go with 11 forwards and seven defenceman. The Canadiens will also hit the road without defensive coach Luke Richardson. He turned 53 Saturday, but didn’t have much to celebrate as he entered the NHL’s COVID protocol. Alex Burrows took over took over Richardson’s duties.

Former Canadiens struggling: P.K. Subban is in the final season of that eight-year, $72-million contract he signed with the Canadiens and it’s a sure bet he’ll moving on after this season. The 32-year-old Subban has been relegated to the third pairing in New Jersey and the only special teams action he sees in on the penalty-kill. He has five goals and 16 assists in 62 games and is minus-7. Tomas Tatar, a perennial 20-goal scorer who signed a two-year contract with the Devils as a free agent after the Canadiens let him walk, has 12 goals and 14 assists. Jesper Bratt is New Jersey’s top scorer with 68 points, including 22 goals. Jack Hughes also has 22 goals and 52 points.

phickey@postmedia.com

twitter.com/zababes1

  1. Canadiens goaltender Jake Allen (34) is hugged by teammates after defeating the Toronto Maple Leafs in Montreal on Saturday, March 26, 2022.

    Canadiens out of playoffs, but beating Leafs at home always feels good

  2. Defenceman Jordan Harris played four seasons at Northeastern University after being selected by the Canadiens in the third round of the 2018 NHL Draft.

    Canadiens sign defenceman Jordan Harris to NHL entry-level contract

  3. The Canadiens announced shortly before Saturday night's game at the Bell Centre against the Toronto Maple Leafs that assistant coach Luke Richardson has been placed on the NHL's COVID-19 protocol list

    Canadiens' Luke Richardson enters NHL COVID-19 protocol

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    Canadiens at Devils, March 27, 2022: Five things you should know - Montreal Gazette
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    Friday, March 25, 2022

    Five headlines for Friday morning - MooseJawToday.com - Moose Jaw Today

    Here are 5 stories we are highlighting this morning.

    1. Rare fin whale found dead on remote beach in British Columbia

    2. Canada to hike oil, gas output by 300,000 barrels a day to help displace Russian fuel

    3. Ukraine says Moscow is forcibly taking civilians to Russia

    4. Mosquito net with new insecticide reduces malaria cases in Africa: study

    5. Canada's Kerri Einarson closes in on women's world curling championship playoffs

    For all the latest national and international news, as well as sports, keep visiting MooseJawToday.com and scroll down our page for the headlines.

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    Pierre Poilievre promises to ban oil from ‘dirty dictators' within five years of being elected - National Post

    The bulk of that volume comes from Saudi Arabia, from which Canada imported 73,600 barrels of crude oil per day

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    Conservative leadership candidate Pierre Poilievre promises to ban all overseas oil imports within five years of being elected prime minister while also removing government red tape he says hampers the construction of a west-to-east pipeline.

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    “Buying overseas oil from polluting dictatorships is terrible for our environment. It exports our jobs, our money and our pollution to countries with poor ecological standards,” Poilievre said during a campaign tour in Saint John, N.B.

    “Instead, let us bring home the jobs, money and business to the most environmentally responsible energy sector in the world here in Canada,” the Conservative MP added.

    Though the vast majority of Canadian crude oil imports are from the United States, almost a quarter  (126,000 barrels per day in 2020) originate from overseas countries, according to the Canada Energy Regulator (CER).

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    The bulk of that volume is from Saudi Arabia, from which Canada imported 73,600 barrels of crude oil per day. In 2020, Canada also imported over 23,000 barrels of crude oil per day from Nigeria and 16,000 from Norway.

    During his speech, Poilievre said the overseas ban is mostly aimed at countries run by “polluting dictatorships”

    “It’s crazy that we live in a country that has these vast resources, that could take money out of the pockets of dirty dictators and put it in the pocket of everyday Canadians, that is more environmentally friendly, and is ethical — and we just don’t do it,” Poilievre said.

    He also accused the Liberals and the NDP, who reached an agreement this week that could keep Justin Trudeau in power until 2025, of only supporting the oil industry “as long as it is foreign oil.”

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    To compensate the drop in crude oil imports, Poilievre told New Brunswickers he would double Newfoundland’s offshore oil production.

    He also promised to remove the red tape that he says prevents companies from developing west-to-east energy pipelines (the “best option”) and facilitate rail transportation project.

    Poilievre’s campaign says supporting Newfoundland and Labrador government’s plan to more than double oil production to 650,000 barrels per day from 244,000 will in itself compensate for the drop in overseas imports.

    His government would support that increase by repealing Trudeau’s controversial Bill C-69, which forces Canada’s energy regulator to consider the impact on human health, local communities and the environment when evaluating future infrastructure projects.

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    He also promises to “quickly” approve “environmentally responsible” expansions of the province’s offshore oil industry, namely by removing “government gatekeepers” — red tape.

    A key part of Poilievre’s plan to increase oil production in Atlantic Canada is Irving Oil’s refinery, which imported over half of its crude oil from non-United States sources between 2018 and 2020, according to CER data.

    “Irving Oil’s refinery capacity is currently 320,000 barrels per day. Doubling Newfoundland’s production (as planned) would completely displace overseas oil,” Poilievre said, adding that the province’s own projections say production can reach 650,000 barrels daily by 2030.

    “That is an enormous amount, and one that would keep gas tanks full and heating prices lower for the whole country.”

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    The Conservative MP also reaffirmed his commitment to help move oil from western Canada to the east coast by facilitating a new west-to-east national pipeline.

    “We will remove government gatekeepers at home and stop paying dictators abroad. Consumers will know when they fill up their tanks they are providing paycheques for Canadians, not money for despots. Canadians will take back control of their lives in the freest country on earth,” he said.

    Poilievre’s promises come as Canada banned imports of Russian oil products as a sanction against President Vladimir Putin’s decision to invade Ukraine nearly one month ago.

    Canada has not imported any crude oil from Russia since 2020, and only three per cent of our crude imports were from there in 2019.

    Poilievre also called upon the Liberal government to “immediately” approve the Bay du Nord project, which would use a floating production, storage and offloading vessel to develop an oil field in the Flemish Pass.

    Norwegian oil company Equinor is behind the project, which it says can produce up to 200,000 barrels daily.

    The Trudeau government has repeatedly delayed a final decision, which needs approval from Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault. A decision is now expected by mid-April.

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    Pierre Poilievre promises to ban oil from ‘dirty dictators' within five years of being elected - National Post
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    Take Five: The last surviving dove - Financial Post

    Breadcrumb Trail Links PMN Technology PMN Business Author of the article: Article content Of all the central banks which unt...