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Brandi Burke

Ideas for the argument - 15 views

Going to work up a rough draft of the argument with the links below it supporting the statement.I will post it in another topic.At that point please feel free to make any adjustments to the stateme...

Jinnette Reyes Pantalone

The Future of Reading - Literacy Debate - Online, R U Really Reading? - Series - NYTime... - 2 views

    • Jinnette Reyes Pantalone
       
      This one we can use!
    • Patrick Gladden
       
      Good stuff.I read one similar that I posted on here earlier about cultural literacy.Although learning through technology is the new wave,I think traditional reading and writing fundamentals should still be applied.I think so much visual learning takes away from the ability to use imagination.
    • Brandi Burke
       
      This is a good article to use.It is one of the ones I had tried to "bookmark" yesterday but couldn't due to Diigo not working right.Then I closed the tab and lost the page.Glad Jinnette found it.
  • Some traditionalists warn that digital reading is the intellectual equivalent of empty calories. Often, they argue, writers on the Internet employ a cryptic argot that vexes teachers and parents. Zigzagging through a cornucopia of words, pictures, video and sounds, they say, distracts more than strengthens readers. And many youths spend most of their time on the Internet playing games or sending instant messages, activities that involve minimal reading at best.
  • Last fall the National Endowment for the Arts issued a sobering report linking flat or declining national reading test scores among teenagers with the slump in the proportion of adolescents who said they read for fun.
  • ...16 more annotations...
  • According to Department of Education data cited in the report, just over a fifth of 17-year-olds said they read almost every day for fun in 2004, down from nearly a third in 1984. Nineteen percent of 17-year-olds said they never or hardly ever read for fun in 2004, up from 9 percent in 1984. (It was unclear whether they thought of what they did on the Internet as “reading.”)
  • “Whatever the benefits of newer electronic media,” Dana Gioia, the chairman of the N.E.A., wrote in the report’s introduction, “they provide no measurable substitute for the intellectual and personal development initiated and sustained by frequent reading.”
  • Despite these efforts, Nadia never became a big reader. Instead, she became obsessed with Japanese anime cartoons on television and comics like “Sailor Moon.” Then, when she was in the sixth grade, the family bought its first computer. When a friend introduced Nadia to fanfiction.net, she turned off the television and started reading online.
  • Many of them have elliptical plots and are sprinkled with spelling and grammatical errors. One of her recent favorites was “My absolutely, perfect normal life ... ARE YOU CRAZY? NOT!,” a story based on the anime series “Beyblade.”
  • “Just then I notice (Like finally) something sharp right in front of me,” Aries writes. “I gladly took it just like that until something terrible happen ....”
  • “So like in the book somebody could die,” she continued, “but you could make it so that person doesn’t die or make it so like somebody else dies who you don’t like.
  • Nadia said she wanted to major in English at college and someday hopes to be published. She does not see a problem with reading few books. “No one’s ever said you should read more books to get into college,” she said.
  • The simplest argument for why children should read in their leisure time is that it makes them better readers. According to federal statistics, students who say they read for fun once a day score significantly higher on reading tests than those who say they never do
    • Brandi Burke
       
      Can add this into the argument.
  • Department of Education statistics also show that those who score higher on reading tests tend to earn higher incomes.
  • “I would believe people who tell me that the Internet develops reading if I did not see such a universal decline in reading ability and reading comprehension on virtually all tests.”
  • Critics of reading on the Internet say they see no evidence that increased Web activity improves reading achievement. “What we are losing in this country and presumably around the world is the sustained, focused, linear attention developed by reading,” said Mr. Gioia of the N.E.A
  • “What the Net seems to be doing is chipping away my capacity for concentration and contemplation,” he wrote, confessing that he now found it difficult to read long books.
  • he suggested that the effects of Internet reading extended beyond the falling test scores of adolescence
  • “Reading a book, and taking the time to ruminate and make inferences and engage the imaginational processing, is more cognitively enriching, without doubt, than the short little bits that you might get if you’re into the 30-second digital mode,”
  • Some scientists worry that the fractured experience typical of the Internet could rob developing readers of crucial skills.
  • To date, there have been few large-scale appraisals of Web skills. The Educational Testing Service, which administers the SAT, has developed a digital literacy test known as iSkills that requires students to solve informational problems by searching for answers on the Web. About 80 colleges and a handful of high schools have administered the test so far.But according to Stephen Denis, product manager at ETS, of the more than 20,000 students who have taken the iSkills test since 2006, only 39 percent of four-year college freshmen achieved a score that represented “core functional levels” in Internet literacy
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    The one that i highlight after this one has a lot of great stuff about grammar.
Lucas Cook

http://bootheprize.stanford.edu/0203/PWR-Boothe-Craig.pdf - 0 views

    • Lucas Cook
       
      Page 118 2nd paragraph
    • Lucas Cook
       
      A prime example of the literacy problem our youth faces in todays world of technology.
Mikail Zahir

The Argument (( rough draft)) - 16 views

I like the rough draft argument you did. You put everything all members posted about in it. I thank you for taking the steps to getting this done. I have been at work all day.

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