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Kassandra Burt

From Print to Critical Multimedia Literacy:One Teacher's Foray Into New Literacies Prac... - 1 views

http://web.ebscohost.com.mantis.csuchico.edu/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?vid=4&hid=111&sid=4e20134d-7470-4b8f-bfd2-e5fd2bb8c097%40sessionmgr113 In the article From Print to Critical Multimedia Liter...

Literacy teahcing technology

started by Kassandra Burt on 28 Sep 10 no follow-up yet
Ryan Fairley

Imaging, Keyboarding, and Posting Identities:Young People and New Media technologies - 1 views

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    This article talks about how young adolescents are constantly trying to find their own identity. They are always trying new roles to find out who they are. In this day and age many people are doing this by the use of technology. It talks about how people shape their image through myspace and other social networks. One girl named Isabella makes her site very elaborate and full of colors while boys of her age usually base their site around sports heros and masculine things. It further goes on to describe how adolescents shape their identities through technology.
Jeannette Villarreal

How Many Social Network Identities Is Too Many? - 1 views

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    The radio talk is a conversation between the host and a senior editor and they talk about how people create different identities with different social networking sites.
Nikki Panek

Social Networking - 1 views

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    The article, How to Use Social-Networking Technology for Learning, tries to get teachers to understand how to get students to interact with others by being "effective collaborators." It also goes into how to keep students engaged since many students can become easily distracted. By having open discussions about why students are using or abusing their social network, students can hopefully find a better way to portray themselves online.
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    The author is discussing this new classroom idea that will actually promote Social networking sites helping students create accounts, organize and share interest with others. The author shares a valid point, "Schools should reflect the world we live in today". The evolving world of Internet communication -- blogs, podcasts, tags, file swapping -- offers students radically new ways to research, create, and learn.
Bre'Onna Wills

The Socialism of Flash Mobs; Or, How Glee Stole Your Freedom - 1 views

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    This article suggests that flash mobs posess certain dangers to our way of life. "The loss of individualism."
Mai Tong Thao

Mix It Up: Popular Culture, Mass Media, and Society - 1 views

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    A introduction to a textbook that shows the social significance of popular culture and mass media.
brittany powles

cyber bullying and sexting - 1 views

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    Sexting and cyber bullying are the new "in" thing that happens on school campuses whether it be middle school or high school. Our schools cannot keep up with what is going on in our day in age with all the new technology that is going on. In my article it states that teachers and other school administrators are trying to figure out a way to keep children from doing this type of thing in school.
Shaina Short

Be who you want to be: The philosophy of Facebook and the construction of identity. - 1 views

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    talks about how Facebook helps people establish who they really their real name, their real representation and they get to represent who they really are.
Azucena Carrillo

Digital Media - New Learners Of The 21st Century - 1 views

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    This video describes the ways five different institutions located in the U.S. have incorporated technology into their classrooms. What they learn is mainly through the use of technology.
Caitlyn Millerick

new age technology and how it is distracting us - 1 views

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    With starting kids off young have we caused a new problem with laptops in the classroom? Kathy McManus blogged on August 14, 2008 about the banning of laptops from university classrooms. Within her blog she mentioned that "The laptop--the favorite in-class tool for college and university students across the country-is coming unplugged." Have we been abusing our laptops in class? I am not going to lie when I bring my laptop my browser ends up on facebook, or youtube checking out the newest funny stunt that some kids posted. The blog talks about how when used correctly the laptop can be a wonderful resource for a classroom but teachers cant monitor every laptop all the time.
August Walsh

Facebook Education - 1 views

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    The first piece of advice the article Facebook Education brings to teachers is to create an alternate profile for yourself in order to avoid any awkwardness from the students seeing the teachers personal life and another profile for former students. Facebook Groups is an essential part of updating classroom work and homework and the same goes for photos. Updating photos of class work and homework can be a helpful way for students to know how to approach their work.
Mary Landaker

