Author Archives: Michael K. Barbour

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About Michael K. Barbour

Michael K. Barbour is the Director of Faculty Development and a Professor of Instructional Design for the College of Education and Health Sciences at Touro University California. He has been involved with K-12 online learning in a variety of countries for well over a decade as a researcher, teacher, course designer and administrator. Michael's research focuses on the effective design, delivery and support of K-12 online learning, particularly for students located in rural jurisdictions.

New webinars available, and some WWI-related video recommendations

An item from the World War One Centennial Commission.


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Doughboys wearing flu masks

Dear Friends and Colleagues:

Some signs are appearing that the end of the national campaign against the Covid-19 enemy may be on the horizon. However, as General John J. Pershing, commander of the American Expeditionary Forces on the Western Front in World War I, said a century ago: “… No one could possibly know when the armistice was to be signed, or what hour be fixed for the cessation of hostilities, so that the only thing for us to do, and which I did as commander in chief of the American forces, and which Marshal Foch did as commander in chief of the Allied armies, was to continue the military activities…”  In the same spirit, Americans need to continue to “do your bit”  to help bring our activities against the pandemic to a successful conclusion as soon as possible.

Truck Drivers needed

We continue to salute the modern day heroes in this national effort: those driving the trucks with essential supplies, the cashiers and those stocking shelves at stores, military and civilian medical personnel fighting to save the lives of those stricken, and everyone working diligently to keep our nation in operation until the campaign ends. In this, we are reminded of how the call went out in World War I for individuals able to perform the then-still-somewhat-novel task of driving a motor vehicle to bring those skills to the national war effort by driving the trucks which, then as now, were essential to supplying the goods and services needed by an embattled nation, as well as supporting the Dougboys on the battlefield. Then, as now a century later, Americans in and out of uniform were “doing their bit” in so many ways to keep the nation going through the perilous fight, onward to victory.

We will continue providing you with World War I-themed activities and information over the coming weeks, hoping these events and recommendations will provide some interesting, informative, and pleasant distractions.


FInding WWI Ancestors webinar image

If you missed our “Finding Your WWI Ancestors” webinar last week, you can click on the image at left to watch genealogist Debra Dudek provide a brief but deep introduction into how to research the records of your family members who served in uniform in World War I. We got an amazing response to this webinar — watch the webinar replay yourself and see why our audience has been deluging us with compliments.

You can also see a replay of our April 3 webinar about the status of the National World War I Memorial under construction in Washington, DC.  You will hear from Joe Weishaar, Lead Designer for the Memorial, and representatives of Grunley Construction Company Inc. about ongoing progress at the Memorial.  Click here to watch the replay of this informative webinar.


Hospital movies

At the U.S. Army hospital in Royat, France, during the World War I influenza epidemic, convalescing Doughboys wearing surgical masks (sound familiar?) gathered in the base theater to enjoy being entertained by movies from back in the states.  We don’t know what the film titles were that they watched (all silent films, remember), but we do have a few suggestions for you sheltering at home for some WWI-themed videos which you may enjoy — surgical masks optional in your home theater, of course!

Wings poster

Wings, a 1927 American film set during World War I, was the first feature film to win an Academy Award, and the only silent film ever to do so. The plot line about two aviators in love with the same woman is overshadowed by the amazing aerial dogfight sequences. Acclaimed for its technical prowess and realism, the film became the yardstick against which future aviation films were measured, mainly because of its realistic portrayal of air-combat. Playing to American audiences less than a decade after the war’s end, Wings was an immediate success upon release. In 1997, Wings was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.”  As World War I was “The War That Changed the World,” Wings was the movie that changed moviemaking.

Wings can be watched free online from the Internet Archive, streaming on Amazon, and via a variety of other online sites.

Millionaires Unit

The Millionaires’ Unit is the story of a privileged group of college students from Yale who formed a private air militia in preparation for America’s entry into World War One.  Known as the First Yale Unit, and dubbed ‘the millionaires’ unit’ by the New York press, they became the founding squadron of the U.S. Naval Air Reserve and were the first to fly for the United States in the Great War.  Using the words of these pioneer aviators from their letters and diaries, the documentary tells the story of young men coming of age as America was coming of age as a world power. Their service and sacrifice is the great untold story of American aviation in World War One. The documentary was inspired by the book The Millionaires’ Unit by Marc Wortman. After seven years of development and production, with filming on three continents,

The Millionaires’ Unit  is available for streaming or purchase on Amazon and Vimeo.

Hello Girls Movie

The Hello Girls documentary tells the story of the American women fluent in French and English who answered the urgent call for telephone operators needed by the American Expeditionary Forces in France during World War I.  They took oaths to join the U.S. Army Signal Corps, underwent training by AT&T before boarding ships to Europe, heading to war before most of the American Doughboys arrived in France, connected 26 million calls and ultimately proved to be a significant factor in winning the war.  Wisconsin filmmaker Jim Theres has created an award-winning one-hour film about the American phone operators who served in the Army Signal Corps during World War I, shining a spotlight on a group of brave, selfless women who were not officially recognized for their work until it was too late for most of them.

The Hello Girls is available for streaming on Amazon

Remember that if you shop using AmazonSmile, a percentage of the price of your purchase will go to help build the new National World War I Memorial in Washington, DC which is currently under construction.


Stay safe.

Dans Signature

Daniel S. Dayton
Executive Director
U.S. World War One Centennial Commission


Our next Virtual Roundtable: Playbook for Building and Leveraging a Channel Partner Ecosystem

An item from one of our fellow Canadian organization.


