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juacenta

Education Week: Classroom-Tested Tech Tools Used to Boost Literacy - 1 views

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    Instead of investing in prepackaged software programs, many teachers are harnessing the technology they already have-such as webcams, audio recorders, blogs, and other Web 2.0 tools-to boost literacy in students.
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    Parisi uses podcasting to help her students practice fluency.
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    Parisi also uses blogs to engage her students in reading and writing.
alfreeman1

reading online - 1 views

  • To be adept at seeking, evaluating, and using information found on the Internet, readers must navigate through Internet text and apply their knowledge of the reading process. The merging of these skills is seen when the Internet reader performs a reading act, such as searching the Internet for information about snowboarding.
  • Literacy and technology converge when students read on the Internet.
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    I think this is a very good general article but a good one too
juacenta

Reading Online - 1 views

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    I can not highlight anything I'm not sure if a screen shot will be acceptable for the information I want to grab, any suggestion?
juacenta

Adolescent Literacy: What's Technology Got to Do With It? | LD Topics | LD OnLine - 2 views

  • How can technology support learners?
    • juacenta
       
      References National Center for Technology Innovation and Center for Implementing Technology in Education (2010). Adolescent Literacy: What's Technology Got to Do With It? | LD Topics | LD OnLine. Retrieved June 6, 12, from http://www.ldonline.org/article/35792
  • Video supports, how-to diagrams and animated illustrations. Visuals are a fantastic tool for building background knowledge,
  • Spell checkers.
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  • Word prediction software.
  • Voice recognition software. For students who have severe dysgraphia or spelling disabilities that inhibit their writing, using voice recognition software may offer an alternative way to input their thoughts.
  • Annotations and study skill features. Literacy software with text-to-speech and study skill features can assist learners to be active readers.
  • Definitions, translations, and explanations are now a click away.
jeremyruby

Critical Issue: Using Technology to Enhance Literacy Instruction - 4 views

  • An authentic use of technology is using it as a tool to accomplish a complex task; for example, students who are creating a written report might use the Internet for research, word-processing software to write and format the text, and hypermedia software to add images. Therefore, it makes sense to consider the variety of uses as they illustrate best practices
  • Technologies That Support Students' Reading Development
  • Audiobooks promote students' interest in reading and improve their comprehension of text, notes Beers (1998). They also have been used successfully by students who cannot read traditional printed books because of visual or physical handicaps.
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  • audiobooks help improve children's reading skills
  • electronic books always provide the text in a visual component. Some electronic books incorporate text enhancements, such as definitions of words or background information on ideas. Others offer illustrations that complement the story
  • With access to an Internet-connected computer, students can find a wide variety of free online reading materials, including books, plays, short stories, magazines, and reference materials. This benefit is especially useful for students in schools that have few resources for the acquisition of new books
  • The use of hypermedia to improve student comprehension of text likely is related to its ability to respond to the needs of an individual learner for information, which results in an increased sense of control over the learning environment and higher levels of intrinsic motivation (Becker & Dwyer, 1994)
  • electronic talking books
  • may provide an effective means for increasing decoding skills and reading fluency
  • increase motivation to read as well as promote basic word recognition.
  • an aid to help children improve their comprehension of texts
  • The computer program helped the children learn to discriminate and sequence the sound in words, which improved their word-reading ability.
  • Programmed Reading Instruction
  • word-processing tools such as spelling checkers are useful aids that improve the quality of student writing. Research indicates that students who are comfortable with word processing write longer papers, spend more time writing and revising, and show improved mechanics and word choice (Lehr, 1995)
  • promotes collaborative writing among students
  • Desktop Publishing of Student Work
  • they can gain practice in desktop-publishing their reports, stories, and poems
  • technology encourages students to integrate visual and aural multimedia in their school projects
  • presents a means of self-expression and provides support for development of reading and writing skills.
  • Providing opportunities for online publishing of students' work is another means to motivate student writing
  • promote student writing is through electronic mail (e-mail), electronic bulletin boards, and e-mail lists
  • Writing to an authentic reader has a positive effect on students' writing performance and motivation
  • (Reinking & Bridwell-Bowles, 1996). "Simple exchanges of e-mail can get students writing and reading with the same intensity they bring to the most exciting video game," note Meyer and Rose (2000). "Receiving feedback from across the globe conveys to young children the power of reading and writing and demonstrates their ultimate purpose—to communicate across time and space.
  • Use of the Internet search engines can promote students' research and investigation skills and enable them to locate online information on any possible topic
  • evaluate online information sources is gaining importance as a basic literacy skill
  • Educational technology is nudging literacy instruction beyond its oral and print-based tradition to embrace online and electronic texts as well as multimedia. Computers are creating new opportunities for writing and collaborating. The Internet is constructing global bridges for students to communicate, underscoring the need for rock-solid reading and writing skills. By changing the way that information is absorbed, processed, and used, technology is influencing how people read, write, listen, and communicate.
  • Literacy instruction traditionally refers to the teaching of basic literacy skills—reading, writing, listening, and speaking. In today's digital world, however, technology has contributed to an expanded understanding of literacy. Besides having basic literacy skills, today's students also need technology skills for communicating, investigating, accessing and using information, computing, thinking critically about messages inherent in new media, and understanding and evaluating data. As policymakers and educators ponder what it means to be literate in a digitized society, an array of literacy definitions is emerging
jleemuthart

