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Ashley Sawyer

Using Participatory Media and Public Voice to Engage - 2 views

http://sprout.tigweb.org/resources/CLO/5_Using_Participatory_Media_-_Voice.pdf This article discusses how the use of media can promote identity exploration and interaction. By participating in digi...

writing identity media

started by Ashley Sawyer on 12 Mar 12 no follow-up yet
Thomas Prosser

Using Participatory Media and Public Voice to Engage - 2 views

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    This is a scholarly article written by Howard Rheingold explaining the various uses of Participatory Media and social media to engage students in the writing process and to promote civic engagement. The article gives numerous examples of particapitory media being utilized to empower students and give them an investment into their work. The entire article comes from a pedagogical perspective that I found beneficial.
nsfarzo

Digital Discourse: Composing with Media in the Writing Classroom - 0 views

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    Digital Discourse: Composing with media in the writing classroom Karen Gocsik This article, posted under the writing and rhetoric section of the Dartmouth University website, discusses the potential multi-media assignments and teaching methods can have on new-age students. Gocsik feels that the literacy of the screen should become a third type of literacy behind oral and print. The nuances in composing a webpage or video reveal similar elements to that of constructing an essay. Gocsik makes the point that making a video project teaches students how to: come up with explicit vs. implied theses, structure according to the expectations of the audience and conventions of a particular medium or genre, and how to craft arguments out of a polophony of voices while creating a multimedia voice of one's own (Gocsik). Multimedia devices such as blogs or webpage's can be used to assist in the bigger project of a video collaboration.
aberman

How Social Media is Effecting the Way We Read and Write - 0 views

http://gigaom.com/collaboration/how-social-media-is-affecting-the-way-we-speak-and-write/ This was a very interesting and actually decently fun read about a commonly talked about idea of whether o...

started by aberman on 05 Mar 12 no follow-up yet
Kris Wheat

A Portal to Media Literacy - 0 views

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    This is an hour long lecture by the same guy (Dr. Wesch) who did the short video "A Vision of Students Today" that we watched in class at the beginning of the semester. This video goes more in depth about the issues presented in the short video. He discusses how the way most college classes are set up (i.e. lecture-based classes) do not encourage learning. He talks about how we can create a community of learning by incorporating different types of media like Google Docs, Twitter, Diigo, etc. to get students engaged with each other and what they're learning. This is a great video, but I warn you: Dr. Wesch likes to pace around in the same area when he lectures. This may not bother everyone, but it was distracting to me because he never holds still.
Patty Hunsicker

Clive Thompson on the New Literacy - 0 views

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    Andrea Lunsford's Standford study shows that technology is not hurting literacy--it is creating a revolution. "Before the Internet came along, most Americans never wrote anything, ever, that wasn't a school assignment. Unless they got a job that required producing text (like in law, advertising, or media), they'd leave school and virtually never construct a paragraph again." Today's generation, however, writes every day, often all day long thanks to things like twitter and facebook and texting.
nsfarzo

Hypermedia Authoring as Critical Literacy - 0 views

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    Hypermedia Authoring as Critical Literacy Jamie Myers Richard Beach This article talks about the benefits of implementing hypermedia into literacy education. Hypermedia or hypertext is a web tool that allows students to access school texts via the Internet and actively engage in annotating those texts or providing links to relating websites, pictures, or videos. Students don't have to just link either, they can create their own webpage geared towards whatever it is their doing. A student could make a webpage featuring a paper they wrote, with links to videos and pictures that the creator feels relates to the paper. It's a type of personalization that would motivate a student and make them view their writing differently. Free writing is a useful tool for helping a writer find their voice or develop their own style. Hypertext allows students to free write with freedom and creativity about particular texts, and puts their writing into conversation with other student's responses. Similar to the way we use dijgo, but with a focus on the inquires made into a certain school text. Discussion of the various posts can be made in class, to create a literal conversation on inquires and interpretations of a text.
Ashley Sawyer

Hypermedia Authoring as Critical Literacy - 1 views

This article by Jamie Myers and Richard Beach discusses the many benefits hypermedia has in education. I recently did an internship at Inspire charter school where most of their classes were Intern...

writing media teaching motivation

started by Ashley Sawyer on 12 Mar 12 no follow-up yet
Joseph Fithian

A mobile-device-supported peer-assisted learning system for collaborative early EFL rea... - 5 views

My first three entries for this research dealt with the classroom pedagogy as it related to teaching. The forth focused on technology used in a university setting for writing. For this last arti...

students teaching classroom literacy media

started by Joseph Fithian on 10 Mar 12 no follow-up yet
Joseph Fithian

Collaborative writing among L2 learners in academic web-based projects - 2 views

My first entry was "How Well Are ESL Teachers Being Prepared to Integrate Technology in Their Classrooms?" The second: "A Framework for Addressing Challenges to Classroom Technology Use". The thir...

students classroom literacy

started by Joseph Fithian on 10 Mar 12 no follow-up yet
Joseph Fithian

A Framework for Addressing Challenges to Classroom Technology Use - 0 views

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    Profess Groff, at MIT, took on the topic of classroom technology and the classroom environment. It is an older article, but she looked at the integration into the learning processes of student and the ways to judge a successful device in the learning process. One point, is that instructors need to assess the effects of a device early-on, so that an effective integration plan could be implemented before the likelihood of it hindering the learning process. I would agree that in the past this was a simple solution even though there seemed to be a lag in the educational system to integrate these devices. Now, however, the rate of development of new devices seems to be making the lag even more of an issue. The end of the article details the main obstacles to learning, the classroom and new technology in the classroom; and they mostly relate to the teacher. Students have no problem keeping up with the newest device available. This then brings me back to the idea that an effect plan in the school and teacher training needs to be employed.
Ashley Sawyer