Serious Games: Incorporating Video Games in the Classroom - 1 views

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    In the article "Serious Games: Incorporating Video Games in the Classroom", Leonard A. Annetta (and other writers) write about Generation N, "N" standing for "net". Annetta claims that this generation has grown up with computers, technology, and the Internet to the point were its just normal to have it around; they have never known a time without it. This creates a generation gap between student and teacher. The students (especially k-12) are becoming more and more interactive with computers and can relate to learning better through the use of technology. However, the teachers often lack this technological knowledge that the students share, leaving the teachers in a game of catch-up. But according to Annetta this is a game well worth playing.
Keira Cavan

chatrooms and backchannel in schools - 1 views

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    This article starts with talking about how students want to think outside of class. It states that they are scared sometimes of being judged on what they say or how they say it. Chat rooms or Backchannels is what they call them can help these students. In the article it shows some graphs about how the students used these chat rooms that were set up and how often they used them. according to the graphs as school seemed to continue, the students seemed to go in less. This article was great to understand the difference between in a classroom learning, and the way the web can teach the students and they can open up more and feel more safe in it. They don't want to learn between four walls all the time is stated in the article, and i think this is a great way to look at learning. broaden their horizons, because they all ready are and want to know that it is ok.
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    This entire article was about online chat rooms and how we can incorporate chat channels into schooling for collaboration, explanations, and discussion about topics in class. It talked about many of the good things and the bad things about chatting online and how we should be able to use chatting in school. The word backchannel is used for anything going on in the background while a teacher is lecturing or presenting. This idea of backchannel is talked about throughout the article. It explains what backchannel is, how we need to change schooling to work with it, what problems it creates, what things it works well with, why kids are using it so much, and how it could be used positively for classrooms.
Bour Nhia Her

Facebook, social integration and information learning ar university: 'It is more for so... - 1 views

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    This is a study of undergraduate students who uses social networking sites, and how it influences students' social integration into university life.
Yia Yang

I AM - 1 views

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    Video by BlueFish TV. People labeled by their appearance , way of dressing & by what they do..What group they belong in.
Azucena Carrillo

Using the Technology of Today, in the Classroom Today - 1 views

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    In "using the technology of today, in the classroom of today" authors Eric Klopfer, Scot Osterweil, Jennifer Groff, Jason Haas start to give basis to the argument that technologies such as videogames and social networking sites help shape learning. They focus on how they are learning outside of school but in completely different ways than teachers focus on. They argue, "Nearly all institutions- business, industry, medicine, science and government - have harnessed aspects of these technologies for decades. Games and simulations have been a key component of training doctors and military personnel, but even businesses like PricewaterhouseCoopers used a game about a mining company in outer space to teach its employees about derivatives. Although that may seem a bit "off the wall," the fact is major corporations, the Department of Defense, and the medical community would not use these tools if they were not highly effective" to illustrate how corporations use videogames so the educational system shouldn't reject it them as a learning tool. They point out how videogames can serve as a simulation for real life just as mining in outer space can teach about derivatives. Videogames are also a highly interactive learning environment. Instead of being told information, students are right in the middle of the action and the learning. They also discuss how social networking is a new way of collaborating with other about a wide variety of subjects including school work. The authors write, "Of course, educators have long been aware that learning is a social activity, where learners construct their understanding not just through interaction with the material, but also through collaboratively constructing new knowledge with their peers" but teachers reject the use of social networking as means of learning because of the other aspects included safety or privacy. But what teachers can learn from social sites is that "'knowledge cultures' assembled in these o
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    This article is very rich with information that has to do with how digital games, social networks, and simulations can be involved in classrooms. With the involvement of them is more than just entertainment that children or people actually learn stuff from them.
Alyssa Starr

Confronting the challenges of participatory culture - 1 views

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    In the Chapter "What Should We Teach? Rethinking Literacy" from the book Confronting the Challenges of Participatory Culture, by Henry Jenkins with Ravi Purushotma, Margaret Weigel, Katie Clinton, and Alice J. Robison, it contemplates what to do about new literacies. The book talks about how it is just as important for students to learn old literacies, like reading and writing, than it is to learn new literacies as well, digital media. They describe the new literacy culture as participatory culture.
Jessica Stoffel

Networking the Classroom Can Computer Technology Reform Education? - 1 views

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    In Christopher Conte's essay, Networking the Classroom Can Computer Technology Reform Education? Conte discusses the roles of computers and other technologies in education. Conte claims that currently the educational system is outdated and should be updated by incorporating the use of computers as well as other types of technology into the classroom.
Rachel Ferneau

multiple intelligences - 1 views

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    In 1983, Howard Gardner developed the multiple intelligences theory. There are supposedly eight different styles of learning and they are all independent of each other. It is said that the theory "has never been empirically tested" but this raises the question as to how you can possibly test such a thing. Another part of this article talks about IQ tests.
Kim Jaxon

Remember to tag - 1 views

To post: click on the BOOKMARK tab. Remember to "tag" the article. Tagging means you assign the article key words so that similar articles end up being grouped together. IE: socialmedia, teaching, ...

started by Kim Jaxon on 25 Sep 10 no follow-up yet
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