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Jeremiah Mwangi

How to write my paper - 0 views

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    Paper Writing Services are there for the help of businessmen and also for the common men engaged in online work.
Jeremiah Mwangi

Complete the Assignment through Help in Assignment - 0 views

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    Paper Writing Services are growing in popularity these days mainly because of the support they are providing to the businesses of today.
Jeremiah Mwangi

How to Write my Paper - 0 views

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    Paper Writing Services are also of great help for people in the long run of their writing career.
Jeremiah Mwangi

Best Idea How to write a good research paper - 0 views

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    To get Custom paper writing services it is important for people to gain exact knowledge about the various websites where these services are available.
Jeremiah Mwangi

Best Idea How to write a good research paper - 0 views

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    Custom Paper writing services are always there for the help of businessmen and people who are not very good at writing.
Jeremiah Mwangi

Help in Assignment Service Great Help for Student - 0 views

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    Custom Paper Writing Services are available nowadays throughout the world and they are also of great use for people.
Jeremiah Mwangi

Help in Assignment Service Great Help for Student - 0 views

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    To get Custom paper writing services it is important for people to gain exact knowledge about the various websites where these services are available.
Jeremiah Mwangi

Apa College Paper Writing Service - 0 views

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    Custom paper writing services are fee based and it is a division of e-commerce industry.
Jeremiah Mwangi

How To Get Latest trends complete through Help in Assignment - 0 views

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    Research Paper Writing Services can always be of good help to people mainly in the field of business and writing.
Jeremiah Mwangi

Buy Custom Paper and Dissertation Writing Services - 0 views

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    Research Paper Writing Services can always be of good help to people mainly in the field of business and writing.
Rick Beach

Writers spin their tales on the Web | StarTribune.com - 0 views

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    Adolescents post their fiction to publishers online sites for responses and reviews.
Dennis OConnor

The Shadow Scholar - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 19 views

  • The Shadow Scholar The man who writes your students' papers tells his story Jonathan Barkat for The Chronicle Review Enlarge Image $().ready(function() { $('#enlarge-popup').jqm({onShow:chronShow, onHide:chronHide, trigger:'a.show-enlarge', modal: 'true'}); }); Jonathan Barkat for The Chronicle Review By Ed Dante Editor's note: Ed Dante is a pseudonym for a writer who lives on the East Coast. Through a literary agent, he approached The Chronicle wanting to tell the story of how he makes a living writing papers for a custom-essay company and to describe the extent of student cheating he has observed. In the course of editing his article, The Chronicle reviewed correspondence Dante had with clients and some of the papers he had been paid to write. In the article published here, some details of the assignment he describes have been altered to protect the identity of the student.
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    One tactic is to proactively teach the nuances of plagiarism in an engaging way. Here's a link to a series of games that help all students (k-12 & Higher Ed) understand the issues. http://www.diigo.com/list/wiredinstructor/plagiarism_games While these games won't stop the kind of abuses described in the article, they will help teachers prove they have taken the necessary steps to inform and train their students about plagiarism and plagiarism detection.
William Gaskins

Turn teen texting toward better writing | csmonitor.com - 0 views

    • William Gaskins
       
      Students are writing and this could not help but lead to better student writers.
Billy Gerchick

6 Ways to Publish Your Own Book - 1 views

  • Users are able to use Google Book Search (Beta), which puts your book content in Google’s search results.
  • Lulu allows you to create a variety of books, but also lets you develop digital media. These range from music and ringtones to videos and e-books. With Lulu, you can also scan and digitize your old books, albums, and photos
  • Softcovers start at $7.60
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  • To increase your search ranking, you are able to add subtitles, tags, categories, and descriptions
  • Softcovers start at $12.95
  • . Because CreateSpace is a subsidiary of Amazon, it’s easier and quicker to sell your book through Amazon
  • Standard B&W starts at $3.66 per book; Standard Color starts at $6.55. You can also upgrade to their Pro Plan, which is $39.00 per book. The Pro Plan allows you to keep more from each sale, and pay less when ordering copies.
  • Prices start at $0.045 per page and a $4 binding fee.
  • WeBook combines the joys of self publishing with social media. You are able to write a book alone or collaborate with other writers. The site provides an online text editor for you to write, and you are able to add images from image-hosting sites like Flickr, Photobucket, Picasa, etc.
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    Here are six great sites that will help you publish your work, guaranteeing you a published book that can be sold via different outlets, such as Amazon.
Ebey Soman

APFaq on Bukisa - Share your Knowledge - 0 views

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    Apfaq's content on Bukisa - Share your Knowledge, Earn Money.
Ruth Howard

http://www.australiacouncil.gov.au/writersguide/newwritinguniverse - 0 views

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    Australia Council maps out a stellar digital literacy for writers guide. Big bang! Web comics,flash fiction, graphic novels,,interactive stortytelling,videotext animated poem,electronic poetry,hyperpoem...mobisodes heaps more.
J Black

Educational Leadership:Literacy 2.0:Orchestrating the Media Collage - 1 views

  • New media demand new literacies. Because of inexpensive, easy-to-use, widely distributed new media tools, being literate now means being able to read and write a number of new media forms, including sound, graphics, and moving images in addition to text.
  • New media coalesce into a collage. Being literate also means being able to integrate emerging new media forms into a single narrative or "media collage," such as a Web page, blog, or digital story.
  • New media are largely participatory, social media. Digital literacy requires that students have command of the media collage within the context of a social Web, often referred to as Web 2.0. The social Web provides venues for individual and collaborative narrative construction and publication through blogs and such services as MySpace, Google Docs, and YouTube. As student participation goes public, the pressure to produce high-quality work increases.
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  • Historically, new media first appear to the vast majority of us in read-only form because they are controlled by a relatively few technicians, developers, and distributors who can understand or afford them. The rest of us only evolve into writers once the new media tools become easy to use, affordable, and widely available, whether these tools are cheap pencils and paper or inexpensive digital tools and shareware.
  • Thus, a new dimension of literacy is now in play—namely, the ability to adapt to new media forms and fit them into the overall media collage quickly and effectively.
  • n the mid 1960s, Marshall McLuhan explained that conventional literacy caused us to trade an ear for an eye, and in so doing, trade the social context of the oral tradition for the private point of view of reading and writing. To him, television was the first step in our "retribalization," providing a common social experience that could serve as the basis for dialogue in the global village.2  However, television told someone else's story, not ours. It was not until Web 2.0 that we had the tools to come full circle and produce and consume social narrative in equal measure. Much of the emerging nature of literacy is a result of inexpensive, widely available, flexible Web 2.0 tools that enable anyone, regardless of technical skill, to play some part in reinventing literacy.
  • What is new is that the tools of literacy, as well as their effects, are now a topic of literacy itself.
  • Students need to be media literate to understand how media technique influences perception and thinking. They also need to understand larger social issues that are inextricably linked to digital citizenship, such as security, environmental degradation, digital equity, and living in a multicultural, networked world. We want our students to use technology not only effectively and creatively, but also wisely, to be concerned with not just how to use digital tools, but also when to use them and why.
  • The fluent will lead, the literate will follow, and the rest will get left behind.
  • They need to be the guide on the side rather than the technician magician.
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