Skip to main content

Home/ Groups/ IL2239 - Fall 2014
noraa2

Growing Up Digital, Wired for Distraction - NYTimes.com - 0 views

    • noraa2
       
      This "impetus" is a reason to foster interest while opening new uses for the internet, to be made into a tool - like Diigo.
  • The technology amplifies whoever you are
    • noraa2
       
      I sometimes wonder how the use of technologies could change our physical appearance. Will our heads become larger as our minds get "bigger," could our eyes begin to bulge as we stare are more screens, will our thumb joints grow while the tip shrinks to increase typing speed? It these traits are socially beneficially and increase the potential for being passed on, how might the human of the future appear?
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • age-old desire for
  • control
noraa2

Growing Up Digital, Wired for Distraction - NYTimes.com - 0 views

    • noraa2
       
      It is easy to want instant gratification, but I've found that delayed gratification usually pays off more. Though many, espcially at a younger age, are often motivated by short term more than long term.
  • discovered a passion for filmmaking
    • noraa2
       
      This is one reason for teaching to students interests and incorporating them within content. By fostering interest we help students develop their passion and increase each aspect of life for that person and for others who benefit from greater creativity within that field.
kelschrdr

Millennial insight on technology - 2 views

http://www.accenture.com/us-en/Pages/insight-millennials-technology-overview.aspx

started by kelschrdr on 09 Sep 14 no follow-up yet
Virginia Loh-Hagan

▶ TEDxSF - Scott Hess - Millennials: Who They Are & Why We Hate Them - YouTube - 0 views

  •  
    On a side note - I think my dad should watch this video! Maybe he wouldn't give my brother and I such a hard time! Our generation (the millennials) are constantly being frowned upon. However, when one steps back and looks at that particular generation and what they are facing at that point in time, it makes sense of where the differences lie. We are a digital group of people that are attempting change in the country with the way people think and what they stand for. We are also confident and educated and determined to be successful while putting family first.
sabrit61

Millennials: Confident. Connected. Open to Change | Pew Research Center's Social & Demo... - 2 views

    • Rachel DeAngelis
       
      As I read this article, I feel like I'm not falling into a clear-cut Millennial category. I'm in my twenties, but I'm married, I have a child, and I have a religious faith, and I don't have any piercings or tattoos (I guess I am just not trendy at ALL, haha). This category of people who are enrolled in grad school because of the competitive job market is the first criterion that I fit into!
    • sabrit61
       
      Millennials are often considered "lazy."  This statement completely contradicts that.
    • sabrit61
       
      Myself, as well as many others put their families before their career.  Specifically, my child comes first.  However, a few decades ago, work seemed more important so that you could provide for your family.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • confident, self-expressive, liberal, upbeat and open to change.
  • Confident. Connected. Open to Change
noraa2

Reading Online - New Literacies: Toward a Theory of New Literacies - 0 views

shared by noraa2 on 10 Aug 14 - No Cached
  • The ability to linguistically manipulate identity as well as the norms of conversation to fit these new electronic spaces has implications for both the development of language and conceptions of the role of technology (Crystal, 2001).
    • Virginia Loh-Hagan
       
      We are constantly "fitting new electronic spaces" - technology seems to have sped up the rate of change.  
  • the Internet
    • Virginia Loh-Hagan
       
      This reminds me of Alan November's contention that the Internet is the innovation, not tech tools/devices/gadgets which are mere vehicles for the internet.
  • The new literacies of the Internet and other ICTs include the skills, strategies, and dispositions necessary to successfully use and adapt to the rapidly changing information and communication technologies and contexts that continuously emerge in our world and influence all areas of our personal and professional lives. These new literacies allow us to use the Internet and other ICTs to identify important questions, locate information, critically evaluate the usefulness of that information, synthesize information to answer those questions, and then communicate the answers to others.
    • Virginia Loh-Hagan
       
      Is this definition adequate?  What about networks and global considerations?
  • ...13 more annotations...
  • mith went on to describe different periods of reading instruction and how each was shaped by the most powerful social forces of its time.
    • Virginia Loh-Hagan
       
      What about the denial of reading instruction, like slaves?
  • instruction
  • Information-age organizations seeking to achieve greater productivity are organized horizontally, with teams within lower levels of the organization empowered to make important decisions related to their functioning.
    • Virginia Loh-Hagan
       
      Flattening organizations require more citizens to be competent - to be college and career ready.
  • Especially salient is the federal response from those nations, like Australia and the United States, with a long tradition of local control and little previous history of federal intervention. Even these countries are beginning to develop important national initiatives to raise literacy levels and prepare children in the use of ICTs.
    • Virginia Loh-Hagan
       
