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Home/ DGL_Misinformation_Debate_Team_A/ Contents contributed and discussions participated by Alisha Birkheimer

Contents contributed and discussions participated by Alisha Birkheimer

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Kids become literate faster with multimedia technology | abc7news.com - 0 views

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    Great resource found by both Felisha and Julia
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Study Finds Preschool Use of Educational Video and Games Prepares Low-Income Children f... - 0 views

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    Great Resource found by Felisha
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Critical Issue: Using Technology to Enhance Literacy Instruction - 0 views

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    Great resource found by TJ
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JTE v7n1 - Collaborative Learning Enhances Critical Thinking - 0 views

  • The concept of collaborative learning, the grouping and pairing of students for the purpose of achieving an academic goal, has been widely researched and advocated throughout the professional literature. The term "collaborative learning" refers to an instruction method in which students at various performance levels work together in small groups toward a common goa
  • Proponents of collaborative learning claim that the active exchange of ideas within small groups not only increases interest among the participants but also promotes critical thinking. According to Johnson and Johnson (1986), there is persuasive evidence that cooperative teams achieve at higher levels of thought and retain information longer than students who work quietly as individuals. The shared learning gives students an opportunity to engage in discussion, take responsibility for their own learning, and thus become critical thinkers (Totten, Sills, Digby, & Russ, 1991).
  • The advances in technology and changes in the organizational infrastructure put an increased emphasis on teamwork within the workforce. Workers need to be able to think creatively, solve problems, and make decisions as a team. Therefore, the development and enhancement of critical-thinking skills through collaborative learning is one of the primary goals of technology education. The present research was designed to study the effectiveness of collaborative learning as it relates to learning outcomes at the college level, for students in technology.
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""Digital Texts and the New Literacies"" by Allen Webb - 0 views

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    Great resource found by Felisha
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Renaissance Learning - Accelerated Reader Enterprise - Take a Quiz - 0 views

  • With so many quizzes, students' reading choices are endless. Only Accelerated Reader Enterprise offers unlimited access to more than 150,000 AR Quizzes (nearly half of which are nonfiction). With an all-new look, AR Quizzes still serve as a quick assessment of student reading comprehension in a friendly, inviting format. They can be taken on computers, laptops, and tablets 7 inches or larger. Click the titles below to take a sample quiz. There are five types of quizzes: Reading Practice Quizzes ask questions that measure a student’s comprehension of a book
  • Available Now. Three-Question AR™ Quizzes for Early Readers are Reading Practice Quizzes designed to help measure comprehension of short early-reader titles. Each title also has an accompanying Recorded Voice Quiz.
  • Textbook Quizzes enable you to monitor comprehension of material that students read in the specific textbook series you use.
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The rise of e-reading | Pew Internet Libraries - 0 views

  • Released: April 4, 2012
  • Summary of findings One-fifth of American adults (21%) report that they have read an e-book in the past year, and this number increased following a gift-giving season that saw a spike in the ownership of both tablet computers and e-book reading devices such as the original Kindles and Nooks.1 In mid-December 2011, 17% of American adults had reported they read an e-book in the previous year; by February, 2012, the share increased to 21%.
  • Using a broader definition of e-content in a survey ending in December 2011, some 43% of Americans age 16 and older say they have either read an e-book in the past year or have read other long-form content such as magazines, journals, and news articles in digital format on an e-book reader, tablet computer, regular computer, or cell phone.
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  • Compared with other book readers, they read more books. They read more frequently for a host of reasons: for pleasure, for research, for current events, and for work or school. They are also more likely than others to have bought their most recent book, rather than borrowed it, and they are more likely than others to say they prefer to purchase books in general, often starting their search online.
  • Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project that look at the public’s general reading habits, their consumption of print books, e-books and audiobooks, and their attitudes about the changing ways that books are made available to the public. Most of the findings in this report come from a survey of 2,986 Americans ages 16 and older, conducted on November 16-December 21, 2011, that extensively focused on the new terrain of e-reading and people’s habits and preferences
  • All data cited in this report are from the November/December survey unless we specifically cite the subsequent surveys. This work was underwritten by a grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
  • The average reader of e-books says she has read 24 books (the mean number) in the past 12 months, compared with an average of 15 books by a non-e-book consumer. Some 78% of those ages 16 and older say they read a book in the past 12 months. Those readers report they have read an average (or mean number) of 17 books in the past year and 8 books as a median (midpoint) number.
  • 30% of those who read e-content say they now spend more time reading, and owners of tablets and e-book readers particularly stand out as reading more now.
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    This is a great study that shows how e-books have positively contributed to literacy.
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Renaissance Learning - Accelerated Reader Enterprise - How it Works - 0 views

