ACADEMIA
Internet2 Issues Call for 2010 Richard Rose Award Nominees
Award recognizes individual efforts to extend advanced networking benefits to broad education community
Internet2 today announced its call for nominations for the 2010 Richard Rose Award. The annual award, established in 2009, recognizes outstanding individual efforts aimed at extending the benefits of advanced networking to the broadest education community. The award will be presented at the Internet2 Spring 2010 Member Meeting in Arlington, Virginia to be held April 26-28, 2010. Nominations will be accepted until March 15, 2010.
Richard Rose (1947–2007) played an early and influential leadership role in Internet2's K20 Initiative, whose mission is to close the digital divide by bringing together Internet2’s advanced network and research university members with innovators from the nation's colleges, primary and secondary schools, libraries, museums and other educational institutions. This partnership extends new technologies, applications and rich, interactive educational content to everyone—no matter where they’re located.
"Richard helped to shape the K20 Initiative through his deep commitment and understanding of how advanced networking could revolutionize learning," said Louis Fox, director of the Internet2 K20 Initiative. Rose was the executive director of the University of Maryland Academic Telecommunications System and USM Office IT.
The Rose Award celebrates educators or technologists who have had a demonstrable impact on the K20 community through the bringing together of diverse communities around common goals and projects, and have accumulated a record of community accomplishments. The award also presents an important opportunity to recognize the achievements of leaders across all educational sectors who are working hard to ensure that students of all ages and locations have access to the most advanced networking resources available.
The awards judging committee includes Carol Willis, manager of the Texas Education Telecommunications Network and Richard Rose Award Recipient; Jennifer Oxenford, Strategic Planning Consultant for Mid-Atlantic Gigapop in Philadelphia for Internet2 (MAGPI) and Richard Rose Award Recipient; Louis Fox, director of the Internet2 K20 Initiative, chairs the committee.
For Richard Rose Award nomination details and more information, visit http://internet2.edu/rose/.
Internet2 today announced its call for nominations for the 2010 Richard Rose Award. The annual award, established in 2009, recognizes outstanding individual efforts aimed at extending the benefits of advanced networking to the broadest education community. The award will be presented at the Internet2 Spring 2010 Member Meeting in Arlington, Virginia to be held April 26-28, 2010. Nominations will be accepted until March 15, 2010.
Richard Rose (1947–2007) played an early and influential leadership role in Internet2's K20 Initiative, whose mission is to close the digital divide by bringing together Internet2’s advanced network and research university members with innovators from the nation's colleges, primary and secondary schools, libraries, museums and other educational institutions. This partnership extends new technologies, applications and rich, interactive educational content to everyone—no matter where they’re located.
"Richard helped to shape the K20 Initiative through his deep commitment and understanding of how advanced networking could revolutionize learning," said Louis Fox, director of the Internet2 K20 Initiative. Rose was the executive director of the University of Maryland Academic Telecommunications System and USM Office IT.
The Rose Award celebrates educators or technologists who have had a demonstrable impact on the K20 community through the bringing together of diverse communities around common goals and projects, and have accumulated a record of community accomplishments. The award also presents an important opportunity to recognize the achievements of leaders across all educational sectors who are working hard to ensure that students of all ages and locations have access to the most advanced networking resources available.
The awards judging committee includes Carol Willis, manager of the Texas Education Telecommunications Network and Richard Rose Award Recipient; Jennifer Oxenford, Strategic Planning Consultant for Mid-Atlantic Gigapop in Philadelphia for Internet2 (MAGPI) and Richard Rose Award Recipient; Louis Fox, director of the Internet2 K20 Initiative, chairs the committee.
For Richard Rose Award nomination details and more information, visit http://internet2.edu/rose/.