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Laura Covington

Technology Is Changing How Students Learn, Teachers Say - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • There is a widespread belief among teachers that students’ constant use of digital technology is hampering their attention spans and ability to persevere in the face of challenging tasks, according to two surveys of teachers being released on Thursday.
  • The researchers note that their findings represent the subjective views of teachers and should not be seen as definitive proof that widespread use of computers, phones and video games affects students’ capability to focus. Even so, the researchers who performed the studies, as well as scholars who study technology’s impact on behavior and the brain, say the studies are significant because of the vantage points of teachers, who spend hours a day observing students. The timing of the studies, from two well-regarded research organizations, appears to be coincidental.
  • One was conducted by the Pew Internet Project, a division of the Pew Research Center that focuses on technology-related research. The other comes from Common Sense Media, a nonprofit organization in San Francisco that advises parents on media use by children. It was conducted by Vicky Rideout, a researcher who has previously shown that media use among children and teenagers ages 8 to 18 has grown so fast that they on average spend twice as much time with screens each year as they spend in school.
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  • She said she did not want to shrink from the challenge of engaging them, nor did other teachers interviewed, but she also worried that technology was causing a deeper shift in how students learned. She also wondered if teachers were adding to the problem by adjusting their lessons to accommodate shorter attention spans.
  • “I’m an entertainer. I have to do a song and dance to capture their attention,” said Hope Molina-Porter, 37, an English teacher at Troy High School in Fullerton, Calif., who has taught for 14 years. She teaches accelerated students, but has noted a marked decline in the depth and analysis of their written work.
  • “Are we contributing to this?” Ms. Molina-Porter said. “What’s going to happen when they don’t have constant entertainment?”
  • The surveys also found that many teachers said technology could be a useful educational tool. In the Pew survey, which was done in conjunction with the College Board and the National Writing Project, roughly 75 percent of 2,462 teachers surveyed said that the Internet and search engines had a “mostly positive” impact on student research skills. And they said such tools had made students more self-sufficient researchers. But nearly 90 percent said that digital technologies were creating “an easily distracted generation with short attention spans.” Similarly, of the 685 teachers surveyed in the Common Sense project, 71 percent said they thought technology was hurting attention span “somewhat” or “a lot.” About 60 percent said it hindered students’ ability to write and communicate face to face, and almost half said it hurt critical thinking and their ability to do homework.
  • In interviews, teachers described what might be called a “Wikipedia problem,” in which students have grown so accustomed to getting quick answers with a few keystrokes that they are more likely to give up when an easy answer eludes them. The Pew research found that 76 percent of teachers believed students had been conditioned by the Internet to find quick answers. “They need skills that are different than ‘Spit, spit, there’s the answer,’ ” said Lisa Baldwin, 48, a high school teacher in Great Barrington, Mass., who said students’ ability to focus and fight through academic challenges was suffering an “exponential decline.” She said she saw the decline most sharply in students whose parents allowed unfettered access to television, phones, iPads and video games.
  • The heavy technology use, Dr. Christakis said, “makes reality by comparison uninteresting.”
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    A study designed by the Pew Internet Project conducted by Pew Research Center and another study performed by Common Sense Media shows that the widespread use of digital devices hamper a students ability to focus. They also show a remarkable decline in a student's capability to push through difficult assignments and tasks, and even teachers who teach advanced students show decline in "the depth and analysis of their written work". Though the studies findings provided by teachers may be seen as "subjective". even the researchers themselves, and scholars who study technology's impact "on behavior and on the brain", acknowledge the findings to be "significant" due to the fact that teachers spend a great deal more time with these students, observing their literacy and learning skills, more than anyone else.
Laura Covington

Technology: Declining Literacy or Changing it? by Brian West on Prezi - 0 views

  • As technology has played a bigger role in our lives, our skills in critical thinking and analysis have declined, while our visual skills have improved, according to research by Patricia Greenfield, UCLA distinguished professor of psychology and director of the Children's Digital Media Center, Los Angeles."Studies
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    This article denotes a definite decline in "reading" literacy but acknowledges an increase in "visual" literacy, due to the increase of technology and more learning through video's and pictures. There is also an important point made in the need, because of this increase in technology, that the term "literacy" may need to be redefined. Many studies have been done to show benefits of "reading" (a literal book) but mentions that there are no studies that actually measure the full intellectual benefits of visual learning.
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    Just realized that this prezi was created by a Full Sail student who participated in this particular debate a little over a year ago. i love the prezi he created.
Laura Covington

