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Brandon King

Impact of Text Messaging & Other Technologies on Student Writing Skills - 1 views

  • This article discusses how technology, primarily texting, has negatively influenced students' writing skills, and offers advise on what particular weaknesses students may have developed that you will need to work on correcting in your classroom.
  • “I wanna go u wanna go 2?” Now, this gibberish is easy enough to understand and requires one to type less, but the problem is that students are not adept enough at knowing where informal writing ends and formal writing begins
  • Today's Tech-Savvy SocietyThe most alarming trend concerning the impact of technology on students involves poor formal writing skills. This is due in large part to the society in which we live. Texting on cellular phones has had a detrimental effect on student’s writing. Although communicating via text messages is a fabulous way to stay in touch, this seemingly coded short-hand that students use while texting, has surfaced in their formal writing, in their essays, and in their research papers. slide 3 of 6Mechanics MeltdownFor the most part, students have no idea that contractions do not belong in formal writing, and that to be considered a contraction, a word has to include an apostrophe, which typically replaces a letter or two. I inform my students to avoid contractions in their writing, and someone always responds, “What’s a contraction?” To no avail. I am not surprised, but I rather expect some student to comment.
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  • Personal Pronoun "I" is Capitalized?Not only is this affecting usage skills, but students have no idea that the personal pronoun “I” is supposed to be capitalized when it is used. Another common mistake that is closely related to capitalizing the personal pronoun, is the capitalization of first letters of the first word that begins sentences.This emanates from students who do not take the time to properly capitalize their letters when they are texting because it takes too much time.slide 5 of 6Lack of PunctuationAnother negative effect that texting is having on students is the lack of punctuation. Now, punctuation is limited on cellular device keypads, but to students, the punctuation that appears is nonexistent. If they are not going to take the time to capitalize letters, they certainly are not going to take the time to punctuate their sentences. The result is that students are so used to texting that when they must complete a formal writing assignment for their English class, they can not transition between formal and informal writing. The result is that students just run together their sentences and phrases, thus omitting proper punctuation. slide 6 of 6Texting Makes Teaching ToughNow, I realize that text messaging is not solely responsible for this shortcoming, but emailing, internet searches, and instant messaging have all contributed to the demise of students' writing abilities. Such technological innovations are useful, but for teachers, it makes them work twice as hard. One solution to this problem is to address the impact of technology on students before each formal writing assignment and emphasize the need to write differently in different circumstances.
Orlando Gonzalez

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

  • Little or no grammar teaching, cell phone texting, social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter, are all being blamed for an increasingly unacceptable number of post-secondary students who can't write.
  • "Thirty per cent of students who are admitted are not able to pass at a minimum level,"
  • Poor grammar is the major reason students fail
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  • "If a student has problems with articles, prepositions, verb tenses, that's a problem."
  • Cellphone texting and social networking on Internet sites are degrading writing skills
  • Barrett says the failure rate has jumped five percentage points in the past few years, up to 30 per cent from 25 per cent.
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    This article discusses how social networking is hurting the youth of today on how to use proper grammar. "Students seem to have absolutely no idea what an apostrophe is for"
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    Schools are not teaching the proper way to use grammar anymore, and with the internet being so dominant our youth today thinks that "U" instead of "YOU" is acceptable etc....
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    If you really think about it they don't really push writing in cursive anymore either. It shows how dramatic technology is affecting writing skills.
Courtney JLee

Ellen Galinsky: Texting, TV and Tech Trashing Children's Attention Spans - 0 views

  • "There is a widespread belief among teachers that students' constant use of digital technology is hampering their attention spans and ability to persevere in the face of challenging tasks.
  • Nearly three quarters of the 685 public and private K-12 teachers surveyed in the Common Sense Media online poll believe that students use of entertainment media (including TV, video games, texting and social networking) "has hurt student's attention spans a lot or somewhat."
  • Likewise, in the Pew online survey, which polled 2,462 middle and high school teachers, 87% report that these technologies are creating "an easily distracted generation with short attention spans," and 64% say that digital technologies "do more to distract students than to help them academically."
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    Per a survey of 85 public and private school teachers, social media has hurt students ability to pay attention in class, thus decreasing their likelihood of obtaining good grades. Teachers have to come up with creative ways to "win" student's attention. 64% say digital technologies hurt them academically.
Jasmine H

