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Pamela Stevens

Education Today - Reading with iPads - the difference makes a difference - 0 views

  • generally positive attitude
  • 16% of the total group reporting they spent no time reading for enjoyment.
  • majority
  • ...11 more annotations...
  • believed strongly that reading was important.
  • boys read frequently online.
  • 40%) reported they never or almost never use online chat or online messages.
  • he low group read more regularly than the other two groups.
  • strong correlation between higher levels of achievement and a more favourable attitude to reading,
  • end of each text, an achievement test was administered to the two classes.
  • results of these tests showed little difference between the ability levels, with the exception of the low group’s responses to the “Knowledge” category.
  • When using the iPad, the scores of the students in this group were lower than when they were reading a traditional text
  • two-thirds of the students recorded negative or no growth when using the iPad.
  • the same for a little over 50% of the Analysis category
  • howed majority positive growth was the Low group
Matt Lane

Why teens should read 'adult' fiction - and vice-versa - The Globe and Mail - 0 views

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    Next year, I may start the Lit course with this essay.
Pamela Stevens

Education Week: Bad Online Behavior Jeopardizes Students' College Plans - 0 views

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    "Bad Online Behavior Jeopardizes Students' College Plans"
Pamela Stevens

The American Scholar: Orson Welles on Reading Shakespeare Aloud - Paula Marantz Cohen - 0 views

  • Young minds—in high school and college—need to feel personally connected, excited, and moved by what they read. They have a thirst for beauty, and will respond to poetry and prose that speaks to the human condition. To pitch too soon into a theoretical approach risks destroying this visceral connection.
  • ascendancy of science, which has turned the study of literature into a scientific endeavor.
  • eading Shakespeare aloud is key to appreciating his work.
Pamela Stevens

Donald L. Luskin: Remembering the Real Ayn Rand - WSJ.com - 1 views

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    So you've read The Giving Tree, right? What happens with Objectivism and Rand cross paths... "Would Rand have cried reading the book for the first time? I doubt it. She would have said that the boy was noble to take all he could (though she may have been puzzled by the fact that he did not make a fortune off the apples, house and boat)."
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