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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.
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  • 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
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.
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