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Jessica Casey

Can social networking boost literacy skills? - 1 views

  • The National Literacy Trust found that social networking sites and blogs help students to develop more positive attitudes toward writing and to become more confident in their writing abilities.
  • According to one of the studies, 49 per cent of young people believe that writing is “boring.” However, students who use technology-based texts such as blogs have more positive attitudes toward writing.
  • The study also showed that students who write blogs or maintain a profile on a social networking site tend to be more confident about their writing ability. More than 60 per cent of students who blog and 56 per cent of students who have a profile on a social networking site claim to be “good” or “very good” writers, compared with only 47 per cent of those who don’t use online formats.
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  • Students who are active online are significantly more likely to keep a journal or write short stories, letters or song lyrics than those without a social networking presence.
  • Of the five kinds of writing that students engaged in most regularly, four were technology based: 82 per cent of students sent text messages (77 per cent of these messages were notes, answers to questions asked in class or remarks about homework assignments), 73 per cent used instant messaging, 67 per cent sent e-mails and 63 per cent wrote on social networking sites.
  • Dr. Spencer Jordan, a creative writing teacher in the School of Education at the University of Wales, notes that web ­technologies encourage young people to write confidently about things they enjoy.
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    Social Networking and Literacy Skills
Jason McNee

Social NetworkiNg Sites & adult literacy learNiNg: raising the issues | Lauren Albr... - 1 views

  •  Adult literacy learners are unequivocally using SNS for social purposes and are simultaneously informallylearning literacy (in the broad sense) as well as technical and social skills. However, few are fully using thepower of SNS and social media due to unequal access and lack of socio-technical capital, or know how
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    Comprehensive study of social media's affect on literacy in adults.
Jason McNee

New Technologies for Literacy and Adult Education: A Global Perspective - 0 views

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    This is a great report by UNESCO Publishing regarding access to technology and information and the increase of literacy among adults. It takes into account the global implications of things such as social media and access to the internet through mobile devices and has complete citations to support.
Catalina Titcomb

Web 2.0 and classroom research: What path should we take now? Educational Researcher, 3... - 0 views

  • Since the mid-1990s, the percentage of publicschools connected to the Internet exploded from 35% to 100%.Public instructional classrooms with Internet access grew to 94%,up from 14% a decade earlier, and the ratio of students perInternet-connected instructional computer decreased from 12:1to 3.8:1 (Wells & Lewis, 2006). Outside of schools, more thantwo thirds of people in the United States have Internet connec-tions at home, more than half of which are broadband (Horrigan, Educational Researcher, Vol. 38, No. 4, pp. 246–259DOI: 10.3102/0013189X09336671© 2009 AERA. http://er.aera.net  Web 2.0 and Classroom Research: What PathShould We Take Now?  Christine Greenhow, Beth Robelia, and Joan E. Hughes Learning, Teaching, andScholarship in a Digital AgeResearch Newsand Comment educational ReseaRcheR  246  by on June 17, 2009http://er.aera.netDownloaded from  (function() { var pageParams = {"origHeight": 1171, "origWidth": 902, "fonts": [4, 9, 8, 0, 7, 12, 6, 5], "pageNum": 2}; pageParams.containerElem = document.getElementById("outer_page_2"); pageParams.contentUrl = "http://html4.scribdassets.com/9qxvunnpogs3ko6/pages/2-470280afa2.jsonp"; pageParams.blur = false var page = docManager.addPage(pageParams); })();   May 2009 247 2008), and by 2014, it is estimated that 90% of all people in theUnited States will be online with dramatically faster, high-speednetworks (Fox, Anderson, & Rainie, 2005).
  • Web 2.0,” a term coined in 2004, characterizes a transitionfrom the predominantly read-only Web 1.0 into a “read-and-write” Web 2.0 (McManus, 2005, para. 1). Web 2.0 facilitates “participa-tory,” “collaborative,” and “distributed” practices within Web2.0–enabled formal and nonformal spheres of everyday activities(Lankshear & Knobel, 2006, p. 38). Other terms used to charac-terize Web 2.0 include “relationship” technologies (Schrage, 2001,para. 6), “participatory media” (Bull et al., 2008, p. 106), and“social digital technologies” (Palfrey & Gasser, 2008, p. 1). Web 2.0 is both a platform on which innovative technologieshave been built and a space where users are as important as thecontent they upload and share with others
Jason McNee

Five iPhone tricks to beef up your texting skills | How To - CNET - 0 views

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    Image citation for texting.
Jason McNee

Research Says Screen Time Can Be Good For Your Kids - Forbes - 0 views

  • One interpretation of Plants vs. Zombies, for instance, reveals an ironic representation of an ideological battle between the good natural spirit of flora and Zombie-like brainwashing that supposedly comes from entertainment and digital media. Pay close attention to the character design of the zombie villains–football zombies, disco zombies, suit & tie zombies, etc. Suddenly, it becomes clear that, intentional or not, there’s an implicit anti-consumer, non-conformist cultural critique underlying the game. Plants are the good guys. Brainwashed mainstream zombies are the bad guys.
  • Individualized gameplay might be better than television because they’re more interactive.
  • These days, in fact, most storytelling is interactive. We consume most of our media through internet connected devices. And technology is so adept at providing ‘adaptive feedback’ that it proves to be an exceptionally effective teaching tool. In fact, a recent SRI study shows that game based learning can boost cognitive learning for students sitting on the median by 12%.
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    Forbes magazine article that focuses on screen time with children but also touches on the benefits for adults as well.
Jason McNee

Emerging Technologies in Adult Literacy - 0 views

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    Great description of several emerging technologies that address and overcome the challenges of adult literacy.
Jason McNee

The era of online classes | KETK | East Texas News, Weather and Sports | Tyler, Longvie... - 0 views

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    "Nowak said one of the perks is he saved money on books because they were all online. "You could use your IPad or IPhone or e-reader and you can download it that way even if you weren't at home you could still study." The cost was the same as classes on campus. But, he saved money not having a 40-minute commute. Nowak also says employers had no problem with an online degree.  "With all the interviews I've had, I've never had any employer ask that question." Junior Martinez is a junior at University of Texas at Tyler. He has taken at least one online class every year since he has been in school. "Taking online classes is kind of like a double edge sword," said Martinez. Martinez says you have to learn how to manage your time. "You have to have self motivation to do it online." Martinez says he likes mixing his schedule up with some online classes and some traditional, so he still has the face to face interaction with his teacher. "I couldn't do all online classes you wouldn't have people to help you out with of course you can email them but it's very impersonal." But for those students like Junior who are still on the fence on whether or not online classes are right for them, some schools now offer half and half classes. You spend half of the class online and half in the classroom. Tyler Junior College offers this type of program. It's called hybrid classes."
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