sábado, 29 de noviembre de 2025

AI Harm and Human Rights

The report AI Harm and Human Rights, published by ICAAD in collaboration with a law firm, offers a systematic framework that links the harms caused by artificial intelligence (AI) to fundamental human rights. 

It argues that although many AI-related “harm taxonomies” and incident databases exist, they rarely make explicit connections between AI-inflicted harms and violations of human rights. The report fills this gap by mapping ten core human rights against concrete examples of AI harms — such as biased algorithms in hiring or healthcare, invasive facial-recognition misuse, or deepfakes that undermine freedom of expression. 

By doing so, the report provides public and private actors — companies, governments, watchdogs — with a practical tool to evaluate whether a given AI system or deployment could infringe basic freedoms. The mapping table becomes a first step for organizations to identify risky AI uses. 

Crucially, the report warns that many businesses still treat human-rights concerns as irrelevant to their AI deployments — even in the face of growing evidence that AI can cause real, widespread harms.

Find the report on:

https://icaad.ngo/2025/09/29/ai-harm-and-human-rights/

Running Reality #History

Running Reality is an interactive digital platform that acts as a global, time-based historical map. It lets users explore the world’s history from around 3000 BC to the present by selecting any date and place and watching how borders, cities, civilizations, and events evolved over time. 

Through its browser interface, you can navigate a dynamic world map, view historical data on settlements, battles, rulers, objects, and more, all tied to specific moments in history. The platform is designed for students, teachers, researchers, and anyone curious about the past, and it includes educational tools specifically tailored for classroom use. 

Every historical “factoid” in Running Reality is backed by a verifiable citation, making the model transparent and academically reliable. What makes it unique is its ability to visualize history as a living timeline—allowing you to scroll through centuries, watch territories expand or disappear, and understand historical processes in a highly intuitive, interactive way.

Find Running Reality on:

https://www.runningreality.org/

sábado, 22 de noviembre de 2025

An Infographic Guide to Technology-facilitated Gender-based Violence (TFGBV)

Technology-facilitated gender-based violence (TFGBV) is an increasingly common issue affecting women and girls in many different ways. To help educators better understand this topic, a new infographic guide has been created. It uses simple, visual explanations to highlight what TFGBV looks like and why it matters in today’s digital world.

The guide includes 14 easy-to-read infographics that explore key ideas such as:

- the different forms TFGBV can take,

- how online and offline violence are connected,

- how TFGBV affects people differently depending on their identities and circumstances,

- what current data and research tell us,

- and how technology can be designed in safer, more ethical ways.

These infographics can be used in training sessions, classroom discussions, awareness campaigns, or any educational activity aimed at promoting safer digital environments. Each infographic comes with a short explanation that highlights its main points, making the material easy to understand and share.

This resource is ideal for teachers, school leaders, and anyone working with young people who wants to help build a more informed and respectful digital community.

Find it on: 

https://www.unfpa.org/sites/default/files/pub-pdf/An%20Infographic%20Guide%20to%20TFGBV.pdf

Teaching basic skills

New set of five guides that provide hands-on support on how schools and teachers can strengthen the teaching of basic skills through a whole school. They are developed to support the European Commission’s Basic Skills Action Plan, which aims to boost teaching and learning, support educators and enable supportive environments. 

The materials offer practical advice based on a whole school approach, helping schools provide effective and inclusive support for all learners at three levels: 

Universal support: Strategies that benefit all learners, such as engaging learning materials and supportive school environments. 

Targeted support: Focused actions for learners who may need extra help, including small-group activities, adapted teaching methods or additional monitoring. 

Individual support: Personalised interventions tailored to learners at risk or with specific needs.

(Source European School Education Platform) 

sábado, 15 de noviembre de 2025

NotebookLM, a versatile assistant for ESL teachers

NotebookLM offers English-language teachers a powerful and flexible tool for supporting students who are learning English as a foreign language. 

By allowing teachers to upload texts, articles, worksheets, or classroom materials, the platform automatically generates explanations, summaries, vocabulary lists, and comprehension questions tailored to the learners’ level. This helps teachers create personalised resources quickly and adapt authentic materials for different groups. NotebookLM also enables students to explore the content interactively, asking questions in real time and receiving clear, contextualised answers that reinforce understanding. 