Using the Internet to Develop Literacy Skills - 1 views

  • One of the ways in which the internet is used in schools is to support the literacy development of children.
  • New ideas about teaching and supporting children with their literacy development can be read on articles and research papers that are easily accessible on the internet.
  • Many websites offer free, printable resources that can be used to support literacy development.
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  • The internet can also be useful in finding materials that specifically target children who have been identified in having difficulties with their literacy development.
  • For example, some will target reading skills, whilst others will focus on spelling or handwriting.
  • Many children do not enjoy their education or any learning tasks. This may be particularly the case with those who have difficulty in attaining literacy skills. One of the ways in which problem can be combated is to make this fun. The internet can be a particularly useful tool in achieving this. Type literacy games into the toolbar of your search engine and it will come up with a large number of websites that offer activities which are both fun and educational.
  • There are games on the internet that suit all ages and ability levels.
  • The internet can also provide homeschoolers with a wealth of free resources that will ensure that their child has the appropriate materials for learning.
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    School
jleemuthart

Can Social Networking Boost Literacy Skills? - 0 views

  • Teenagers may not be reading books, but they are clearly interested in social networking. So the question becomes whether social networking sites such as Facebook, MySpace, Twitter and YouTube are harming students or helping them.
  • The National Literacy Trust found that social networking sites and blogs help students to develop more positive attitudes toward writing and to become more confident in their writing abilities.
  • The study also showed that students who write blogs or maintain a profile on a social networking site tend to be more confident about their writing ability. More than 60 per cent of students who blog and 56 per cent of students who have a profile on a social networking site claim to be “good” or “very good” writers, compared with only 47 per cent of those who don’t use online formats. Having a blog also affects writing behaviour. Students who are active online are significantly more likely to keep a journal or write short stories, letters or song lyrics than those without a social networking presence.
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  • Whereas 60 per cent of bloggers say that they enjoy writing, only 40 per cent of nonbloggers find writing enjoyable.
  • He notes, “When I was a kid, I used to write in exercise books kept in a drawer, but now that young people write on the web, there’s a whole community out there to read their work. It’s interactive, and that makes it more appealing to them.” Jordan believes that encouraging students to share their writing boosts their confidence in their writing abilities.
  • Research suggests that young people who blog are reading and are becoming more confident writers.
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    Facebook, Twitter, & Blogs
mandyyim8

Can social networking boost literacy skills? - 1 views

  • According to these studies, 20 per cent of students never read fiction or nonfiction books, but about 67 per cent surf websites weekly, 55 per cent read e-mails and 46 per cent read blogs.
    • hauted
       
