Natasha Singer is a technology reporter at The New York Times where she explores the intersection of data and society, with a particular focus on education, health, and behavioral advertising. She also writes a monthly column, called Technophoria, for the Sunday Business section. She will develop a taxonomy of educational data, identifying the types of information that schools and ed tech companies collect about prekindergarten through twelfth-grade students; the primary and secondary uses of that data; how those details are analyzed and disseminated; and the outcomes of those analyses.
Natasha Singer
All Work
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Longform
The New York TimesD&S fellow Natasha Singer on the use of virtual-reality in education, and Google's virtual field trip system for schools, Expeditions. The idea of virtual field trips is not new. Some teachers have for years used Microsoft... Read on The New York TimesSeptember 2015 -
Longform
The New York TimesD&S fellow Natasha Singer details Clever, a software service — free for schools — that enables schools to send student information to web and mobile apps at the click of a button. Clever is clearly benefiting from the incr... Read on The New York TimesSeptember 2015 -
Longform
The New York TimesD&S fellow Natasha Singer explores how the sharing economy, and sites like TeachersPayTeachers.com, are benefitting teachers willing to share the lessons they have created. At a time when many politicians, technology execu... Read on The New York TimesSeptember 2015 -
Longform
The New York TimesIncoming D&S fellow Natasha Singer reports for the New York Times on the glut of recently proposed legislation aimed at restricting the collection and use of student data. Read on The New York TimesAugust 2015