      Common Core State Standards?
  • a literacy curriculum during an age of information needs to include new, critical literacies that enable children to adequately evaluate messages from individuals and corporations that shape the information they provide
    • Virginia Loh-Hagan
       
      Yes!  Critical literacy!
  • ne might view reading, writing, and communication on the Internet as including a set of multiliteracies, emerging as individuals from different cultural contexts encounter one another within different communication technologies.
  • New skills and strategies are required in this context to successfully comprehend information such as how to search for appropriate information; how to comprehend search engine results; how to make correct inferences about information that will be found at any hyperlink; how to determine the extent to which authors "shape" information presented on a webpage; how to coordinate and synthesize vast amounts of information, presented in multiple media formats, from a nearly unlimited set of sources; and how to know which informational elements require attention and which ones may be ignored.
  • ew literacies, such as these, almost always build on foundational literacies rather than replace them.
  • There are three sources for the deictic nature of literacy: (1) transformations of literacy because of technological change, (2) envisionments of new literacy potentials within new technologies, and (3) the use of increasingly efficient technologies of communication that rapidly spread new literacies. Each source contributes to the fundamental changes taking place in the nature of literacy.
  • e new literacies of the Internet will be defined in important ways around the rate at which one can read, write, and communicate.
    • Virginia Loh-Hagan
       
      Case for fluency instruction
    • noraa2
       
      The essence of reading is change. I never thought of this before, but if we aren't changing as we read are we really reading?
  • identify important problems, locate useful information related to the problems they identify, critically evaluate the information they find, synthesize this information to solve the problems, and then quickly communicate the solutions to others so that everyone within an organization is informed
    • noraa2
       
      The skills mentioned here are those of a critical thinker. Developed problem solving that requires one to engage in seeking and deconstructing information to synthesize a solution. Then a new skill I hadn't before considered, sharing your findings in a concise and easily understood way. I am going to try this for my research projects. I will still incoporate the "research this (blank)" but will also implement research a problem and create a solution too
Virginia Loh-Hagan

Learn How To DANCE - Hip Hop (Time Lapse) - YouTube - 1 views

  •  
    I was amazed at the progress he made. I don't think that I would get to that point no matter how hard I try. As teachers, I think that it proves that we have to pick starting point that all students can handle and build off of it. I think that progress is the key in education and not how quickly somebody can get from A to B.
  •  
    I'm absolutely inspired! The dedication it must have taken to learn to dance over a year and a half.
noraa2

Dead and online: What happens to your digital estate when you die? | netnebraska.org - 4 views

shared by noraa2 on 10 Aug 14 - No Cached
    • Virginia Loh-Hagan
       
      I am geeked by these new concepts:  digital estate, digitally departed, etc.  Technology has "invented" a lot of new words and concepts.  
  • Digitally Departed.
  • Glenn’s problems managing his mother’s online estate helped inspire him to start a business solution called “WebCease”—an online service that helps people search for their deceased loved ones’ digital assets.
  • ...8 more annotations...
    • Virginia Loh-Hagan
       
      Think of all the new jobs made necessary by the internet - now "Digital Estate Manager"
  • It starts with those terms-of-service agreements; the fine print of the online world. Once the “I agree” button is pressed, it’s as good as a contract.
    • Virginia Loh-Hagan
       
      Does anyone really pay attention to these "terms of agreement"?  This could definitely be something we teach our students.  
  • 1986 Stored Communications Act, which prohibits anyone from accessing private information online without permission.
    • Virginia Loh-Hagan
       
      We should probably know this act - especially if we are to be informed "digital citizens."
  • For now, there are steps that people can take now to make the process of digital estate management easier on next of kin. First, create an inventory list of all your online accounts and passwords for your fiduciary. Stipulate what to do with your email accounts in a will, and read the terms-of-service agreements, so you can understand how or even if access to your accounts can be granted to someone else.
    • Virginia Loh-Hagan
       
      This is what we need to do in the age of the internet.  
    • noraa2
       
      Reading the terms-of-service agreements sounds sensible. But are they written in such a way that if those who take the time to read it would comprehend it?
  •  
    "These accounts don't die with us. The passwords to each of them, are often times locked away with only one person-the deceased. Which means that valuable online assets could be lost forever-or be found by those looking to exploit them". -This was very eye-opening and something that I need to consider in the near future!
  •  
    I've seen Facebook walls of deceased friends turn into virtual wailing walls, with friends and family posting messages for the deceased or mini eulogies for everyone to read. But I've never really thought about financial accounts and what happens to them after someone dies. I had no idea that most companies try to bar family members from accessing those accounts because they are following the letter of the law! I hope that Walsh's law gets passed!
‹ Previous 21 - 40 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page