      I think this is an important statistic that illustrates clearly how access to technology increases literacy.
    • mandyyim8
       
      I like that idea
  • The National Literacy Trust found that social networking sites and blogs help students to develop more positive attitudes toward writing and to become more confident in their writing abilities
  • students who use technology-based texts such as blogs have more positive attitudes toward writing.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • The study also showed that students who write blogs or maintain a profile on a social networking site tend to be more confident about their writing ability
  • Students who are active online are significantly more likely to keep a journal or write short stories, letters or song lyrics than those without a social networking presence
  • Dr. Spencer Jordan, a creative writing teacher in the School of Education at the University of Wales, notes that web ­technologies encourage young people to write confidently about things they enjoy
  • ncouraging students to share their writing boosts their confidence in their writing abilities
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    APA Citation: Alberta Teachers' Association (2010, October 8). Can social networking boost literacy skills? Retrieved June 10, 2014, from http://www.teachers.ab.ca/Publications/The%20Learning%20Team/Volume-14/Number-1/Pages/Can-social-networking-boost-literacy-skills.aspx
Jessica Hernandez

http://www.ns.literacy.ca/docs/Improving_literacy_with_technology.pdf - 1 views

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    > The Internet makes available many applications that help build reading  and writing skills, many of them free. In many cases, applications are so easy to use that learners can use them independently, with perhaps just a little guidance from someone more knowledgeable about reading and computers.  > The benefits are easy to see: when a person uses online resources to develop literacy skills, it also builds confidence in using computers and helps the learner to master digital literacy skills.  > View all the online sources that help with literacy that are available online. 
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    I originally found this article through LexisNexis, but it wasn't letting me highlight to bookmark so I found a PDF of the article through Google. http://www.lexisnexis.com.oclc.fullsail.edu:81/lnacui2api/results/docview/docview.do?docLinkInd=true&risb=21_T20047563701&format=GNBFI&sort=BOOLEAN&startDocNo=1&resultsUrlKey=29_T20047563705&cisb=22_T20047563704&treeMax=true&treeWidth=0&csi=397220&docNo=24 APA Citation for Lexis Nexis Link: (January 12, 2011 Wednesday ). Improving literacy with technology. Ottawa Citizen, Retrieved from www.lexisnexis.com/hottopics/lnacademic PDF Citation: The Ottawa Citizen (2011, January 12). Improving literacy with technology. Retrieved June 11, 2014, from http://www.ns.literacy.ca/docs/Improving_literacy_with_technology.pdf
Jessica Hernandez

Where to find the best answers is a skill unto itself - 0 views

  • Julien has studied the need for critical information literacy skills and how these skills can be learned and appliedInformation literacy is actually a refined term for an old concept that librarians have modified to fit the staggering range of information sources available over the Internet.
  • "Accessing good information is critical to skill development."Julien notes that an Internet search on a specific topic can generate results that lead to high-quality sites with legitimate content, but the better information sources can often get buried in a lengthy list of less reliable results.
Jessica Hernandez

90 million Japanese wired | The Japan Times - 0 views

  • et, as with all technological advances, the impact on the lives, minds and feelings must be weighed and considered.
  • Japan’ high literacy rate suggests that most of the millions are probably spending time reading more, and more widely, on the Internet.
  • The Internet will continue to change our society in fundamental ways.
jleemuthart

How The Internet Saved Literacy - Forbes - 1 views

  • The Internet has shortened the feedback loop on writing and has made readers more active participants, says Matt Kirschenbaum, an assistant professor of English at the University of Maryland.
  • 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.
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    I am not sure if this pertains to 'literacy skills'. Are we supposed to be talking about DIGITAL literacy skills specifically? Cause the statement we are supposed to support seems to make that unclear.
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    I don't think it is DIGITAL literacy skills specifically. I think its just literacy skills and how technology that accesses the internet affects those skills. I also think this article does have a good correlation as it relates to increased internet use has not led to decline in book sales.
hauted

