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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Saatrina Bishop

John Powell

organizing the group - 5 views

team discussion
started by John Powell on 09 Oct 13 no follow-up yet
  • Saatrina Bishop
     
    I think that I have invited everyone using the emails that were left on the 2.4 activity. And it was no problem John. Thank you.
Saatrina Bishop

Does Technology Make Us Smarter or Dumber? | TIME.com - 1 views

  • Auto-complete. Frequent users of smartphones quickly get used to the “auto-complete” function of their devices—the way they need only type a few letters and the phone fills in the rest. Maybe too used to it, in fact. This handy function seems to make adolescent users faster, but less accurate, when responding to a battery of cognitive tests, according to research published in 2009 in the journal Bioelectromagnetics.
    • Saatrina Bishop
       
      People are forgetting how to spell when they have technology at their hands to do the task for them. The teenagers are spelling faster (with aid of smartphones) but are less precise when it comes to answering questions on tests.
  • Texting. A study led by researchers at the University of Coventry in Britain surveyed a group of eight- to twelve-year-olds about their texting habits, then asked them to write a sample text in the lab. The scientists found that kids who sent three or more text messages a day had significantly lower scores on literacy tests than children who sent none. But those children who, when asked to write a text message, showed greater use of text abbreviations (like “c u l8r” for “see you later”) tended to score higher on a measure of verbal reasoning ability—likely because the condensed language of texting requires an awareness of how sounds relate to written English.
Saatrina Bishop

Techs That Make Us Stupid : Discovery News - 1 views

  • As the Nicholas Carr succinctly explains in the Wired Magazine: "e ask the Internet to keep interrupting us in ever more varied ways. We willingly accept the loss of concentration and focus, the fragmentation of our attention, and the thinning of our thoughts in return for the wealth of compelling, or at least diverting, information we receive."
    • Saatrina Bishop
       
      We are barely paying attention to the world around us, let alone the spelling of words for everyday use, for a few moments of distraction.
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