Skip to main content

Home/ HGSET561/ Group items tagged digital reader

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Tomoko Matsukawa

Interesting Results from the WorldReader e-Reader Pilot in Ghana | ICTWorks - 1 views

  •  
    Very interesting article. "iREAD (Impact on Reading of E-Readers And Digital content) Ghana Pilot Study" Another example showing us the traditional standardized test doesnt seem to be a suitable type of assessment here. But in addition to that there are many interesting findings related to IT literacy, benefits of the teachers and increased access to learning materials. (never really thought a simple hardware such as e-reader itself will be this 'transformational' to certain countries across the world) 
Vafa AK

Inching closer to the perfect e-reader for students | Education IT | ZDNet.com - 0 views

  •  
    I've always been interested in the use of these so called 'e-readers', how they hopefully will take the place of books, will let you take notes right there on the digital text and will seriously lighten you backpack. Obviously these things haven't quite caught on yet, but the techology is certainly starting to get better and better in this area!
Maung Nyeu

Textbooks Finally Take a Big Leap to Digital - NYTimes.com - 2 views

  •  
    Are digital textbooks the beginning of the end for the college bookstores? 39 percent students surveyed used digital reader. We may be reaching a tipping point here.
Garron Hillaire

Writer Neal Stephenson Unveils His Digital Novel The Mongoliad - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  • The company, based in Seattle and San Francisco, has developed what it calls the PULP platform for creating digital novels
  • aterial like background articles, images, music, and video. There are also social features that allow readers to create the
  • There are also social features that allow readers to create their own profiles, earn badges for activity on the site or in the application, and interact with other readers.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • Stephenson isn’t writing the book alone. There’s a team led by a writer Mark Teppo; it also includes Greg Bear, author of Blood Music and other science fiction novels. Stephenson compared the experience to writing a TV show, and not just because it’s a team of writers.
  •  
    The PULP platform is an example of a writer trying to respond to people wanting more than traditional publishing. If this platform, or something like it, was widely accepted by people it might build a better case for alternative forms of publishing in education
Chris Dede

Education Week's Digital Directions: Schools Test E-Reader Devices With Dyslexic Students - 0 views

  •  
    Do e-readers aid dyslexic students? They actually could do much more, but the vendors are happy to make claims without building in those capabilities...
Hannah Lesk

NY Times Op-Ed: Long Live Paper - 2 views

  •  
    A point of view challenging the rapid transition to digital textbooks. 
  •  
    These op-eds and blogs keep popping up, but I have yet to read one that is at all compelling. It was particularly entertaining when this author referenced how digital photography put Polaroid out of business. Hard to understand why one would use that reference when defending the textbook. The funny thing is that textbooks were never a fantastic learning tool to begin with. The real danger is that digital textbooks will not not make the dramatic improvements that they may be capable of when it comes to teaching the material.
Devon Dickau

BBC News - The rights and wrongs of digital books - 2 views

  • The latter part of 2010 may mark the point from which future historians date the transition to screen-based reading for literary fiction as well as reference works
  • However, even they are not yet willing to accept that the price of electronic texts is too high, and that readers will not pay the same for a bunch of bits as they will for a bound book, since the market knows that it costs less to send electrons over a network than it does to buy paper, make books out of it and ship the physical objects around the world
  • When you buy an digital copy to read on your e-book reader, phone or laptop all you get is the copyrighted bit, and what you pay for is a licence to have a copy or copies of the text.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Amazon recently announced that it will let Kindle owners "lend" books, but only for two weeks and only once per title.
  • The idea of "intellectual property" deliberately conflates the two and allows politicians to pretend that laws about physical property should extend to digital downloads. We need to challenge this unjustifiable elision if we are to think seriously about copyright and business models in the age of electronics.
Ando Endano

The Barnes & Noble Nook reader to be revealed and available tomorrow for $259 - 0 views

