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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Daisy PhD

Daisy PhD

global voices, one world » Andrew Lih on the Wikipedia Revolution - 0 views

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    With this text, Jill Walker's Blogging, and the OReilly Twitter book coming out, I think there's a great web 2.0 course in the works!
Daisy PhD

Dan Baum, Fired By New Yorker, Recounting His Story On Twitter - 0 views

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    good way to show students how not to Twitter [in terms of structure per tweet]
Daisy PhD

Global Kids' Digital Media Initiative - 0 views

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    perhaps a way to introduce the various uses of Twitter to students & colleagues?
Daisy PhD

12 Reasons to Start Twittering | Michael Hyatt - 0 views

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    very convincing argument that i wish i'd had yesterday to share with my dept!
Daisy PhD

SIIA Brown Bag Lunch: Why Twitter Matters - 0 views

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    great slideshow and video of the brown bag meeting!
Daisy PhD

Professors experiment with Twitter as teaching tool - JSOnline - 0 views

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    i'm not the only one!
Daisy PhD

Twenty-Two Interesting Ways to use Twitter in the Classroom - Google Docs - 0 views

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    very cool ideas here!
Daisy PhD

LA Learning Success Examiner: Facebook does not cause lower GPAs - 0 views

  • Don’t folks love these studies that make them hang on to their seats! It’s a research murder mystery turned cliff hanger! The reality is no one knows who “dunnit”! People can guess all they want. Parents can play it safe and deactivate accounts without any real basis, but it might make them feel better. The truth is we won’t know unless further study is completed some day in the future after more data is collected and described. Then and only then can some patterns be looked at and then perhaps a study looking at causation could be undertaken. And that will be a long time from now.So what are parents to do? If parents have been vigilant about how much time children spend on technology whether computer, television, video games, or the internet, keep up the good work. If parents have not been monitoring time spent with technology, then maybe some consideration is needed. But parents should do so not because they are fearful of lower grades. Instead, parents should monitor social networking because, done in excess, it keeps teens from doing other activities that are probably better for them in the long run in achieving a balanced life and true learning success. 
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    great counterargument to the Ohio State report that got everyone talking last week
Daisy PhD

The Slow Erosion of Google Search - Bokardo - 0 views

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    good guessay to get the kids thinking
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