Spelling and text language are influenced by technology - New York literacy | Examiner.com - 0 views

  • When students are not aware of the requirements for formal written language, ‘texting language’ can make itself present, and this poses a major issue. Many times, teachers will read their students’ assignments and are unable to comprehend what students have written, simply because the assignment is written in text language.
  • Studies have shown that areas of students with low-socioeconomic status are more likely to be influenced by ‘texting language’ in their writing.
Brandon King

The Decreasing Literacy Skills of the Workforce - Changing Responsibilities of Business... - 1 views

  • In 2001, the American Management Association found that one-third of job applicants flunked basic literacy and math tests. 
  • There is plenty of evidence that literacy skills continue to decline. U.S. government data from the National Assessment of Educational Progress shows that after years of educational reforms, high school seniors scored worse on a national reading test than they had back in 1992. Less than three-quarters of U.S. 12th graders scored at at least the “basic” level, down from 80% in the early 1990s. 
  • Employers view reading and writing as critical basic skills, yet they are often at a loss about how to improve those skills among their workforce without incurring huge costs and loss of on-the-job time. Training programs abound to train managers and staff about project and budget control and various technical disciplines, but few programs exist to teach basic skills and employers find it difficult to justify such expenditures. 
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  • The Center for Lifelong Learning was created to address these and other pressing literacy issues. 
  • We believe that the problem of the decline in literacy is exacerbated by the fact that nearly everyone is taught to read using techniques that modern education and brain researchers have proven to be antiquated. Since the beginning of mass education in the U.S., students have been taught to read, starting in Kindergarten, in ways that have been shown to be the opposite of the way our brains work. 
  • Most people attribute their reading problems to their own failings as students. Yet the problem is really the techniques they were taught to use, not their brain and its native capabilities. 
  • Researchers have found that the reality is that the faster you read, the more you remember. It’s the way our brains are designed. In school, kids are taught to read one word at a time, to stop reading at the end of a line until they reach the left side of the page again, and, worst of all, to say the words out loud in their head. All of these practices are exactly the opposite of the reality of the way our brains want information delivered.
  • Researchers have found that the reality is that the faster you read, the more you remember. It’s the way our brains are designed. In school, kids are taught to read one word at a time, to stop reading at the end of a line until they reach the left side of the page again, and, worst of all, to say the words out loud in their head. All of these practices are exactly the opposite of the reality of the way our brains want information delivered.
    • Brandon King
       
      this article discusses the decreasing literacy skills in jobs because of advancements of technology
Gilbert Lawrence

Does texting hurt writing skills? - TimesDaily: Archives - 4 views

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    This article talk about how students at the age rang 12 to 17 are dramatically affected by texting and writing. Talks about how kids abbreviate their words making their writing very bad. Some kids even say they get lazy and allow text talk to enter the papers.
Danielle hall

Bedtime Texting Bad for Sleep - ABC News - 2 views

  • Kids who send text messages or use the Internet right before bed may suffer poorer sleep at night as well as mood and cognitive problems during the day, according to results of a pilot study.
  • Text messaging and other electronic communication media were linked to excessive movement during sleep, insomnia, and leg pain at night in students ages 8 to 22,
  • Use of these technologies after bedtime was also associated with "high rates of daytime cognitive or mood problems ... including ADHD, anxiety, depression, learning difficulties," according to the report slated for presentation here at the CHEST meeting on Wednesday.
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  • "The prevalence of insomnia and other sleep disorders is cause for great concern, given their potential consequences on a child's ability to function in school,"
  • These young people averaged 33.5 text messages or e-mails sent per night to an average of 3.7 people for a total of 3,404 text messages per person per month.
  • More than 77 percent of the adolescents and young adults surveyed had persistent trouble getting to sleep.
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    An article about how the texting and having technology around actually causes kids to not only not get enough sleep but causes disruptions in sleep and the effects are terrible. It can disrupt learning in a extremely negative way.
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