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Andrew Ford

Literacy and Text Messaging | MIT Technology Review - 2 views

  • Shanahan points to the more than 30 billion e-mail messages and 5 billion text messages that are exchanged every day as evidence of how technology “is raising the value of reading in our society, both as an economic and as a social activity.”
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    Great Article from MIT
Steven Armenta

Duz Txting Hurt Yr Kidz Gramr? Absolutely, a New Study Says - Inside School Research - ... - 2 views

  • Middle school students who frequently use "tech-speak"—omitting letters to shorten words and using homophone symbols, such as @ for "at" or 2nite for "tonight"—performed worse on a test of basic grammar, according to a new study in New Media & Society.
  • Drew P. Cingel, a doctoral candidate in media, technology, and society at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., conducted the experiment when he was an undergraduate with the Media Effects Research Laboratory at Penn State University in University Park, Pa. under director S. Shyam Sundar. The researchers surveyed 228 6th, 7th, and 8th graders in central Pennsylvania on their daily habits, including the number of texts they sent and received, their attitudes about texting, and their other activities during the day, such as watching television or reading for pleasure. The researchers then assessed the students using 22 questions adapted from a 9th-grade grammar test to include only topics taught by 6th grade, including verb/noun agreement, use of correct tense, homophones, possessives, apostrophes, comma usage, punctuation, and capitalization. Mr. Cingel, who published the study while at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, N.C., and Mr. Sundar found that the more often students sent text messages using text-speak (shortened words and homophones), the worse their grammar—a concern as 13- to 17-year-olds send more than twice the number of text messages each month than any other age group.
Marvin Tucker

Doritos Superbowl Commercial: Keep your hands off my mama & doritos! - YouTube - 0 views

  • Doritos Superbowl Commercial: Keep your hands off my mama & doritos!
Nick kroger

EBSCOhost: Texting Makes U Stupid - 0 views

  • COMPASS The U.S. is producing civilizational illiterates. How will they compete against America's global rivals?
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    Good Stuff
Andrew Ford

Texting, Twitter contributing to students' poor grammar skills, profs say - The Globe a... - 0 views

  • "Thirty per cent of students who are admitted are not able to pass at a minimum level," says Ann Barrett, managing director of the English language proficiency exam at Waterloo University. "We would certainly like it to be a lot lower." Barrett says the failure rate has jumped five percentage points in the past few years, up to 30 per cent from 25 per cent.
  • At Simon Fraser University in British Columbia, one in 10 new students are not qualified to take the mandatory writing courses required for graduation. That 10 per cent must take so-called "foundational" writing courses first.
Nick kroger

Does Texting Hurt Your Grammar? - Online College.org - 0 views

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    used images in slide
Steven Armenta

Is Text Messaging Destroying the English Language? A Reflective Essay on Texting and En... - 1 views

  • According to Job Bank USA, numerous employers have complained of the sheer volume of job applications they receive written in text language [1]. In particular they note that many applicants have a tendency to speak informally and use text message abbreviations, giving the impression that they are corresponding with an old friend rather than a potential employer. Such prospective applicants seem therefore poorly educated, lazy, and unprofessional. Needless to say, in most cases such applications are thrown in the bin and never thought of again.
William Carver

The Effects of Text Messaging on Literacy - 0 views

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    This paper was written on behalf of our group's goal and I think would be a great asset here
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