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Karen Lands

why teach digital writing? > how technology changes writing practices - 1 views

  • Many writing technologies have streamlined the writing process (the typewriter is one example), but only a few writing technologies have had truly dramatic social impact. The printing press is one; the networked computer is another. It is the networked computer, the spaces to which networked computers provide access, and the public ways in which individuals are writing that are together changing the cultural landscape. These elements, taken together, are truly revolutionary.
  • When we use the term “digital writing,” we refer to a changed writing environment—that is, to writing produced on the computer and distributed via the Internet and World Wide Web. We are not talking about the computer as a stand-alone machine for writing; although that particular technological development has indeed changed the writing process, the computer itself as a stand-alone machine is not revolutionary in the sense we mean. Rather, the dramatic change is the networked computer connected to the Internet and the World Wide Web. Connectivity allows writers to access and participate more seamlessly and instantaneously within web spaces and to distribute writing to large and widely dispersed audiences.
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    WHY TEACH DIGIGAL WRITING
Sally Summey

Writing, Technology and Teens - Pew Research Center - 0 views

  • Overall, nearly two-thirds of teens (64%) say they incorporate some informal styles from their text-based communications into their writing at school.
  • Teens are motivated to write by relevant topics, high expectations, an interested audience and opportunities to write creatively.
  • eens who communicate frequently with friends, and teens who own more technology tools such as computers or cell phones do not write more for school or for themselves than less communicative and less gadget-rich teens.
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  • Most teens feel that additional instruction and focus on writing in school would help improve their writing even further.
  • verall, 82% of teens feel that additional in-class writing time would improve their writing abilities and 78% feel the same way about their teachers using computer-based writing tools.
  • All teens write for school, and 93% of teens say they write for their own pleasure.
  • Teens generally do not believe that technology negatively influences the quality of their writing, but they do acknowledge that the informal styles of writing that mark the use of these text-based technologies for many teens do occasionally filter into their school work. Overall, nearly two-thirds of teens (64%) say they incorporate some informal styles from their text-based communications into their writing at school.
  • Parents believe that their children write more as teens than they did at that age.
  • Teenagers' lives are filled with writing.
  • At its core, the digital age presents a paradox. Most teenagers spend a considerable amount of their life composing texts, but they do not think that a lot of the material they create electronically is real writing. The act of exchanging emails, instant messages, texts, and social network posts is communication that carries the same weight to teens as phone calls and between-class hallway greetings.
  • At the same time that teens disassociate e-communication with "writing," they also strongly believe that good writing is a critical skill to achieving success -- and their parents agree.
  • While the debate about the relationship between e-communication and formal writing is on-going, few have systematically talked to teens to see what they have to say about the state of writing in their lives.
  • The internet is also a primary source for research done at or for school. 94% of teens use the internet at least occasionally to do research for school, and nearly half (48%) report doing so once a week or more often.
  • Teens believe that the writing instruction they receive in school could be improved.
  • Overall, 82% of teens feel that additional in-class writing time would improve their writing abilities and 78% feel the same way about their teachers using computer-based writing tools.
  • 47% of black teens write in a journal, compared with 31% of white teens. 37% of black teens write music or lyrics, while 23% of white teens do. 49% of girls keep a journal; 20% of boys do. 26% of boys say they never write for personal enjoyment outside of school. Multi-channel teens and gadget owners do not write any more -- or less --than their counterparts, but bloggers are more prolific.
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    Overall, nearly two-thirds of teens (64%) say they incorporate some informal styles from their text-based communications into their writing at school.
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    "At its core, the digital age presents a paradox. Most teenagers spend a considerable amount of their life composing texts, but they do not think that a lot of the material they create electronically is real writing. "
Steve Fulton

When Images "Lie": Critical Visual Literacy | NWP Digital Is - 1 views

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    Digital IS Site
Steve Fulton

http://www.gotbrainy.com/ - 2 views

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    features two sections; Brainy Flix and Brainy Pics. Brainy Pics is comprised of images that demonstrate the meaning of a word. Most of the pictures are submitted by students. Brainy Flix is comprised of short videos that illustrate the meaning of words. Just like with Brainy Pics, most of the videos are submitted by students
Steve Fulton

PBS Teachers - Resources For The Classroom - 1 views

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    HIP-HOP: Beyond Beats and Rhymes is a groundbreaking 60-minute documentary that examines representations of manhood, sexism, and homophobia in hip-hop culture. It is a "loving critique" of certain disturbing developments in rap music culture from the point of view of a fan who challenges the art form's representations of masculinity.
Steve Fulton

http://digitalis.nwp.org/ - 2 views

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    "The NWP Digital Is website is a collection of ideas, reflections, and stories about what it means to teach writing in our digital, interconnected world. Read, discuss, and share ideas about teaching writing today"
Steve Fulton

YouTube - 'Star Wars (John Williams Is The Man)' medley - Corey Vidal and Moosebutter -... - 4 views

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    This is awesome....a creative example of digital composing
Malcolm Campbell

Clive Thompson on the New Literacy - 3 views

  • The first thing she found is that young people today write far more than any generation before them. That's because so much socializing takes place online, and it almost always involves text.
    • Lacy Manship
       
