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Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

The Myth of the Tech-Savvy Student - Online Learning - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

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    by Ron Tanner, November 6, 2011 This article echoes some of what Geoff ? said several years ago. When I began teaching a course called "Writing for the Web," three years ago, I pictured myself scrambling to keep up with my plugged-in, tech-savvy students. I was sure I was in over my head. So I was stunned to discover that most of the 20-year-olds I meet know very little about the Internet, and even less about how to communicate effectively online. The media present young people as the audacious pilots of a technological juggernaut. Think Napster, Twitter, Facebook. Given that the average 18-year-old spends hours each day immersed in electronic media, we oldsters tend to assume that every other teenager is the next Mark Zuckerberg. Aren't kids crazy about downloading music, swapping files, sharing links, texting, and playing video games? But video games do not create savvy users of the Internet. Video games predate the Internet and have little to do with online culture. When games are played online, the computer is no longer an open portal to the world. It is an insular system, related only to other gaming machines, like Nintendo and Xbox. The only communication that games afford is within the closed world of the game itself-who is on my team? At their worst, games divert children from other, more enriching experiences. The Internet's chief similarity to video games is that both siphon off audiences from television, which will soon reside exclusively on the Internet. As a delivery system for television, film, and games, the Internet has proved itself a premier source of entertainment. And that's all that most young people know about it. Why wouldn't we educate students in sophisticated uses of the Internet, which is commanding an increasing amount of the world's time and attention? I'm not talking about a course on "How to Understand the Internet" or an introduction to searching for legitimate research-paper sources online (although that is useful, obviously
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Understanding Digital Kids (DKs): Teaching and Learning in the New Digital Landscape - 1 views

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    By Ian Jukes and Anita Dosaj, The InfoSavvy Group, Sept 2006. Jukes and Dosaj look at the challenges of digital immigrants (e.g. adults) effectively teaching digital natives (today's kids).
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    In the forum (Table 4: Thinkers) there is a PDF of an earlier version of this resouce (2004).
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Learning Through Digital Media » Introduction: Learning Through Digital Media - 0 views

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    The basis for using digital media for learning on campus and off. The introduction to a book.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

The State of Digital Education Infographic - #edtech #edutech #edchat - 1 views

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    Very good infographic on the growth in digital education and need for students, teachers and professors at all levels to be prepared to play on this field. How does or should this trend affect ePD? How does or should this trend affect high school student learning and pedagogy in the classroom whether online, blended, or face to face?
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

TCRecord: Article - 0 views

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    Book review by Corinne E. Hyde of Writing Assessment and the Revolution in Digital Texts and Technologies. How to assess writing with technology. Having firmly established that the technology is omnipresent, that it can be reductive and inaccurate, and that it shifts the purpose and nature of writing itself, he goes on to describe what he terms "hypertechs," which can have a much more positive effect on the field of teaching writing. He describes hypertechs as consisting of hypertext (in which readers can progress through the text in multiple ways, and in which there are multiple linked connections), hypermedia (which is very similar to "new media" or "multimedia composition"), and hyperattention (which is actually a characteristic of the writer and reader, and could be equated with the short attention span produced by bombardment and integration of digital media in daily life). Neal then provides concrete suggestions for selecting and evaluating the various technologies that are available for assessing writing, advocating the use of both construct validity and writing outcomes in the process of determining which technologies will provide the greatest benefit to writing educators.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Digital Storytelling Teacher Guide - 0 views

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    Microsoft education site for Digital Storytelling inthe Classroom PDF
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Learning Through Digital Media » Essay - 0 views

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    An incredible resource on Learning Through Digital Media Experiments in Technology and Pedagogy, edited by Trebor Scholz.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Analysis of …Does the Digital Classroom Enfeeble the Mind? | 21st Century Col... - 0 views

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    "Ineffective use of technology happens because even when given the opportunity- some over burdened teachers shy away from working hard enough to understand how emerging tools can be used for powerful learning. Ineffective use of technology is a teacher problem, a PD problem, a leadership problem, a time problem, a systemic problem, a culture problem - not a computer problem."
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WUW / sixthsense - a wearable gestural interface - 0 views

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    By Pranav Mistry. Posted on YouTube. This tool, a "wearable gestural interface" connects the physical world with the digital world of information. For more, see http://pranavmistry.misutori.com/projects/sixthsense/
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Integrating Technology: The Power of Diigo - 0 views

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    By David Hayward and originally published in April 2009 Integrating Technology column of Beyond Penguins and Polar Bears; here it is part of the blog Expert Voices published by the National Sciences Digital Library. The post provides a great overview of Diigo, with advice on how middle school teachers can use it.
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Social Bookmarking - 0 views

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    Published in ChemPaths, the Chemical Education Digital Library on Aug 11 2009. An overview of social bookmarking.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Learning Through Digital Media » Facebook as a Functional Tool & Critical Res... - 0 views

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    How a professor of media studies uses Facebook in and outside of class to engage his students in discussions, share resources, brainstorming, understanding privacy settings and how Facebook may be used constructively for our different selves depending on the groups we interact with, etc.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Mike Matas: A next-generation digital book | Video on TED.com - 1 views

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    Unbelievable!!!!
KPI_Library Bookmarks

The Learning Network - 0 views

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    The Learning Network Blog on NYTimes.com. For two years, students, teachers, parents and others have posted and commented on this blog. Daily lessons for subjects across curriculum based on Times content are offered. Suggestions are given for using the The Learning Network posts in the classroom. The Learning Network is accessible without a digital subscription, as are the articles linked from Learning Network posts.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

5 Reasons Why Our Students Are Writing Blogs and Creating ePortfolios | Powerful Learni... - 0 views

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    great blog by Australian teacher on how and why they are helping their students to build digital literacy skills through eportfolios and blogging
Adana Collins

The Digital Teachers Corps: Closing America's Literacy Gap - 0 views

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    This is wonderfully enlightening article by Michael H. Levine and James Paul Gee
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Teachers' Domain: Learning Through Video Production - 0 views

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    resource for MCNC Innovation lab teachers and students?
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Collaborative Learning for the Digital Age - The Chronicle Review - The Chronicle of Hi... - 1 views

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    Fascinating must read on how "attention blindness" prevents us from seeing the bigger world and how unstructured charges to students on finding academic uses of iPods they had been given as Duke first year students led to interconnected learning, innovation, etc. Excerpt: But it got me thinking: What if bad writing is a product of the form of writing required in college-the term paper-and not necessarily intrinsic to a student's natural writing style or thought process? I hadn't thought of that until I read my students' lengthy, weekly blogs and saw the difference in quality. If students are trying to figure out what kind of writing we want in order to get a good grade, communication is secondary. What if "research paper" is a category that invites, even requires, linguistic and syntactic gobbledygook? Research indicates that, at every age level, people take their writing more seriously when it will be evaluated by peers than when it is to be judged by teachers. Online blogs directed at peers exhibit fewer typographical and factual errors, less plagiarism, and generally better, more elegant and persuasive prose than classroom assignments by the same writers. Longitudinal studies of student writers conducted by Stanford University's Andrea Lunsford, a professor of English, assessed student writing at Stanford year after year. Lunsford surprised everyone with her findings that students were becoming more literate, rhetorically dexterous, and fluent-not less, as many feared. The Internet, she discovered, had allowed them to develop their writing.
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EDUCAUSE Quarterly (EQ) published by Educause - 0 views

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    The current issue, Vol 34, #3, 2011 looks at the theme of collaboration, with articles ranging from a look at online collaborative experiences, to digital publishing and collaboration, to an opinion piece titled From Us vs. Them to We: Collaborating for Change.
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