EBSCOhost: New Jersey High School Learns the ABCs of Blogging - 1 views
-
he "blogs" are gaining traction in education as an online forum for classroom discussion, and to develop students' critical thinking, writing, and reading comprehension skills.
-
he Weblog traffic has since grown to encompass different students and schools, making it clear to our students that others are reading and learning from their work. This "sense of audience" gets students excited, and helps to facilitate discussion, debate, and participation, even among reticent students. Blogs also motivate students to become more engaged in reading, think more deeply about the meaning of their writing, and submit higher quality work.
-
The flexibility of this online tool makes it well suited for K-12 implementations. Teachers can use blogs to post homework assignments, create links, pose questions, and generate discussion. Students can post homework, create a portfolio, and archive peer feedback, enabling a virtually paperless classroom.
- ...1 more annotation...
What research has to say about ... - Google Books - 0 views
-
-
-
In the near future it is estimated that nearly every US classroom will have an Internet connected computer. The Internet also makes cross cultural literature more easily available.
-
New Literacy: "The skills, strategies, and insights necessary to successfully exploit the rapidly changing info and communication technologies that are emerging in our world"
-
-
How to Weather the Frustrations of Technology Integration | Edutopia - 0 views
-
One of the biggest distracters of technology integration is what I like to call the "technology fails."
-
Technology fails are inevitable, but can be prevented by putting in place procedures that will allow your classroom to progress smoothly.
-
Kiker adds that teachers must persevere and not just give up because technology went wrong during one lesson.
- ...4 more annotations...
Critical Issue: Using Technology to Enhance Literacy Instruction - 2 views
-
The Internet is constructing global bridges for students to communicate, underscoring the need for rock-solid reading and writing skills. By changing the way that information is absorbed, processed, and used, technology is influencing how people read, write, listen, and communicate.
-
Besides having basic literacy skills, today's students also need technology skills for communicating, investigating, accessing and using information, computing, thinking critically about messages inherent in new media, and understanding and evaluating data.
-
literacy definitions is emerging. Among them are the following examples: Information Literacy: The ability to access and use information, analyze content, work with ideas, synthesize thought, and communicate results. Digital Literacy: The ability to attain deeper understanding of content by using data-analysis tools and accelerated learning processes enabled by technology. New Literacy: The ability to solve genuine problems amidst a deluge of information and its transfer in the Digital Age. Computer Literacy: The ability to accurately and effectively use computer tools such as word processors, spreadsheets, databases, and presentation and graphic software. Computer-Technology Literacy: The ability to manipulate the hardware that is the understructure of technology systems. Critical Literacy: The ability to look at the meaning and purpose of written texts, visual applications, and spoken words to question the attitudes, values, and beliefs behind them. The goal is development of critical thinking to discern meaning from array of multimedia, visual imagery, and virtual environments, as well as written text. Media Literacy: The ability to communicate competently in all media forms—print and electronic—as well as access, understand, analyze and evaluate the images, words, and sounds that comprise contemporary culture.
- ...33 more annotations...
It Takes Many Villages to Make a World: The International Education and Resource Networ... - 0 views
-
Students in Belarus post their folktales on the Internet and in turn are treated to student interpretations of local stories from their own countries, providing a unique window into new cultures, customs, traditions, and beliefs.
-
iEARN is a network of teachers and students who use the Internet and email to carry out collaborative projects that embody activist teaching and learning.
-
Through international collaboration, problems get solved. But the individual student benefits as well. We see heightened motivation in class. We see improved reading and writing skills. We see excited students taking one aspect of a project and expanding it to another that they created on their own.
‹ Previous
21 - 40 of 47
Next ›
Showing 20▼ items per page