Is Technology Producing A Decline In Critical Thinking And Analysis? -- ScienceDaily - 0 views

  • "By using more visual media, students will process information better," she said. "However, most visual media are real-time media that do not allow time for reflection, analysis or imagination — those do not get developed by real-time media such as television or video games. Technology is not a panacea in education, because of the skills that are being lost.
  • "Studies show that reading develops imagination, induction, reflection and critical thinking, as well as vocabulary," Greenfield said. "Reading for pleasure is the key to developing these skills. Students today have more visual literacy and less print literacy. Many students do not read for pleasure and have not for decades."
  • Another study Greenfield analyzed found that college students who watched "CNN Headline News" with just the news anchor on screen and without the "news crawl" across the bottom of the screen remembered significantly more facts from the televised broadcast than those who watched it with the distraction of the crawling text and with additional stock market and weather information on the screen.
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  • Greenfield believes much of this change is related to our increased use of technology, as well as other factors, including increased levels of formal education, improved nutrition, smaller families and increased societal complexity. The Children's Digital Media Center, Los Angeles, has received federal funding from the National Science Foundation.
  • The above story is based on materials provided by University of California - Los Angeles
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    Technology has brought about a profound negative effect on how well we learn today. The increase of visual media has caused many skills to be lost. This article is based on studies and research done by Patricia Greenfield, UCLA. Greenfield is a distinguished professor of psychology and director of the Children's Digital Media Center, Los Angeles.
Andrew Osbourne

The 4 Negative Side Effects Of Technology - Edudemic - 0 views

  • What are some of the side effects of technology?
  • A limited use of gadgets can be quite useful for children as it will allow them to be up to date with the current technology. However, the overuse of these advancements can really hamper or even damage their development in the personal growth, communication and educational department.
  • These days, children indulge themselves in internet, games or texting. These activities have affected their psyche negatively, consequently leading to increased frustration. Now they get frustrated whenever they are asked to do anything while playing games or using internet. For instance, when their parents ask them to take the trash out, they get furious instantly. This behavior has shattered many parent-children relationships.
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  • According to studies, tolerance in children is vanishing quite increasingly due to the improper use of technology. For example, children get frustrated quickly when they surf internet and the page they want to view takes time to load.
  • Due to the excessive usage of online chatting and shortcuts, the writing skills of today’s young generation have declined quite tremendously.
  • children are relying more and more on digital communication that they have totally forgot about improving their writing skills. They don’t know the spelling of different words, how to use grammar properly or how to do cursive writing.
  • Now, more and more people are interacting with others through different platforms like apps, role-playing online games, social networks, etc. This advancement has hampered the physical interaction skills of many children. Due to that they don’t know how to interact with others when they meet them in-person or what gesture they should carry.
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    Team B. Hello Everyone. I know I'm super late adding my input to the assignment, and I apologize for being late. However, I've been doing my research to find good sources and info to add. Everyone else so far has done an excellent job though. Looking good Team B. -Andrew Osbourne
Pallin Allar

Dawn of the digital natives - is reading declining? | Technology | The Guardian - 0 views

  • a convincing case that both kids and adults are reading fewer books
  • . "Non-required" reading - ie, picking up a book for the fun of it - is down 7% since 1992 for all adults, and 12% for 18-24 year olds.
  • all progress appears to halt as children enter their teenage years."
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  • in 1992, 43% of Americans read at an intermediate level; by 2003 the number was slightly higher at 44%. "Proficient" readers dropped slightly, from 15% to 13%.
  • Odds are that you are reading these words on a computer monitor. Are you not exercising the same cognitive muscles because these words are made out of pixels and not little splotches of ink? According to the NEA you're not, because in almost every study it cites, screen-based reading is excluded from the data.
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    Not sure if this still matters, but this was what I was able to find this week. Sorry I let you guys down. Work got hectic this week. It was my first week. Lots of staying late :(
Pallin Allar

The Future of Reading - Literacy Debate - Online, R U Really Reading? - Series - NYTime... - 0 views

  • regularly spends at least six hours a day in front of the computer
  • teenagers’ scores on standardized reading tests have declined or stagnated
  • — diminishing literacy, wrecking attention spans and destroying a precious common culture that exists only through the reading of books.
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  • At least since the invention of television, critics have warned that electronic media would destroy reading. What is different now, some literacy experts say, is that spending time on the Web, whether it is looking up something on Google or even britneyspears.org, entails some engagement with text.
Laura Covington

