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Anne Bubnic

Wikipedia: Beneath the Surface [flash video tutorial] - 0 views

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    This wikipedia tutorial was produced by a group of librarians and present it from an academic standpoint. Good stuff!
Anne Bubnic

Wikipedia Norms [Video] - 0 views

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    Great video from MIT Tech TV on Wikipedia norms. Students discuss the correct way to participate in the Wikipedia community.
Anne Bubnic

Our Kids Are Failing - And It's All Wikipedia's Fault! - 0 views

  • n. Yesterday, news broke out in Scotland about how the internet was to blame for Scotland's failing exam pass rates. According to the Scottish Parent Teacher Council (SPTC), Wikipedia, among other sources, was cited as the reason as to why the students were failing. Is this a case of the internet making us stupid? Or do students just need to learn how to use the new research tools of the web a little more appropriately?
  • Children are very IT-savvy, but they are rubbish at researching." She noted that today's students do the majority of their research online instead of using books or other resources that could be found at the library.
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    Children may be net savvy but their critical reading and research skills are not finely honed. They don't understand that they shouldn't believe everything they read. To kids, WIKIPEDIA is still the gospel.
Vicki Davis

Encyclopedia Britannica Now Free For Bloggers - 0 views

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    Britannica is now free for bloggers. Another endorsements for the increasing importance of bloggers.
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    Encyclopedia Britannica is now free for bloggers from an article on 4/18/08 -- yet another reason for our students to blog. (I have students blogging publicly under pseudonyms.) This is fascinating, but also interesting to see how Britannica is playing catch up to Wikipedia in the market it once owned. I wonder, which would be more authoriative to you, a wikipedia quote updated daily, or Brittanica updated less often that doesn't display the authors of its content?
yc c

Amazon Kindle - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Kindle devices may report information about their users' reading data such as last page read, annotations, bookmarks, notes, highlights, or similar markings to Amazon.[132] The Kindle stores this information on all Amazon e-books but it is unclear if this data is stored for non-Amazon e-books.[133] There is a lack of e-reader data privacy — Amazon knows who the user's identity, what the user is reading, whether the user has finished the book, what page the user is on, how long the user has spent on each page, and which passages the user may have highlighted
Anne Bubnic

U.S. senator: It's time to ban Wikipedia in schools, libraries - 0 views

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    Here's the newest from Sen. Ted Stevens, the man who described the Internet as a series of tubes: It's time for the federal government to ban access to Wikipedia, MySpace, and social networking sites from schools and libraries.
Anne Bubnic

Should schools teach Facebook? - 0 views

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    FACEBOOK, MySpace, YouTube and Wikipedia are considered valuable educational tools by some who embrace the learning potential of the internet; they are also seen as a massive distraction with no academic benefit by others. Research in Nottingham and Notts suggests split opinions over the internet in the classroom. Some 1,500 interviews with teachers, parents and students nationwide showed the 'net was an integral part of children's personal lives, with 57% of 13 to 18-year-olds in Notts using blogs in their spare time and 58% in Nottingham. More than 60% of Nottingham teens use social networking sites. They are a big feature of leisure time - but now the science version of You Tube, developed by academics at The University of Nottingham, has been honoured in the US this week. The showcase of science videos shares the work of engineers and students online. However just a quarter of teachers use social networking tools in the classroom and their teaching, preferring to leave children to investigate outside school.
Anne Bubnic

Kiva - Loans that change lives - 0 views

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    Just as YouTube has changed the way we watch video and Wikipedia has changed the way we find information, Kiva.org - the world's first online person-to-person microlending platform - is changing the way we give back. Kiva lets you lend to a specific entrepreneur in third world countries, empowering them to lift themselves out of poverty. There are many great classroom connections here for global citizenship, math, geography etc. Kiva also allows you to develop a social network with other contributors supporting the same entrepreneur.
Anne Bubnic

Annotatitng and Sharing Diigo Links with Your Students - 0 views

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    Whether we like it or not, Google or Wikipedia are our student's first ports of call when it comes to researching or undertaking independent study, not the school library. Diigo offers a fantastic way to tap into the way our students operate by allowing the annotation of web pages which can then be shared with your students and, by doing so, you facilitate the process of research for your students and you set them on the right track for further independent study.
Anne Bubnic

Griefer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    A griefer is a player who plays a computer game in order to irritate and harass other players, rather than in pursuit of game objectives.
Anne Bubnic

Protecting Kids While Protecting Free Speech - 0 views

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    If Wikipedia is to be believed, cyberbullying involves "the use of information and communication technologies to support deliberate, repeated and hostile behavior by an individual or group that is intended to harm others." Cyberbullying has eclipsed sexual predators on the Internet as the number one concern of policymakers, parents and kids themselves
Anne Bubnic

Project Information Literacy: Large-scale study of early adults and their research habits - 1 views

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    Project Information Literacy (PIL) is ongoing research project, based in the University of Washington's Information School. We are currently collecting data from early adults enrolled in community colleges and public and private colleges and universities in the U.S. The goal is to understand how early adults conceptualize and operationalize research activities for course work and "everyday life" use and especially how they resolve issues of credibility, authority, relevance, and currency in the digital age.
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