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Mary Fahey Colbert

MEET THE MILLENNIALS Kanna Hudson - 0 views

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    Even though most of my students are at the very tail end of this millenial generation, many of the generalizations still fit.  Kanna Hudson, a millenial herself put together this slide show, and she states some specific characteristics that work for my research paper.
Mary Fahey Colbert

Students and the stress of Multitasking - HOME - Edgalaxy: Where Education an... - 0 views

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    Good resource for me for ideas and lesson plans as well as another source for my paper.  The pictorial flow chart about what happens to the brain while multitasking and how information overload occurs is simple and clear.  It will be another good source to share with students.
Mary Fahey Colbert

Why Modern Innovation Traffics in Trifles - WSJ.com - 0 views

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    I love this guy!  He is right on the money in my humble opinion, and I see this kind of "small" thinking in the classroom BIG TIME!
Mary Fahey Colbert

Nicholas Carr on what the internet is doing to our brains - 0 views

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    I want to download this podcast, so I can play it for students in class, or have them "listen" at home for homework before assigning chapters for homework.
Mary Fahey Colbert

Turning Into Man Machines: Nicholas Carr's "The Shallows" | Strangers on the Shore - 0 views

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    This guy gives a great review of "The Shallows" by Nicholas Carr, and he goes on to talk about how he hopes to see educators come to with appropriate Internet use:           "It's not impossible that educators will come to a consensus about what constitutes healthy Internet usage and we come to think about it in the way we now think about risks to our physical health. Perhaps children in 10 years' time will be taught to do 2 hours' book reading for every hour online." This is the ultimate challenge I see facing me and all of us in the classroom.  We do need to address the reading and empathy piece head on, but how is the question.
Mary Fahey Colbert

How Multitasking Affects Human Learning : NPR - 0 views

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    UCLA psychology professor Russell Poldrack
Mary Fahey Colbert

The Millennial View-Don't Be: "Young & Distracted" | Management Excellence by Art Petty - 0 views

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    This blog post is by a "millenial" about some of his peers who are multitasking non-productively in the workplace.  This advice also applies to students in the classroom. 
Mary Fahey Colbert

'Internal Chatter' Limits Multitasking As People Age : NPR - 0 views

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    This is a good one for an overview of why we are bettter at multitasking at different ages, because of our ages.  Interesting.
Mary Fahey Colbert

EBSCOhost: Layering Knowledge: Information Literacy as Critical Thinking in the Litera... - 0 views

Mary Fahey Colbert

JSTOR: Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, Vol. 52, No. 6 (Mar., 2009), pp. 471-481 - 0 views

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    Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20468390 Good article to sum up an overall picture of the goal of teaching students media literacy.
Mary Fahey Colbert

Academic Leadership Journal - 0 views

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    This is from an older issue, 2004, so I probaby won't use it in my research paper, but it is background information and confirms my own experience with students in high school who think nothing is wrong with plagiarizing and copying each others homework.
Mary Fahey Colbert

Multitasking has negative effect on student academic work | Social Media in Higher Educ... - 0 views

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    This article comes from an Academic Journal.
Mary Fahey Colbert

I Said, 'Not While You Study!' - 0 views

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    Another article about the downsides of multitasking, which sites some good research studies.
Mary Fahey Colbert

Have Technology and Multitasking Rewired How Students Learn? - 0 views

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    This is a practical look at technology's usefulness in the classroom.  It addresses the idea of multitasking and working memory.
Mary Fahey Colbert

How the New Generation of Well-Wired Multitaskers Is Changing Campus Culture - Technolo... - 0 views

  • Jazzing Up Lectures Question: Are you comfortable with a lecture style that is just a guy speaking to you, or do you think that colleges should add more flair or more pizzazz to lectures through video and PowerPoint, electronic stuff, and so on? Laura: Well, with the professor just lecturing to you it can get boring, so I think they need to. If they do not already have flair, they need to just add a little more instead of just lecturing notes. Deanna: I agree with her 100 percent. When there is a teacher lecturing to you in the front of the room, it is really boring. You do not get involved, and you tend to kind of zone out the whole time. I need more bells and whistles to keep my attention. Anthony: I think what they really should look at is how businesses are doing business because the student could say they want to learn a certain way, but if business is not working like that, they might not be prepared to actually go into the work force. So I think you definitely need to look at what the corporate world is doing and try to match with them in some ways. Going Out Into the Real World Question: How many of you think that when you get out into the work world and you are reaching your sort of earning potential, how many of you think you are going to make more money than your parents did? And do you think you will work as hard as they do? John: I definitely think we are going to be working more than our parents simply because of the integration of technology and the tools that we are required to learn and use in everyday business. ... Technology being there is going to force us to be more productive, so in an eight-hour day we are expected to do four, five, six times as much. Question: But the tool that was supposed to get rid of work makes work.
Mary Fahey Colbert

Is Technology Making Your Students Stupid? - Technology - The Chronicle of Higher Educa... - 0 views

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    I won't have time to read Nicholas Carr's book, "The Shallows," so this interview with him about his assertions in it is useful for my research.
Mary Fahey Colbert

On Stupidity - Advice - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

  • The Dumbest Generation: How the Digital Age Stupefies Young Americans and Jeopardizes Our Future (2008), by Mark Bauerlein, provides alarming statistical support for the suspicion — widespread among professors (including me) — that young Americans are arriving at college with diminished verbal skills, an impaired work ethic, an inability to concentrate, and a lack of knowledge even as more and more money is spent on education.
  • t seems that our students are dumb and ignorant, but their self-esteem is high so they are impervious or hostile to criticism. Approaching his subject from the right, Bauerlein mentions the usual suspects — popular culture, pandering by educators, the culture war, etc. — but also reserves special attention for the digital technologies, which, for all their promise, have only more deeply immersed students in the peer obsessions of entertainment and fashion rather than encouraging more mature and sustained thought about politics, history, science, and the arts.
  • Uncertain about academic honesty and what constitutes plagiarism. (I recently had a student defend herself by claiming that her paper was more than 50 percent original, so she should receive that much credit, at least.)
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  • Uncertain about spelling and punctuation (and skeptical that such skills matter).
  • We need to reverse the customer-service mentality that goes hand-in-hand with the transformation of most college teaching into a part-time, transient occupation and the absence of any reliable assessment of course outcomes besides student evaluations.
  • Of course, we lament that the skills we have acquired at great pains can become lost to the next generation, but we can hardly reverse all of it. And it may be that the young are better adapted to what is coming than we are.
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    The Dumbest Generation: How the Digital Age Stupefies Young Americans and Jeopardizes Our Future (2008), by Mark Bauerlein, provides alarming statistical support for the suspicion - widespread among professors (including me) - that young Americans are arriving at college with diminished verbal skills, an impaired work ethic, an inability to concentrate, and a lack of knowledge even as more and more money is spent on education.
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