C100 is excited to share details for next week’s Virtual Roundtable. Please join us for our next session on Wednesday.

April 22nd @ 9AM PT/12PM ET

Topic: A Playbook for Building, Managing, and Leveraging a Strategic Partner and Channel Ecosystem: Why now is a great time to build out a partner and channel ecosystem.  Featuring Bill Lipsin (VP of Worldwide Channels, Cohesity) and Sunir Shah (CEO, Appbind). Moderated by Mark Sochan (Managing Director, CEO Quest).

Partnerships are a critical aspect of any business plan, but even more critical in this era of economic uncertainty. Hear from industry experts about why taking the next 6-12 months to establish key partnerships could enable critical leverage when the market turns around. Learn and discuss how to build and manage a strategic partnership strategy. Suggested for: SaaS, B2B, Enterprise founders & execs.

Moderated by:

Mark Sochan (Managing Director, CEO Quest). Mark is C100 Charter Member who for over 25 years has successfully managed hundreds of strategic partnering initiatives, mergers and acquisitions, and has grown revenue for clients such as SAP, Microsoft, Cisco, VMware, Capgemini, and Accenture. Mark’s unique gift is his experience on “both sides of the table,” with an ability to successfully manage complex partner relationships. Mark is the author of the book “The Art of Strategic Partnering: Dancing with Elephants.’

Panelists: 

Sunir Shah (CEO, AppBind) Sunir loves SaaS partnerships, possibly too much! Sunir is the CEO of AppBind which is bringing SaaS into the massive reseller market; the  President of the Cloud Software Association, the network of 3,000+ SaaS partnership leaders; and Conference Chair of SaaS Connect, the SaaS partnership conference.

Bill Lipsin (Global VP, Channels, Cohesity). Bill has more than 30 years of enterprise channel, sales, and marketing expertise. At Cohesity, Bill leads the company’s go-to-market strategy, channel programs, enablement, and distribution channels. Previously he was a senior partner at The Spur Group, a leading consulting firm helping companies optimize channels, end-user sales, and business operations to rapidly increase revenues. Prior to joining The Spur Group, Lipsin was VP of worldwide channels at NetApp and held senior channel leadership positions at Brocade and CA Technologies.

We look forward to seeing you online!

The C100 Team

Liberating the Nazi death camps

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Prime minister invokes memory of war in stirring pandemic speech

Prime minister invokes memory of
war in stirring pandemic speech

Story by Stephen J. Thorne

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau invoked memories of Vimy Ridge, his grandfather’s role in the Second World War and the sacrifices and contributions of “the Greatest Generation” in a stirring speech about “the trials that shaped our country” delivered prior to a critical vote in the House of Commons on April 11.

“I rise here in this moment in this House as our generation faces its greatest challenge yet,” said Trudeau. “We all stand on the shoulders of those who came before us. Of all of those Canadians who saw our nation through difficult, tumultuous times in our history.”

READ MORE

Military Milestones
Liberating the death camps

Liberating the death camps

Story by Sharon Adams

On April 15, 1945, three weeks before the end of the Second World War, the British 63rd Anti-Tank Regiment liberated the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, which was in the throes of an epidemic and was peacefully handed over by the Germans.

What they witnessed there in northern Germany was unimaginable: 13,000 emaciated corpses lying in heaps throughout the camp among about 60,000 starving and sick inmates, mostly Jewish; about 500 were children. Teen-aged diarist Anne Frank died there of typhus, just weeks before the camp was liberated.

READ MORE

A letter of marque from the king
Vimy: The Birth of a Nation Special Issue
This week in history
This week in history

April 15, 1885

Fort Pitt surrenders to Cree warriors during the Northwest Rebellion.

READ MORE

CWT Vacations
Legion Magazine

WWI Webinar Series: First Public Reveal of the “WWI Memorial Virtual Explorer”

An item from the World War One Centennial Commission.


WWI Webinar Series

Building the National WWI Memorial
In Washington, D.C.

Dough Foundation with WWI Commission logo

Friday April 17, 2020 , 1p Eastern •  “WWI Memorial Virtual Explorer”

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Webinar Introducing the
“WWI Memorial Virtual Explorer”
Augmented Reality Smartphone APP


Our Virtual Explorer lets you drop a 3D model of the entire Washington, D.C. National WWI Memorial anywhere. Place it, Scale it and Explore it in your own personal living spaces (and soon in classrooms).

It is not only an accurate AR model of the entire National WWI Memorial, but it is also filled with all sorts of learning and discovery experiences about WWI.

It’s for the young, the young at heart – and basically anyone who owns an Apple or Android smartphone or tablet. Best of all, it is FREE.


Click to Register


The Future Meets the Past.

Join us as we illuminate:

What IS Augmented Reality?

Can you really put the entire National WWI Memorial in my pocket?

How does this help me learn or teach about WWI?

Spend a little time with us and learn about this innovative 21st century way of honoring the past.

You’ll meet the project producer and the team of brilliant young programmers who are putting it all together. We’ll even lift the curtain and let you see how some of this is done.

Everyone who attends, will be invited to become Beta Testers for the App. That means you get a copy of it before anyone else… and you can feed back to the development team to help make this wonderful tool even better.

Short Documentary Bonus

Influenza pandemic thumb

As most of you know, 100 years ago, largely as a result of WWI there was a terrible global pandemic known at the time as “The Spanish Flu”.

Get the story and the facts about this incredible historical event from our leading historians. This short 6 minute documentary was produced by the US World War One Centennial Commission and the Doughboy Foundation with a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

Click to Register



View videos from our Previous 2020 Webinar Series