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Lorie Shuck

How Technology Wires the Learning Brain | MindShift - 0 views

  • The technology train has left. You have to deal with it, understand it, and get some perspective
  • “The brain is complex,” he said. “The answers are not straightforward.”
  • “Google is making us smart,” he said. “Searching online is brain exercise.”
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    "How Technology Wires the Learning Brain February 23, 2011 | 9:45 AM | By Tina Barseghian FILED UNDER: Learning Methods, Research, Neuroscience, text, video games * 9 Comments * * Share447 * Email Post * Link to this post Getty Kids between the ages of 8 and 18 spend 11.5 hours a day using technology - whether that's computers, television, mobile phones, or video games - and usually more than one at a time. That's a big chunk of their 15 or 16 waking hours. But does that spell doom for the next generation? Not necessarily, according to Dr. Gary Small, a neuroscientist and professor at UCLA, who spoke at the Learning & the Brain Conference last week."
Lorie Shuck

Flash Launches on Android--Now Things Get Interesting - PCWorld Business Center - 0 views

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    Adobe launched Flash Player for Android 10.1 today--the latest move in the Chess match between Adobe and Apple over the future of interactive mobile ads and video content. Now, the world can begin to experience firsthand whether Flash delivers as expected on smartphones, or if Steve Jobs made the right move in turning his back on the platform.
Ben Wyatt

Education Week's Digital Directions: Mobile Devices Seen as Key to 21st-Century Learning - 1 views

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    A report calls for presidential initiative, research and development, and investment to boost the use of handheld digital tools in K-12.
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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