Cris Rowan: The Impact of Technology on the Developing Child - 0 views

  • Children of the past moved... a lot, and their sensory world was nature based and simple.
  • Today's families are different. Technology's impact on the 21st century family is fracturing its very foundation, and causing a disintegration of core values that long ago were the fabric that held families together. Juggling school, work, home, and community lives, parents now rely heavily on communication, information, and transportation technology to make their lives faster and more efficient. Entertainment technology (TV, Internet, video games, iPads, cell phones) has advanced so rapidly, that families have scarcely noticed the significant impact and changes to their family structure and lifestyles. A 2010 Kaiser Foundation study showed that elementary aged children use on average 7.5 hours per day of entertainment technology, 75 percent of these children have TV's in their bedrooms, and 50 percent of North American homes have the TV on all day. Gone is dining room table conversation, replaced by the "big screen" and take out.
  • Children now rely on technology for the majority of their play, grossly limiting challenges to their creativity and imaginations, as well as limiting necessary challenges to their bodies to achieve optimal sensory and motor development. Sedentary bodies bombarded with chaotic sensory stimulation are resulting in delays in attaining child developmental milestones, with subsequent negative impact on basic foundation skills for achieving literacy. Hard-wired for high speed, today's young are entering school struggling with self regulation and attention skills necessary for learning, eventually becoming significant behavior management problems for teachers in the classroom.
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  • So what is the impact of technology on the developing child? Children's developing sensory, motor, and attachment systems have biologically not evolved to accommodate this sedentary, yet frenzied and chaotic nature of today's technology. The impact of rapidly advancing technology on the developing child has seen an increase of physical, psychological and behavior disorders that the health and education systems are just beginning to detect, much less understand
  • Four critical factors necessary to achieve healthy child development are movement, touch, human connection, and exposure to nature. These types of sensory inputs ensure normal development of posture, bilateral coordination, optimal arousal states and self-regulation necessary for achieving foundation skills for eventual school entry. Young children require 2-3 hours per day of active rough and tumble play to achieve adequate sensory stimulation to their vestibular, proprioceptive and tactile systems. Tactile stimulation received through touching, hugging and play is critical for the development of praxis, or planned movement patterns. Touch also activates the parasympathetic system lowering cortisol, adrenalin and anxiety. Nature and "green space" has not only a calming influence on children, but also is attention restorative and promotes learning.
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    A study done in 2010, by The Kaiser Foundation shows how drastically every facet of our lives, especially our children's lives, have changed and been negatively impacted, because of the constant, and continual up-rise of the use of technology. The increase of time spent watching television, for instance, has limited physical activity, leaving us sedentary a great deal of that time. The "chaotic sensory stimulation" that 21st century technology creates, conflicts with the sedentary state, and as a result, there are "delays in attaining child developmental milestones, with subsequent negative impact on basic foundation skills for achieving literacy. Hard-wired for high speed, today's young are entering school struggling with self regulation and attention skills necessary for learning, eventually becoming significant behavior management problems for teachers in the classroom."
Victor Salinas

LexisNexis® Academic & Library Solutions - 0 views

    • Victor Salinas
       
      Carr's argument is scientific rather than moral. The internet, he argues, has been "tinkering" with our brains. It is eroding our ability to concentrate and contemplate intellectually, the mental requisites that allow us to read and digest books. Instead of readers, the digital revolution is transforming all of us into skimmers - highly skilled at mentally jumping from hypertext to hypertext link, but increasingly unable to digest long or complex textual information, particularly in book form. Quoting the Tufts University developmental psychologist and leading authority on the act of reading, Maryanne Wolf, Carr reminds us we are not only "what we read" but also "how we read".
    • Victor Salinas
       
      Thus, today's skimming generation is becoming more mentally superficial, unable to think in anything beyond the intellectually impoverishing currency of instant messages, emails, and short web posts. The historical consequences of Carr's observations are deeply worrying. In Distracted: The Erosion of Attention and the Coming Dark Age, the Boston Globe columnist Maggie Jackson suggests that the increasingly low attention span and poor cognitive skills of today's multi - tasking, digitally addicted kids threatens to return civilisation to another dark age, one of what she calls "shadows and fears".
    • Victor Salinas
       
      Through the continual use of digital products, specifically the internet, our brains are starting to work differently. "It is eroding our ability to concentrate and contemplate intellectually, the mental requisites that allow us to read and digest books" (Andrew keen). Society has gotten so accustomed to information instantaneously that formal eduction is expected in the same fashion. Students are becoming less dependent on reading books and more dependent on browsing the internet.
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