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Lorie Shuck

Is Technology Making Your Students Stupid? - Technology - The Chronicle of Higher Educa... - 0 views

  • It indicates that, even if you think that allowing students to look at other information relevant to what they're being taught might enhance their learning, it actually appears to have the opposite effect.
    • Lorie Shuck
       
      Or maybe it indicates that the instructor lectured primarily on what would be on the test. What is the ultimate end result for the students? Can students comprehend concepts better by looking at relevant websites? Is learning material for a test the sole indicator of whether a student understands the concepts... and can that be a true predictor of future success in the chosen field?
Lorie Shuck

Mind Over Mass Media - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "NEW forms of media have always caused moral panics: the printing press, newspapers, paperbacks and television were all once denounced as threats to their consumers' brainpower and moral fiber. So too with electronic technologies. PowerPoint, we're told, is reducing discourse to bullet points. Search engines lower our intelligence, encouraging us to skim on the surface of knowledge rather than dive to its depths. Twitter is shrinking our attention spans. But such panics often fail basic reality checks. When comic books were accused of turning juveniles into delinquents in the 1950s, crime was falling to record lows, just as the denunciations of video games in the 1990s coincided with the great American crime decline. The decades of television, transistor radios and rock videos were also decades in which I.Q. scores rose continuously."
Lorie Shuck

Will the iPad Make You Smarter? | Gadget Lab | Wired.com - 3 views

  • newer mobile interfaces could foster focus and improve our ability to learn
  • It is less likely to cause cognitive overload to the user, based on my studies
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    "A growing chorus of voices argue that the internet is making us dumber. Web-connected laptops, smartphones and videogame consoles have all been cast as distracting brain mushers. But there's reason to believe some of the newest devices might not erode our minds. In fact, some scientists think they could even make us smarter."
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