For teachers, it becomes an efficient assistant for preparing lessons, designing activities, and differentiating instruction, while for learners it creates a more engaging environment where they can practise reading, listening, and speaking skills with guidance. In essence, NotebookLM enhances both teaching and learning by making high-quality language support accessible, dynamic, and easy to integrate into everyday classroom practice.

Getting started with NotebookLM is simple. After accessing the platform with a Google account, teachers can create a new “notebook” and upload the materials they want to work with—PDFs, Google Docs, web pages, or text files. Once the sources are added, NotebookLM automatically analyses them and becomes ready to answer questions or generate teaching resources based on the content. Teachers can then ask the tool to produce vocabulary exercises, reading-comprehension tasks, grammar explanations, or simplified versions of difficult texts. They can also share notebooks with students or colleagues, making it easy to organise collaborative learning. With just a few minutes of setup, English teachers gain a versatile assistant that supports lesson planning, scaffolding, and student autonomy.

https://notebooklm.google.com/

Musicmap

Musicmap is a powerful, beautifully designed tool for anyone who wants to understand, explore, and connect the vast landscape of popular music. It’s especially useful for music lovers, educators, researchers or anyone curious about how music evolved over time.

The project is based on more than seven years of research, drawing from over 200 sources. Its creator, Kwinten Crauwels, aimed to strike a balance between accuracy, clarity, and accessibility — so the map is detailed, but still easy to navigate. 

How it works

  • The map (called the “Carta”) is a 2D diagram: the vertical axis represents time (from past to present), and the horizontal axis groups “super-genres” (broad families of music). 
  • Genres are color-coded by their super-genres, and there are different types of links:
  • Parent links (showing where a genre comes from),
  • Influence links (how genres affect each other),
  • “Anti-links” (genres pushing back or reacting against others). 

When you click on a genre, a panel appears with:

  • Its name (and any synonyms)
  • Approximate year of origin
  • Which super-genre it belongs to (or if it's a hybrid)
  • A brief description (historical, social, musical) 
  • A playlist of example songs (usually 9–12) from different artists, helping you explore what that genre actually sounds like. 
  • A connectivity bar with other useful links or tools. 

Find this resource on:

https://musicmap.info/

domingo, 9 de noviembre de 2025

Teacher’s Essential Guide to Cyberbullying Prevention

This guide by Common Sense Education provides educators with a comprehensive, research-based approach to understanding and preventing cyberbullying in schools. It includes definitions of cyberbullying, the differences between offline and online bullying, real-world scenarios, prevention strategies, and ideas for classroom implementation.

The guide explains what cyberbullying is, how digital tools change the ways students interact, and why cyberbullying can be more complex than traditional forms of bullying. It offers actionable steps teachers can take: building a respectful classroom climate, creating digital safety rules, facilitating peer-to-peer support, integrating digital citizenship into lessons. Rather than only reacting to incidents, it emphasizes fostering a respectful online and offline environment, encouraging bystanders to act, and involving families and the community.

The guide includes discussion questions, scenario-based prompts, and links to further resources, making it practical for immediate implementation.

https://www.commonsense.org/education/articles/teachers-essential-guide-to-cyberbullying-prevention

ESLfriend.com

ESLfriend.com is an online platform offering free ESL resources, including handouts, lessons, activities, and full lesson-sets for English language teaching and learning. The site describes itself as providing materials ranging from daily conversation and grammar to business English and test preparation. 

One of the major strengths of ESLfriend is its breadth of content: there are materials for a variety of levels, topics and uses — from conversation starters to full lesson packs. For teachers, this means a ready-made resource library to draw on, reducing preparation time. For learners, the materials can offer extra practice outside class. Another plus is the free access to most of the materials, making it accessible for educators and students with limited budget.

The site also includes media-based lessons (reading passages, audio, discussion questions) which are useful for integrating skills (reading, speaking, listening) rather than only grammar.

Find it on:

https://eslfriend.com/

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