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Directors
The Burke Institute Board of Directors
consists primarily of educators, technologists, and civic leaders. The
board focuses on practical aspects of leading the organization, including
fundraising and strategic partnerships.
James Burke
Perhaps best known as the host and producer of many television series,
including Connections and The Day the Universe Changed,
James Burke has had a career as interdisciplinary as his television shows. An
author, journalist, science historian, translator, and frequent keynote
speaker, Burke's experience might best be summed up by the term "educator."
Working with various media, from radio to television to print, he has
brought the world a unique perspective on how all of history is interrelated
and interdependent. Burke was educated at Oxford University and has been
awarded honorary doctorates in for his work in communicating science and
technology.
Bill Fisher
Bill Fisher has
served as president of the Special Libraries Association as well as associate
dean of Graduate Studies & Research, San Jose State University, and
professor and associate director of the SJSU School of Library and Information
Science. He earned his doctorate at the University of Southern California.
Fisher has published widely on business and management.
Patrick McKercher
Patrick McKercher teaches
courses in writing, technology, and the environment at the University
of California, Santa Cruz. He serves on several educational technology
advisory boards and has long been involved in using technology for outreach
to public schools—particularly through the investigation of virtual reality
spaces for educational exploration, collaboration, and mentoring.
Margarita Quihuis
Margarita
Quihuis is managing director of Open Capital Network, a nonprofit
organization focused on creating and facilitating innovations that help
improve the quality of life for the consumers of developing countries.
She is frequently a featured speaker at a variety of domestic and international
conferences and has served as a consultant to the U.S. State Department
on entrepreneurship. Prior to serving at Open Capital Network, Quihuis
was a venture partner for NewVista Capital, a seed and early stage venture
fund focused on the information technology and enterprise software markets.
Previously, she was the executive director of the San Francisco-based
Women's Technology Cluster, specializing in helping launch woman-founded
high-tech companies.
Matthew Kaser
Matthew Kaser is a senior partner at Bell & Associates, a San Francisco
Patent Law Office, specializing in biotechnology, plant/agri-biotechnology,
and medical devices. He has wide experience in biotechnology IP issues
and has spent over twenty years in academic and industry scientific research.
His work has focused on the role of gene expression during vertebrate
growth and development, with particular emphasis on the effects of toxins
and radiation. He is on the Board of the Houston-based public interest
group Public Search, where he has advised on biotechnology, radiation,
and health issues. He is also on the Board of the Castro Valley Educational
Foundation (Alameda County, Calif.) and has been involved in projects
to promote science education in the school district.
Advisors
The Burke Institute's Board
of Advisors consists of leaders in various fields: educational technology,
the arts, the sciences, politics, and business. The board focuses on defining
a long-term vision for the organization.
James Burke
Perhaps best known as the host and producer of many television series,
including Connections and The Day the Universe Changed,
James Burke has had a career as interdisciplinary as his television shows. An
author, journalist, science historian, translator, and frequent keynote
speaker, Burke's experience might best be summed up by the term "educator."
Working with various media, from radio to television to print, he has
brought the world a unique perspective on how all of history is interrelated
and interdependent. Burke was educated at Oxford University and has been
awarded honorary doctorates in for his work in communicating science and
technology.
John Seely Brown
John Seely Brown has served as the chief scientist of Xerox Corporation and the director
of its Palo Alto Research Center (PARC). He has expanded the role of corporate
research to include such topics as organizational learning, ethnographies
of the workplace, complex adaptive systems, and techniques for unfreezing
the corporate mind. His personal research interests include digital culture,
ubiquitous computing, user-centering design, and organizational and individual
learning. A major focus of Brown's research over the years has been in
human learning and in the management of radical innovation. He has published
nearly a hundred scientific papers and a number of books, most recently
co-authoring The Social Life of Information.
Dee Dickenson
Dee Dickenson is chief learning officer and founder of New Horizons for Learning,
a nonprofit international education network based in Seattle, Washington.