Using Technology to improve the Literacy Skills of Disabled Students - 0 views

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    Definition of Literacy Skills - "Literacy skills consist of the ability to think, listen, speak, and read and write effectively."
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    This article also mentions a online service called www.bookshare.org that provides digital books to person with disabilities. Also there is programs like www.rfbd.org (recordings for the blind and dyslexic) and www.loc.gov/nls (Talking Books at the National Library Service) that they can access online have have Audio cassettes or CDs mailed to them postage-free. Even though libraries have had this content for a while the internet makes it much more accessible than ever before. I think thats the core of how technology though the internet increases literacy skills. It gives us "fingertip" access to things we would have had to physically travel for. Digital copies of books that make not even be in local library systems are easily accessible online.
hauted

Using Technology To Improve Literacy Skills - YouTube - 0 views

    • hauted
       
      This teacher talks about how technology has changed the way she teaches literacy skills and her argument that tech has made it  better cause student don't have to spend as much time gathering information. Instead they spend more time digesting information.
  • National Louis University's Katie McKnight, Ph.D., associate professor in the National College of Education, says teachers should embrace new technologies as tools to enhance students' literacy skill development.
Jessica Hernandez

Footprints in the Digital Age: EBSCOhost - 1 views

  • The new literacy means being able to function in and leverage the potential of easy-to-create, collaborative, transparent online groups and networks, which represent a "tectonic shift" in the way we need to think about the world and our place in it (Shirky, 2008).
  • More than ever before, students have the potential to own their own learning — and we have to help them seize that potential. We must help them learn how to identify their passions; build connections to others who share those passions; and communicate, collaborate, and work collectively with these networks. And we must do this not simply as a unit built around "Information and Web Literacy." Instead, we must make these new ways of collaborating and connecting a transparent part of the way we deliver curriculum from kindergarten to graduation.
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    APA Citation: Richardson, W. (2008). Footprints in the Digital Age. Educational Leadership, 66(3), 16-19.
Jessica Hernandez

Multi Media Comes of Age: EBSCOhost - 0 views

  • The skills and talents required for success in the 21st century have made their entrance on cue, as literacy moves beyond reading and writing to embrace the full spectrum of digital media.
  • Our focus on communication skills and expanded literacy comes from these efforts to improve performance. So the technology in our multimedia and technology initiative has a purpose, a vital role in helping everyone meet these goals.
  • these are all examples of how the multimedia technology we've acquired through this initiative has been integrated into the daily life of our school.
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  • he company is pursuing a strategy that capitalizes on the networking investments made by schools, which, by now, have resulted in nearly all schools being connected to the Internet
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    APA Citation: Gold, R., & Serim, F. (2002). Multi Media Comes of Age. (cover story). Multimedia Schools, 9(2), 14.
jeremyruby

Education Update:Leveraging Technology to Improve Literacy:Leveraging Technology to Imp... - 0 views

  • Leveraging Technology to Improve Literacy
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    This site has a lot of good information, but I think we are supposed to relate our research to 'technology through internet' specifically.
Jessica Hernandez

4. Making Movies: Digital Video Production in the School Library Program: EBSCOhost - 0 views

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    View PDF for full text, but here is some of the things I would highlight: > And like anything on the Internet, it makes "consider the source" the best possible advice for Internet users.  > We need to focus on the media literacy skills necessary to decode images, and therefore empower students to make decisions about the validity of multimedia as well as text content.  > While all of this obviously increases the likelihood of students being  misled by misinformation, the other side of the story is the tremendous opportunity it provides for students to find an authentic audience for their own work.
juacenta

Interactive Technologies Promote Improved Literacy in Low-Income Children | U.S. Depart... - 3 views

  • he Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) and PBS have released a report entitled “Findings from Ready to Learn 2005-2010” that summarizes the results of independent research conducted under grant funding from the Ready to Learn Television program. The results demonstrate that using combinations of well-designed educational media, including television, websites, and other digital platforms, can be effective in improving literacy skills among low income children, ages 2-8. To access the report, please visit: http://www.cpb.org/rtl/FindingsFromReadyToLearn2005-2010.pdf.
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