Copyrights Info - 0 views
Networking Rebellion: Digital Policing and Revolt in the Arab Uprisings | The Abolitionist - 0 views
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Because Egyptian television and radio were state-controlled, the internet became a means to publicize the demonstrations and evade state censorship. As a result, the Egyptian and other Arab uprisings have largely been described as a series of “Twitter” or “Facebook” revolutions.
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global democracy, allowing repressed peoples to find each other and network in ways which were previously impossible or too dangerous under authoritarian regimes.
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nternet and cellphone services were cut in a desperate attempt to stop the escalating protests.
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How the Internet brought down a dictator - Technology on NBCNews.com - 0 views
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The wildfire flame of social networking burned quickly. In just a few weeks, Ghonim's page — We are all Khaled Said — had accumulated 130,000 fans, according to the New York Times. Ghonim this week said that the page has 375,000 followers. (The English-language site visible to U.S. Facebookers has just over 71,000 followers.) In a country with around 5 million Facebook users, that is a large percentile, and doesn't count Facebook users who may visit the page without "liking" it.
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"The real threat to the regime is people will take pictures of the police beating their brothers and sisters, and the regime can't respond well to Facebook images of the police shooting rubber bullets into a crowd," Howard told msnbc.com on Jan. 28. "There is no regime response for those images that go out over trusted networks."
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a service called SpeakToTweet, launched by Google and Twitter, brought voices of Net-deprived Egyptians to the global forum of Twitter by way of a phone number. Just like regular voicemail, people could call and leave a message.
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World Development book case study: the role of social networking in the Arab Spring -- ... - 0 views
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internet is useful for information dissemination and news gathering, social media for connecting and co-ordinating groups and individuals, mobile phones for taking photographs of what is happening and making it available to a wide global audience and satellite television for instant global reporting of events.
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all of these digital tools allow them to bring together remote and often disparate groups and give them channels to bypass the conventional media, which is usually state controlled and unwilling to broadcast any news of civil unrest and opposition to the government.
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Rapid internet interaction through Twitter and Facebook gave information to the protesters about how to counteract the security forces as they tried to disperse the protesters, maps showing locations for protest meetings and practical advice about such things as what to do when teargas is used against groups of protesters.
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EBSCOhost: Online commenting 2 - 0 views
Issues to Consider When Implementing Digital and Media Literacy Programs | KnightComm - 0 views
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concern is whether people will be able to transfer their self-developed digital skills beyond their affinity groups, fan communities or local social cliques.
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, we should not assume they are digitally literate in the sense that we are discussing it here (Vaidhyanathan, 2008).
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MediaShift . The Importance and Challenges of Universal Media Literacy Education | PBS - 0 views
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The campaign reports that 61 percent of 13 to 17 year-olds publish a profile on social networking sites, and one in seven young people receive sexual solicitations over the Internet (70% of which are girls). But kids aren't only the victims. They can be perpetrators, as when it comes to so-called textual harassment" or cyber-bullying.
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My curiosity about the prospects for media literacy education in the testing-heavy era of the "No Child Left Behind" Act led me to attended a panel at the NAMLE conference entitled, "Does It Work? Assessing the Effectiveness of Media Literacy in K-12 Education." The panel featured some of the brightest minds in media literacy, including Renee Hobbs, Cyndy Scheibe, Peter Worth and David Kleeman. Yet there was hardly a consensus on how to create a measurement protocol that can determine whether a certain media literacy curriculum is successful.
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Mark Hannah - 0 views
What is Media Literacy? A Definition...and More. | Center for Media Literacy - 1 views
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Media literacy, therefore, is about helping students become competent, critical and literate in all media forms so that they control the interpretation of what they see or hear rather than letting the interpretation control them.
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To become media literate is not to memorize facts or statistics about the media, but rather to learn to raise the right questions about what you are watching, reading or listening to. Len Masterman, the acclaimed author of Teaching the Media, calls it "critical autonomy" or the ability to think for oneself.
The Urgency of Visual Media Literacy in Our Post-9/11 World: Reading Images of Muslim W... - 0 views
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http://www.surrey.ac.uk/englishandlanguages/staff_list/complete_staff_list/diane_watt/ Diane watt studied at the university of ottawa, ontario Canada in 2011 she returned to university of surrey to teach.
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The Past, Present, and Future of Media Literacy Education | Hobbs | The Journal of Medi... - 0 views
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http://namle.net/2009/08/30/renee-hobbs-amy-petersen-jensen-to-edit-the-journal-of-media-literacy-education/ Renee Hobbs and Amy Jensen are editors for the article.
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EBSCOhost: Online commenting. - 0 views
New Media Literacy In Education: Learning Media Use While Developing Critical Thinking ... - 1 views
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What sources does the author cite, and what do others say about those sources?
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Education, media-literacy-wise, is happening now after school and on weekends and when the teacher isn't looking, in the SMS messages, MySpace pages, blog posts, podcasts, videoblogs that technology-equipped digital natives exchange among themselves.
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Online Etiquette - 0 views
EBSCOhost: CHALLENGES IN SPREADING INFORMATION LITERACY AMONG STUDENTS - 1 views
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Information literacy is a global phenomenon today and the critical importance of the role of information literacy is gaining increased recognition Information literacy means knowing information about information
EBSCOhost: An Introduction and Guide to Enhancing Online Instruction with Web 2.0 Tool... - 0 views
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hen direct contact with students in a traditional face-to-face classroom is not feasible, instructors must be innovative in content delivery and provide for students a sense of instructor presence. It has been suggested that the online instructor is the critical factor for a successful learning experience
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This article explains how web-based tools can improve education for the online learner. It suggests that faculty plays a large role in educating online learners about the tools available, the tools they will be using, and how the tools are used. Examples of web-based tools are blogs, wikis, RSS feeds, video and photo sharing, avatars, microblogging, social bookmarking, and social media.
EBSCOhost: A Comparison of Different Communication Tools for Distance Learning in Nucl... - 0 views
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The purpose of this work is to explore distance learning related tools to determine if they can provide an enhanced learning environment for nuclear education. In this work, a set of tools are examined that can be used to augment or replace the traditional lecture method. These tools are Mediasite, Adobe Connect, Elluminate, and Camtasia. All four tools have recording capabilities that allow the students to experience the exchange of information in different ways.
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This article explains the use of web-based tools for online eduction of nuclear engineers, but the information is relevant to Full Sail students as well. In the article they evaluate several web based tools but the interesting thing is that in order for the students to use the tools effectively the teachers must be comfortable with the use of these tools.
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