She has been a school administrator and has taught on all levels, has
produced educational television and international conferences, as well
as consulted for Motorola, IBM, Microsoft, and Disney Interactive. Dickenson
is the editor of the book Creating the Future: Perspectives on Educational
Change, and she is co-author with Linda Campbell and Bruce Campbell
of the educational bestseller, Teaching and Learning Through Multiple
Intelligences, the first comprehensive adaptation of the theories
outlined in Dr. Howard Gardner's landmark book, Frames of Mind.
Doug Engelbart
Doug Engelbart has a 40-year track
record in predicting, designing, and implementing the future of organizational
computing. Co-founder of the Bootstrap Institute, Engelbart has authored
dozens of publications and generated 20 patents, including the patent
for the computer mouse. He is the recipient of many honors, notably the
Lemelson-MIT Prize and the National Medal of Technology, the highest award
for technological achievement the United States has to offer.
Jaron Lanier
Jaron Lanier is a computer
scientist, composer, visual artist, and author. Best known for his work
in virtual reality, he coined the term "virtual reality" and in the early
1980s founded VPL Research, the first company to sell virtual reality
products. In the late 1980s, he led the team that developed the first
implementations of multiperson virtual worlds using head-mounted displays,
as well as the first "avatars," or representations of users, within such
systems. More recently, Lanier has been lead scientist of the National
Tele-immersion Initiative, and is currently developing virtual reality
models of organs for surgical training. His most recent publication is
an essay in The New Humanists, edited by John Brockman.
Howard Rheingold
Howard Rheingold writes,
"I fell into the computer realm from the typewriter dimension, then plugged
my computer into my telephone and got sucked into the net." In earlier
years, his interest in the powers of the human mind led to Higher
Creativity and other books. He then started writing about life in
the WELL virtual community and ended up with a book about the cultural
and political implications of a new communications medium, The Virtual
Community. He was also editor of The Whole Earth Review
and The Millennium Whole Earth Catalog, as well as the first
executive editor of HotWired and founder of Electric Minds. Interest in
computers as mind-amplifiers led to Tools for Thought and Virtual
Reality. His most recent book is Smart Mobs: The Next Social
Revolution.
Jim Spohrer
Jim
Spohrer is chief technology officer of IBM Venture Capital Relations
Group, partnering with new ventures in IBM's emerging business areas.
Earlier, Spohrer directed the work of the Computer Science Foundations
Group at IBM's Almaden Research Center (ARC). Prior to IBM, he was a manager
and later a distinguished scientist of learning technology projects at
Apple's Advanced Technology Group, focusing on authoring tools, learning
platforms, and learning architectures. He has published broadly in the
areas of the future of technology, empirical studies of programmers, artificial
intelligence, authoring tools, online learning communities, intelligent
tutoring systems and student modeling, speech recognition and Markov modeling,
and new paradigms in using computers. Spohrer has also helped found two
nonprofit web sites: The Educational Object Exchange and WorldBoard: Associating
Information with Places.
David Thornburg
Dr. David Thornburg is Director of the Thornburg Center and Senior Fellow of the Congressional
Institute for the Future, helping to shape telecommunications and education
policy for the benefit of all learners. As one of the first employees
of the famed Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) in 1971, David took
part in the early stages of the personal computer revolution. He has been
interested in the educational applications of technology for many years,
with a special focus on the creative use of technology by students. In
addition to his lectures, he has appeared on PBS, CBC and numerous radio
and television programs throughout the Americas. David has authored numerous
books and received several awards for his work in the field of educational
technology. His latest book, Campfires in Cyberspace, explores the true
nature of the World Wide Web as a tool for learning.
His educational philosophy is based on the idea that students learn best
when they are constructors of their own knowledge. He also believes that
students who are taught in ways that honor their learning styles and dominant
intelligences retain the native engagement with learning with which they
entered school. A central theme of his work is that we must prepare students
for their future, not for our past. |
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