      So... right... texts and Texts are so mixed up in our lives now in a way that is more social than writing has ever been before. Like I wrote texts, facebook statues, emails so much more often than we wrote postcards and letters and passed notes before.
    • Lucy Arnold
       
      I can't think of a Facebook status report right now. Will you write one for me and I'll plagiarize it?
    • Lacy Manship
       
      I think you just wrote it. Copy and paste
  • An age of illiteracy is at hand, right?
    • Malcolm Campbell
       
      There's actually something called the "post-literate age" - can't remember who coined the phrase.
Steve Fulton

TypeWith.me: Live Text Document Collaboration! - 3 views

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    Collaborative word processing. An etherpad alternative....there's a bunch of them out there. The cool thing about them is that there's no need to create an account, just share the link with collaborators. Infinate undos and the time slider feature are nice, too!
Diane Morrow

Apple Learning Interchange - iPod touch. Touching student lives in the classroom. - 0 views

  • With the iPod touch in hand, keeping a digital plan book is easy, convenient, and dare we say fun! The iPod touch can make your plan book portable and easy to access anytime and anywhere where it is convenient! Just reach into your pocket and you can start planning out or carrying out the activities of your classroom!
    • Diane Morrow
       
      ipod touch for planning
Steve Fulton

BlogBooker - Blog Book - 1 views

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    What is this ? BlogBooker produces a high-quality PDF Blog Book from all your blog's entries and comments. Archives can be generated from any blog running on WordPress, LiveJournal (and derivatives) or Blogger. The whole process takes about 3-4 minutes, depending on the size of your blog.
Steve Fulton

The "We Think" video - 0 views

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    Cool video on how the web is changing the role of information our society. Also brings up points about questions that will have to be answered as we move forward
Yulanda Crawley

Utopian Society Old Harmony - 0 views

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    Old Harmony
Steve Fulton

Audioboo - 0 views

  • Audioboo. Because sound is social. We are a mobile & web platform that effortlessly allows you to record and upload audio for your friends, family or the rest of the world to hear.
Lacy Manship

Kidblog.org - Blogs for Teachers and Students - 1 views

  • Kidblog.org is designed for elementary and middle school teachers who want to provide each student with their own, unique blog. Kidblog's simple, yet powerful tools allow students to publish posts and participate in discussions within a secure classroom blogging community. Teachers maintain complete control over student blogs. Set up your class with no student email addresses.
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    This looks like a good blogging site for getting students with little previous blogging experience started. It's user friendly, and requires no email for students to get started.
Laura Collander

What Kids Learn When They Create with Digital Media - National Writing Project - 0 views

  • "In this new world of digital media creation and participation, the role of the parent, the role of the educator, the role of the adult more generally is shifting—and it's still not defined,"
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    National Writing Project page that discusses how digital media can help our students
Malcolm Campbell

Technology Transforms Writing and the Teaching of Writing - Technology - The Chronicle ... - 1 views

  • bad habits they fear their students pick up on computers
    • Malcolm Campbell
       
      Wouldn't it be nice to capture 'gamers' attention for such sites as these? Wonder how it might work?
  • Students submit essays that are longer but not better written than those in years past
    • Malcolm Campbell
       
      This doesn't appear to be the case, re: longer papers. Whycome so many papers fall short of minimum page counts?
  • The perils are clearer. "Students will tinker endlessly with the text and forget that their paper doesn't have a thesis," says Kathleen Skubikowski, an assistant professor of English who directs the writing program at Middlebury College. "I receive immaculately word-processed documents that are just terrible," says David Galef, an associate professor of English at the University of Mississippi.
    • Malcolm Campbell
       
      Interesting! Sometimes a roadblock to me is the time it takes to learn the technology associated with new applications and, like the thesis for students, I'm occaionally in danger of forgetting to plan my class lessons.
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    Chronical of Higher Ed piece
Lucy Arnold

CCCC Position Statement on Teaching, Learning, and Assessing Writing in Digital Environ... - 1 views

  • ncreasingly, classes and programs in writing require that students compose digitally. Such writing occurs both in conventional “face-to-face” classrooms and in classes and programs that are delivered at a distance. The expression composing digitally” can refer to a myriad of practices. In its simplest form, such writing can refer to a “mixed media” writing practice, the kind that occurs when students compose at a computer screen, using a word processor, so that they can submit the writing in print (Moran). Such writing may not utilize the formatting conventions such as italics and bold facing available on a word processor; alternatively, such writing often includes sophisticated formatting as well as hypertextual links. Digital composing can take many other forms as well. For example, such composing can mean participating in an online discussion through a listserv or bulletin board (Huot and Takayoshi). It can refer to creating compositions in presentation software. It can refer to participatingin chat rooms or creating webpages. It can mean creating a digital portfolio with audio and video files as well as scanned print writings. Most recently, it can mean composing on a class weblog or wiki. And more generally, as composers use digital technology to create new genres, we can expect the variety of digital compositions to continue proliferating.
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    "Creating new genres" is interesting to me... I am going to keep thinking about this I think.
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