Even though teens are heavily embedded in a tech-rich world, they do not believe that communication over the internet or text messaging is writing.
Contents contributed and discussions participated by Randall Oxendine
Turning in the assignment - 13 views
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I'm willing to turn it in unless someone else wants to. I plan to put the "review" of our peers that's under the References into another Document to email Mrs. Harkins at the same time. If you all want me to I will email it to her Thursday at 10:30pm EST that way everyone has a chance to add/edit the document and it can all be turned in before the cut off. I created a Google Drive Document for the Review as well if you wish to add your thoughts to it. I'm not sure if she wants the list of participants and what they did in the original doc or a new one so I was going to ask her which she preferred tomorrow. https://docs.google.com/document/d/17x8g2vBe-53OWinpj0ER_OZJYYt6TjW1N-08z8Lerw0/edit?usp=sharing
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Bumping this up so others can find the link to the Peer Review.
Google Drive Document - 29 views
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I've started a document, feel free to add your information, if anyone can make a graph from findings or some type of eye catching info that will help our case, add it in. If you find what I've typed inappropriate or you would like to reword it that's fine by me, just let me know so I don't go to change it back. Remember the document is due tomorrow by 11:59 pm EST. Add your last name to the end of each thing you provide so to know who contributed what, if you edit/add to what another person typed please add you name next to theirs.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1fu-5mJHCOtKEBH3gEifH9fnurKMGZW8vW7QMGPlagRg/edit?usp=sharing -
I've added at the bottom of the Document a place to "review" your other team members as a way to show who participated and what others saw as contributions to our assignment.
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I like the image but I don't understand what is being said, can you explain it to me further? How do you feel about changing "The Technology Decline of Digital Literacy" to "Technology Declines Skills in Literacy".
Writing, Technology and Teens | Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project - 0 views
Texting, Twitter contributing to students' poor grammar skills, profs say - The Globe a... - 0 views
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Ontario's Waterloo University is one of the few post-secondary institutions in Canada to require the students they accept to pass an exam testing their English language skills. Almost a third of those students are failing. "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.
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Punctuation errors are huge, and apostrophe errors. Students seem to have absolutely no idea what an apostrophe is for. None. Absolutely none. Paul Budra, an English professor and associate dean of arts and science at Simon Fraser University
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The Internet norm of ignoring punctuation and capitalization as well as using emoticons may be acceptable in an e-mail to friends and family, but it can have a deadly effect on one's career if used at work.
Education World: Does Texting Harm Students' Writing Skills? - 0 views
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One only has to spend about two minutes browsing the public pages of a social media platform like Facebook to find examples of cyber slang. In some cases, a second and third read is required before a sentence begins to make sense. A public Facebook page entitled “If you think the rules at UnionCounty High School are ridiculous,” dealing with school policies in Union, S.C. offers these examples: “the new policy on dress code they handed out last week is our last chance 2 keep us out of uniforms. the new super intendant as u all know is from spartanburg is using the saturday school crap 2 take a note on how many offenses we have & will use it 2 make her decision. so we ned 2 stop breaking the dress code or we might have 2 really fight uniforms next year.” “dont worry abt us wearing uniforms nxt year. our parents wont buy them & the district cant even give us the first set cuz our parents pay the taxes & we cant afford them. so get ur parents opinion & make them disagress with uniforms!”
I Think, Therefore IM - New York Times - 0 views
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As more and more teenagers socialize online, middle school and high school teachers like Ms. Harding are increasingly seeing a breezy form of Internet English jump from e-mail into schoolwork. To their dismay, teachers say that papers are being written with shortened words, improper capitalization and punctuation, and characters like &, $ and @.
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Even terms that cannot be expressed verbally are making their way into papers. Melanie Weaver was stunned by some of the term papers she received from a 10th-grade class she recently taught as part of an internship. ''They would be trying to make a point in a paper, they would put a smiley face in the end,'' said Ms. Weaver, who teaches at Alvernia College in Reading, Pa. ''If they were presenting an argument and they needed to present an opposite view, they would put a frown.''
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Ms. Harding noted that in some cases the shorthand isn't even shorter. ''I understand 'cuz,' but what's with the 'wuz'? It's the same amount of letters as 'was,' so what's the point?'' she said.
School of Education at Johns Hopkins University-Instant Messaging: Friend or Foe of Stu... - 0 views
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According to Lee (2002), "teachers say that papers are being written with shortened words, improper capitalization and punctuation, and characters like &, $ and @. " However, something that is not always considered is that these mistakes are often unintentional – when students use IM frequently, they reach a saturation point where they no longer notice the IM lingo because they are so used to seeing it.
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This was also a problem for Carl Sharp, whose 15-year old son's summer job application read "i want 2 b a counselor because i love 2 work with kids" (Friess, 2003), and English instructor Cindy Glover, who – while teaching undergraduate freshman composition in 2002 – "spent a lot of time unteaching Internet-speak. 'My students were trying to communicate fairly academic, scholarly thoughts, but some of them didn't seem to know it's "y-o-u," not "u"'" (Freiss, 2003.) These examples give credence to Montana Hodgen's point, that heavy IM use actually changes the way students read words on a page.
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Students need to understand the importance of using the appropriate language in the appropriate setting, and that who one is writing for affects the way in which one writes. For example, IM-speak is perfectly acceptable when instant messaging with someone; on the flip side it is completely unacceptable when writing a formal letter. The same thing is true of formal writing – it is appropriate in an official document, such as a school paper, but would be inappropriate in-- for example-- an online chat room.
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Findings? - 0 views
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