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For Immediate Release
March 20, 2002
Contact:
617-618-2109
Alison Cohen
acohen@edc.org
EDC Elects Charles Benton and Linda Roberts to Board of Trustees
Advocates enhance EDC's focus on using technology for education and problem solving
NEWTON, MA – Charles
Benton and Linda G. Roberts-two of the country's leading advocates for
the effective use of technology in education and society-have been elected
to the Board of Trustees of Education Development Center, Inc. (EDC).
Benton is the Chairman of the Benton Foundation in Washington, DC and
Roberts is a former Senior Adviser on Technology to the U.S. Secretary
of Education.
Benton has devoted
his career as a foundation executive, in government service and in business
to the field of public interest communications. He was the chairman of
the first White House Conference on Library and Information Services
and a member of the Presidential Advisory Committee on Public Interest
Obligations of Digital Television Broadcasters (known as the "Gore
Commission"). Under his leadership, the Benton Foundation has worked
to articulate a public interest vision for the digital age and to demonstrate
the value of communications for solving social problems. In addition
to his work with the Benton Foundation, Benton is chairman of Public
Media Inc., a video publisher and distributor, and before that served
as President of Encyclopaedia Britannica Education Corporation and a
member of its board.
"EDC has done pioneering work in the application of media to education
and in helping to bridge the Digital Divide. I'm especially pleased to
join in those efforts," Benton said.
Roberts, a former
director of the U.S. Department of Education's Office of Educational
Technology until January 2001, developed the first National Technology
Plan, launching five new technology programs, and successfully increasing
the department's annual technology budget from less than $30 million
to over $900 million. Roberts also championed development of the E-RATE,
a $2.25 billion program that helps bring the Internet and advanced telecommunications
to the nation's schools and libraries. Smithsonian magazine called Roberts
"America's advocate for educational technology at the highest levels
of government."
Before joining the
Clinton administration, Roberts was a Senior Associate at the Congressional
Office of Technology Assessment, where she directed several landmark
studies promoting the use of technology for teaching and learning.
"I look forward
to working with EDC on the challenge of how to capitalize on the power
and promise of technology to improve teaching and learning," said
Roberts.
EDC President Janet
Whitla called the new trustees' expertise and experience invaluable to
EDC's mission. "An increasing majority of EDC's projects are using
technology in innovative ways to expand educational opportunities, build
communities, and improve student learning. Linda and Charles will be
tremendous assets as we work to deepen the impact of that work."
Roberts and Benton
join EDC trustees Alonzo L. Plough, Director, Seattle/King County (Washington)
Department of Public Health (Chair); Edwin D. Campbell, Principal, Padanaram
Associates, Inc.; Beatriz Chu Clewell, Principal Research Associate,
The Urban Institute; Hans Decker, Executive in Residence and Adjunct
Professor, Columbia University; Pat Mora, Author; Bradley Palmer, Managing
Partner, Palm Ventures, LLC; Deborah Wadsworth, President, Public Agenda;
William N. Whelan, Principal, Whelan Associates LLC; and Gail T. P. Wickes.
With more than 325
projects around the globe, EDC is one of the world's leading nonprofit
research and development organizations. Current EDC projects focused
on technology include the America Connects Consortium and the Northeast
and Islands Regional Technology in Education Consortium (NEIR*Tech)-both
funded by the U.S. Department of Education. In addition, EDC's Center
for Children and Technology (CCT) in New York and the Center for Online
Professional Education (COPE) in Newton conduct a range of research and
development projects funded by IBM, Intel, the Gates Foundation, federal
agencies, and other private foundations.
Education Development Center, Inc. (EDC) is one of the world’s leading nonprofit education and health organizations, with 325 projects in 50 countries. EDC brings researchers and practitioners together to advance learning and healthy development for individuals of all ages and institutions of all types. For more information, visit www.edc.org.
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