  •  
    Barnes and Noble releases the Nook, which is a competitor to the Amazon Kindle. It has E-ink on the top, and a color screen below.
Ayelet R

Education Week: Digital Book-Sharing Unlocks Print for Students - 0 views

  •  
    Digital books allow students with disabilities to read more easily.
  •  
    I think the main idea and KEY affordance is getting books to these kids faster and more efficiently. In the past, for a visually impaired student, a district would have to request or find the book in Large print or in Braille after the typical book had arrived, so by making an HTML version of the printed book available (at the same time) as the print, allows for screen readers to work and be available to the students without the traditional wait time. Excellent use of technology.
amy hoffmaster

A Web 2.0 Class: Students Learn 21st Century Skills, Collaboration, and Digital Citizen... - 1 views

  • "I have been able to virtually meet the people that can help me get the answers I need for what I am searching for in school and one day, in my career."
  • These students are learning how to be critical readers and thinkers, while opening up rich, academic conversations via blogs, Twitter, and Skype.
  •  
    Students realize that with Web 2.0 lots of resources are available.
Jenny Reuter

UDL Book Builder - 1 views

shared by Jenny Reuter on 30 Sep 12 - Cached
  •  
    This is another project by CAST which has been particularly relevant to the work our research project is involved with. For more information click on the link below: http://jlr.sagepub.com/content/43/1/68 This article was provided to us by our contact at CAST and attempts to validate this type of "Digital Reading Environment." It's also authored by Catherine Show of HGSE, and is just a year old. The statistical data is a little above my comprehension level but it is described at a level I can understand. CAST UDL Book Builder This wonderful and free online tool allows you to create your own interactive "books" to help young readers learn reading strategies to build comprehension. Enter your own text, images, and hints.
  •  
    this was presented in one of my other classes (A-117). it provides an interesting way to use digital text for enhanced learning.
Tommie Anthony Henderson

Grading the Digital School - 3 views

  •  
    In recent years there has been a major push to equip classrooms with technology, including laptops, overhead projectors, interactive white boards and tablets. It has become big business. But there are questions about whether the investment is paying off. This series explores the push to digitize the American classroom and whether the promises are being fulfilled.
  •  
    This comment from a reader on one of the articles (Inflating the Software Report Card) sums it up rather nicely: "Data-driven, individualized instruction aimed at identifying a student's strengths and weaknesses, is not perfect, nor can it replace great teachers. But it can and does allow gifted students to zoom ahead, average students to keep up, and struggling students to catch up. If we really want math education to become part of the fabric of our kids' lives, not just raising their scores on a standardized test, but helping them become more competent and effective adults, we need to take advantage of all of the technology available".
Drew Nelson

Kids Tagged With RFID Chips? The Creepy New Technology Schools Use to Track Everything ... - 2 views

  •  
    In general, these systems consist of a school photo ID card affixed to a lanyard that is worn around the student's neck. The ID has a RFID chip embedded in it. The tag includes a digit number assigned to each student. As a student enters the school or pass beneath a doorway equipped with an RFID reader, the tag ID is read, recorded and sent to a server in the school's administrative office. The captured data not only provides an attendance list (sent to the teacher's PDA), but tracks the student's movement throughout the day.
  •  
    I like that it makes attendance easier to monitor but still seems kinda creepy...and there's always a way around those systems....
Brandon Bentley

Technology in the Classroom: Why It Needs to Catch Up -- And Fast - 2 views

  •  
    Kno reader- digital textbook
Garron Hillaire

Kno Tablet to Debut at $599 - NYTimes.com - 2 views

  • We already knew that the Kno, a tablet computer designed for college students, would be bigger and heavier than Apple’s iPad. It will also be pricier.
  • “When you do the math, it actually pays for itself and still saves $1,300 in digital textbook costs,” he said.
  • To be sure, the Kno is not just a fancy e-reader. It is also a platform that will allow students to take notes, manage projects and organize their college lives.
1 - 15 of 15
Showing 20 items per page