First Reflections - 0 views

Student teachers' first reflections on information and communications technology and classroom learning: Implications for initial teacher education is an article written by Daniela Sime and Mark Pr...

technology teaching students writing media research

started by Ashley Sawyer on 05 Mar 12 no follow-up yet
Joseph Fithian

Have Technology and Multitasking Rewired How Students Learn? - 2 views

This is the article Dr. Fosen sent to all of us. The article is by cognitive science, the science of the mind and how it works. Here it is applied to how the mind works in relation to learning an...

http:__www.aft.org_pdfs_americaneducator_summer2010_Willingham.pdf

started by Joseph Fithian on 05 Mar 12 no follow-up yet
nsfarzo

Celebrated poems of Milton, Whitman come alive for students through multimedia teaching... - 0 views

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    The University of Austin Texas posted an article on their website talking about the innovative approach English professors John Rumrich and Coleman Hutichson created for teaching Milton's poem Paradise Lost. The two wanted to incorporate multimedia uses into the teaching of the poem in order to enhance the reading and listening experience, as well as actively engage students into incorporating their meaning of the texts. The website they created has the poem being read aloud be various voices while the text itself is highlighted on the screen. Each line or group of lines has links to them that a student can follow which provide images, websites, or comments from students and teachers expressing their interpretation of the lines or ideas and questions prompted from them. The website Rumrich and Hutichson created have had around 25,000 hits world wide, and have inspired similar projects dedicated to the poems Leaves of Grass and Song of Myself. If poetry were to be taught in high schools with technology in mind, students would be more likely to actively participate in reading and discussing poetry then if it were just read as any other text.
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    let's try to link more directly to writing/learning to write.
nsfarzo

Poetry: A Powerful Medium for Literacy and Technology Development - 1 views

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    This article by Dr. Janette Hughes talks about the import role poetry plays in literacy development and how multi-media uses of poetry in the classroom can further enhance and engage a students learning process. For the sake of how in depth both of these subjects are, I'm only going to discuss what Dr. Hughes says about poetry and literacy development in this article. "Paying attention to the language and rhythms of poetry helps build oral language skills…..Children with well-developed oral language skills are more likely to have higher achievement in reading and writing" (Hughes). Poetry has an elitist stereotype to it, and tends to be something kept out of middle school and high school classrooms for the most part. Some English classes may briefly touch on some of the cannons of poetry, but only focus on a traditional notion of reading the context and finding the one single meaning. As Hughes states, "The dominant model of poetry teaching, particularly for older students, has been to teach poetry through print text and to focus on finding one meaning to be dissected. In contrast, poets emphasize the importance of hearing the poem read aloud, engaging with it, and probing for deeper meaning through discussion with others" (Hughes). I feel that engagement in poetry provides tools applicable to understanding every type of text. The brevity in poetry forces your mind to work in more analytical ways, and a facilitation of this analysis with other students provides a type of engaging learning experience that can be applied to any type of text for any class. This article really fascinated me, and left me with many more questions and ideas I would like to explore regarding poetry in the classroom.
Lina Dong

ESL/EFL instructors' practices for writing assessment: specific purposes or general pur... - 1 views

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    In this article, the author interviews a several instructors and examines the different types of assessment based on the information from the instructors and students. The general purpose assessment can have many benefits such as improve students' self-confidence and expressive abilities, check the language style and composing process, and so on. The specific purpose assessment limits individual's development and pushes students focusing on the written text rather than exploring ideas from multiple media. Assessment is also very important for students and instructors because it is closely related to the grades students will get. If the assessment is not appropriate, writing practices and activities will not attract students' attention. Also, this article agrees that general purpose assessment can be more helpful for students; my question is that whether general purpose writing is helpful for students to improve writing.
Rocky Rodriguez

I Hate Writing - 0 views

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    I found this video actually looking for an informative video about students liking writing ---- goes to show that most students "hate" writing for multiple reasons. Many of the reasons in the control of educators. Teachers have the power to change the negative connotation students interpret writing to be - just an assignment, no further significance to, no interest to write ---- students should enjoy writing <<< school stems from learning through writing and reading ---- students want to write on things that interest them not pedagogical theories and research assignments. Students like to learn through their own eyes - students enjoy different genres of writing. Teachers have the power to enable their students in finding their interest in the writing realm. However, students should know the general rules and process of writing whether it be a narrative or research assignment, etc. Also, (as a teacher comments within the movie) - students don't always take blogs or social-media oriented writing forums with interest since self-representation is then transmitted into a educational institution. The video also covers the public's views on possible preventing of "writing hatred." This video also reflects the concept in the Casanava article in our class packet - teachers need to work on getting students immersed in writing through allowing their personal knowledge be combined with the values and lessons deemed by the institution they are writing for.
Brendan O'Donnell

Writing for Whom? Cognition, Motivation, and a Writer's Audience - 0 views

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    After getting past the awesomeness of the fact that the author's name is Magnifico, this article concerns itself with issues of audience in writing. Much of the article is a literature review summing up the current research in the area and how it relates to her future research. Some of the areas examined are the cognitive and socio-cultural analyses of the effect of audience on writing. She finds that the audience can be a source of motivation and that writing with the audience in mind can inspire new comers to ask themselves the same sorts of questions as expert writers, such as what is it that they want to say, to whom are they saying it, and how are they going to convey this message.
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