  • AR helps teachers monitor students' vocabulary growth, literacy skills development, and other reading skills.
  • AR provides teachers with immediate information, helping them monitor the comprehension skills of each student and inform further instruction or intervention
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    Information about the Accelerated Reader Program
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ERIC - Impact of the Accelerated Reader Technology-Based Literacy Program on Overall Ac... - 0 views

  • A study demonstrated the positive impact of school ownership of the Accelerated Reader (AR) technology-based literacy program on attendance and standardized test scores at a representative sample of 2,500 elementary, middle, and high schools. These schools were compared with approximately 3,500 schools of similar geographic and demographic characteristics that did not own the software. A comparative analysis of data revealed: (1) statistically significant evidence that, on virtually every subject test (including reading, writing, math, science, and social studies), a majority of schools that owned AR performed better than socioeconomically comparable non-AR schools;
  • gains in academic performance increase with the length of time schools own AR--schools that have owned AR for 2 or more years are 59% more likely to show test performance above the median for their control group;
  • Findings suggest that AR has a positive effect on student academic performance, especially for socioeconomically disadvantaged children in urban areas. Together with the results of previous Institute studies, this is compelling evidence that AR is an effective tool in stimulating increased reading, and that increased reading will lead to higher attendance rates and greater academic success.
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    Example of a tech-based program increasing the literacy rates of students.
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How The Internet Saved Literacy - Forbes - 0 views

  • According to the Pew Internet & American Life Project, 73% of American adults had used the Internet or e-mail as of March 2006. For the first time, the National Association of Adult Literacy—the most wide-ranging U.S. study of literacy—will test computer literacy in its 2008 survey that measures overall literacy.
    • Alisha Birkheimer
       
      Need to find the results of this study to see how it can help support our statement.
    • Alisha Birkheimer
       
      Latest results that 2008 study aren't available yet; most recent results are from 2003, but I don't think they take into consideration any influences technology might have had on increasing literacy. http://nces.ed.gov/naal/index.asp
  • Indeed, despite fears that the Internet would stunt the reading of books, the sale of books has continued to trend upward over the past several years. In 2005, sales jumped 9.9%, to $25 billion, according to the Association of American Publishers.
  • A number of studies have been released that suggested a negative correlation between Internet use and reading. Fortunately, those studies are now considered to have been unduly alarmist, according to several experts in the field. In 2004, the National Endowment for the Arts released a study titled “Reading at Risk” (the data was collected in 2002), saying that fewer than half of American adults read literature. “To lose this human capacity–and all the diverse benefits it fosters–impoverishes both cultural and civic life,” said the foundation chair Dana Gioia when the survey was released. The study failed to take into account whether people are actually reading more non-fiction works now.
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  • students rewrite the poem and keep role journals, chronicling their journeys deep into the recesses of their characters’ minds. To play the game effectively, they must react to each other’s interpretations as well. “Collaboration is the demand laid on you by this technology,” says McGann. “Classroom work is typically solo. Ivanhoe encourages you to work interactively with others.”
    • Alisha Birkheimer
       
      Interesting example of how a tech-based program has increased literacy, particular a student's use of both writing and critical thinking.
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National Assessment of Adult Literacy (NAAL) - Literacy Tasks - 0 views

  • A common thread across all literacy tasks is that each has a purpose–whether that purpose is to pay the telephone bill or to understand a poem.
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National Assessment of Adult Literacy (NAAL) - Definition of Literacy - 0 views

  • NAAL defines literacy as both task-based and skills-based. The task-based definition of literacy, used in both the 1992 and 2003 assessments, focuses on the everyday literacy tasks an adult can and cannot perform. The 2003 NAAL adds a complementary skills-based definition of literacy that focuses on the knowledge and skills an adult must possess in order to perform these tasks. These skills range from basic, word-level skills (such as recognizing words) to higher level skills (such as drawing appropriate inferences from continuous text). New information provided by the 2003 NAAL is intended to improve understanding of the skill differences between adults who are able to perform relatively challenging literacy tasks and those who are not. to perform literacy tasks Task-based (conceptual) definition Literacy is the ability to use printed and written information to function in society, to achieve one's goals, and to develop one's knowledge and potential. The skills required Skills-based (operational) definition Successful use of printed material is a product of two classes of skills: Word-level reading skills Higher level literacy skills SOURCE: White, S., and McCloskey, M. (forthcoming). Framework for the 2003 National Assessment of Adult Literacy (NCES 2005-531). U.S. Department of Education. Washington, DC: National Center for Education Statistics.
    • Alisha Birkheimer
       
      Let's go beyond the basic definition of literacy of simply being able to read and write. Expanding on it enables us to branch out a little bit more with our research to find information that supports more than just technology teaching basic reading and writing.
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