The heart of the digital humanities is not the production of knowledge. It’s
the reproduction of knowledge.
Contents contributed and discussions participated by Nancy Prentice
» Building and Sharing (When You're Supposed to be Teaching) Journal of Digit... - 0 views
-
-
The promise of the digital is not in the way it allows us to ask new questions because of digital tools or because of new methodologies made possible by those tools. The promise is in the way the digital reshapes the representation, sharing, and discussion of knowledge.
-
Classrooms were made for sharing
- ...10 more annotations...
ALA Releases Copyright Lessons for School Librarians - 0 views
What Tech in Schools Really Looks Like - The Digital Shift - 0 views
-
the distribution of technology in our classrooms remains radically uneven
-
about 48 percent of low-income families have a home computer compared with 91 percent of higher-income families, according to a recent report by Common Sense Media, an independent group that advocates for kids.
-
even students who don’t have home computers or Internet access are increasingly likely to own a cell phone. “Teens, Smartphones, & Texting,” a March 2012 study by the Pew Internet & American Life Project, has found that 77 percent of young adults ages 12 to 17 own a cell phone, and 31 percent of those ages 14 to 17 have a smartphone
- ...7 more annotations...
10 Tips for Inquiry-Based Learning - 0 views
Bloom's Interactive Taxonomy - 0 views
Encyclopedia of Earth - 1 views
Finding the right moment (and many more YouTube tricks) « NeverEndingSearch - 0 views
Teaching Tools - 0 views
Free Technology for Teachers: 7 Good Resources for Art Teachers and Students - 0 views
Boolean Logic Research Guide - 0 views
Evaluating Non-Fiction Resources: Criteria for Quality - 0 views
« First
‹ Previous
161 - 180 of 214
Next ›
Last »
Showing 20▼ items per page