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anonymous

The Age of Distraction: Getting Students to Put Away Their Phones and Focus on Learning... - 1 views

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    In a September 2012 post I briefly highlighted a number of studies documenting that most students don't multi-task well. When they're texting, looking at Facebook, or cruising on the Internet and listening to a lecture or discussion and trying to take notes, they aren't dealing with the content as well as they would be if they just focused on listening and note taking. And the evidence of that keeps accumulating, like the Kuznekoff and Titsworth study referenced here and described in detail in the January issue of The Teaching Professor. Using an intriguing study design, here's what they found: ". . . students who use their mobile phones during class lectures tend to write down less information, recall less information, and perform worse on a multiple-choice test than those students who abstain from using their mobile phones during class." (p. 251).
Amanda Lucas

If You Give a 12-Year-Old a Phone.... - YouTube - 0 views

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    12 year old kids from NY reflect on having a phone.
margaret_1

How people read online: Why you won't finish this article. - 10 views

  • Why people online don’t read to the end.
  • 38 percent—are already gone
  • five are never going to scroll
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • wait a second, where are you guys going? You’re tweeting a link to this article already? You haven’t even read it yet!
  • readers can’t stay focused
  • relationship between scrolling and sharing. Schwartz’s data suggest that lots of people are tweeting out links to articles they haven’t fully read.
  • pages containing photos and videos—on those pages, people scroll through the whole page
  • whether people who are sharing links to articles on social networks are likely to have read the pieces they’re sharing.
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    An interesting article Margaret. I had been thinking the same thing...I sometimes post articles and whilst I do have at least a quick view, I don't always read through to the end. The author calls it the age of skimming. I guess there are multiple reasons for it: time constraints for one. The author mentions how the small size of a mobile phone screen also affects the ability of people to read articles online - and people are increasingly accessing information/social networking sites on mobile phones. So they just skim...Thanks for sharing!
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    I love this. It is so true. It goes to show you need interesting titles, the important info straight up, pics and/or videos and articles that are not too long.
msmelm

Smartphone Ownership and Internet Usage Continues to Climb in Emerging Economies - 0 views

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    Needs research into how the extrapolate their data. Are the conducting the surveys? Are they extrapolating and if so where from...
Carole Gerts

5 Digital Marketing Trends for 2015 - 10 views

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    How many of these would you agree with?
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    Indeed Google+ isn't something I have gravitated toward - it will be interesting to see if Google evolves it or replaces with a something totally new. Quite frankly I don't have many friends who use it so it has been somewhat redundant. As far as Google Wallet I'm sitting back to see if it would be of any real benefit. I suppose my key concerns would be security firstly and secondly vendors which accept it. Here is an interesting article that I refer to as TechCarrotDangling! http://arstechnica.com/business/2014/11/psa-google-wallet-is-giving-away-200000-to-attract-new-users/ Smart watches are definitely an area of keen interest for me. I currently own a Sony Smartwatch 1 and I find it pretty useful when I"m out and about. I keep up to date with all my social media alerts as well news and it's also a great way to never miss an important call. My husband who is an extremely serious technophile has two a Pebble and Sony Smartwatch 2. I can see this technology really starting to take off in the very near future and the types of functions and uses will only improve and diversify. As far as advertising is concerned any business that wants to thrive and not be relegated to the obsolete and irrelevant bin needs to actively get on board with targeted social media advertising. It is really is a sink or swim scenario. However, platforms such as FB , if I'm wearing my "consumer hat", are really annoying and sometimes even infuriating - from a marketing perspective though it is innovative in that it targets your interests and plays on your wants and desires. I suspect that business and various organisations need to determine and utilise ways to market themselves without it turning consumers off. There is a fine line between intrusion and ingenious use of the old 5 Ps of marketing!
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    1. Google+ isn't dead yet, however, the one before it, Google Wave is dead, but it influenced many other collaboration to think of digital whiteboards to share thoughts and video. I use Moxtra's one. I use Google+ sparing, say when Mashable want to collaborate a document to the White House or a twitter user holding talk about the future of code, and so on. 2. Mobile payment is there and not quite there. At the moment, people put stickers on the back of their mobile phone and tap on PayPass machines. 3. Smartwatches, ahh, another thing to charge up at night. Good but bulky. 4. I can live with social media advertising, it isn't too annoying and some of them are quite clever. It is not different to advertisement in Freemium games, really. Ignore and tap selectively. 5. Accessible analytics. Oh la la. This would be so handy to so many people, especially I. I can use it to plan my delivery better and work my weak spots on SNS.
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