The Right Way to Ask Questions in the Classroom | Edutopia - 28 views
Paper vs. computer screen - The Boston Globe - 12 views
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A Norwegian researcher, Anne Mangen, recently weighed in with an interesting paper in the Journal of Research in Reading, asserting that screen reading and page reading are radically different. “The feeling of literally being in touch with the text is lost when your actions - clicking with the mouse, pointing on touch screens, or scrolling with keys or on touch pads - take place at a distance from the digital text, which is, somehow, somewhere inside the computer, the e-book, or the mobile phone,’’ Mangen writes.
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Her conclusion: “Materiality matters. . . . One main effect of the intangibility of the digital text is that of making us read in a shallower, less focused way.’
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Reading digital text will always differ from reading text that is not digital (i.e., that has a physical, tangible materiality), no matter how reader-friendly and ‘paper-like’ the digital reading device (e.g., Kindle etc.),’’ she answered
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The Importance of Generalizations in Social Studies « Bridging the Gap - 6 views
Academic Leadership Benefits of Co-Teaching for ESL Classrooms - 13 views
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Wendy, I am very thankful for the link. the intertwined relationship between education and leadership is a crucial issue that educators should work more on to enhance the quality eduction. We should not teach english for the sake of English; but the language is a means to promote the main skills the Millenium age require.
Languages smarten up your brain - Guardian Weekly - 7 views
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a study of recent research into brain function reveals that students could be gaining a lot more from their pursuit of linguistic skills
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It argues that there is a dovetailing of results between studies conducted over the last 40 years, including recent findings from the neurosciences
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six areas in which the multilingual mind differs in some way to the monolingual mind
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Mashable - Blog - How Conceptual Metaphors are Stunting Web Innovation - 7 views
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We still haven’t truly understood that click and link are as fundamental today as read and write
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consider what we want the web to be rather than awkwardly fitting that vision into older descriptive paradigms
Blogging About The Web 2.0 Connected Classroom: Does Homework Raise Attainment? - 9 views
Did You Know Moodle 2.0 Will….? (Online Educa 2009) « Hans de Zwart: Technolo... - 2 views
Education | infoDev.org - 3 views
Harlem Success Academy Prepares for Tests at Queens Farm Museum - NYTimes.com - 1 views
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New York State’s English and math exams include several questions each year about livestock, crops and the other staples of the rural experience that some educators say flummox city children, whose knowledge of nature might begin and end at Central Park
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Professory Cooke once told a story about teaching students in the rural West. When asked where they were most likely to see a yacht, the students did not choose lake or ocean, but highway. They lived in a town through which many yachts were moved on flat-bed trucks between the summer and winter homes of their owners. So, given the life experiences of the students, this was the correct answer.... but not the one that the test-makers were going to count as correct.
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AFT - Publications - American Educator - Spring 2006 - How Knowledge Helps - 5 views
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Recent neurological and psychological research (using scientific methodolgy as a basis, not theories e.g. Gardner's Multiple Intelligences, Bloom's Taxonomy, etc) is indicating that the constructivist models of learning, where 'process' is valued far more than 'content', are incorrect. Knowledge and thinking are interdependent and to think well, students must have knowledge.
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