Teachers' notes: The opening title of the video erroneously concatenates "High School" into one word: "highschool". This is presumably an artefact of direct translation (Germanic languages prefer to form compound nouns by concatenation, whereas modern English prefers juxtaposition). The term "High School" is designated as US English in many course texts. However, this ignores the complex history of education. "High School" is a Scottish term, and most secondary schools in Scotland are named as such. Scottish teachers brought the term to the USA, and also to England, where a small number of schools call themselves by this name. Sentence 2: incorrect ellipsis: "That's an interesting thought that... includes 40 North Jutland high schools. Sentence 6: possibly inappropriate use of the article: "breathe new life into the teaching". ---- Recording transcript [Screen title: Project Educational use of IT in Highschools ] 1: Knowledge is the only thing that there's more of when you share it with others. 2: That's an interesting thought that is shared by many businesses and institutions and includes 40 North Jutland high schools. 3: Here they have a vision of being able to offer students a better and more up-to-date education with the help of major IT involvement. 4: So together they've launched the project called educational use of IT in high schools. 5: The project consists of two parts. 6: One of them concentrates on the establishment of a large common conference system which they hope will breathe new life into the teaching, by releasing it from traditional isolation. 7: Now, there's a common subject conference for all high school subjects. 8: For example, English teachers can exchange new thoughts with each other at the same moment they're thinking them. 9: The second part consists of many smaller projects where various high schools work together within individual subjects or between two or more subjects. 10: Thanks to computers and the internet, teachers and students are no longer dependent on time and place but can work together in what is called flexible organised teaching.