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Jeffrey Plaman

BBC News - Web addicts have brain changes, research suggests - 0 views

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    Article citing new findings about brain changes in people showing internet addiction disorder.
Katie Day

In Korea, a Boot Camp Cure for Web Obsession - New York Times - 0 views

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    an article from 2007 re internet addiction in kids and how Korea is tackling it.... Would be interesting to get an update....
Miles Beasley

Kranky Kids® In-School and After-School Programs Using Radio, Theater and Vid... - 1 views

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    Kranky Kids a useful site for multimedia work in the classroom
Louise Phinney

We, the Web Kids - Pastebin.com - 0 views

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    There is probably no other word that would be as overused in the media discourse as 'generation'. I once tried to count the 'generations' that have been proclaimed in the past ten years, since the well-known article about the so-called 'Generation Nothing'; I believe there were as many as twelve. They all had one thing in common: they only existed on paper. Reality never provided us with a single tangible, meaningful, unforgettable impulse, the common experience of which would forever distinguish us from the previous generations. We had been looking for it, but instead the groundbreaking change came unnoticed, along with cable TV, mobile phones, and, most of all, Internet access. It is only today that we can fully comprehend how much has changed during the past fifteen years.
Jeffrey Plaman

4 Steps to Viral, Or How to Create Infographics That Blow up the Web | Visual.ly Blog - 0 views

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    Great piece talking about the core of what makes a good infographic (or anything else really)... STORY
Keri-Lee Beasley

Information Literacy - Home - 0 views

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    Useful site for research skills and how to evaluate websites etc
Keri-Lee Beasley

import*io - Structured Web Data Scraping - 0 views

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    Grabs data from websites into useable formats for infographics
Keri-Lee Beasley

Ten Websites to Help Students Connect with Books | Edudemic - 1 views

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    "Teachers might see the Internet as the enemy of old-fashioned books, but the two entities can actually compliment each other nicely. Websites devoted to reading and literacy help children connect with other readers, delve deeper into what they are reading, and discover new books of interest. And they provide teachers with ideas for the classroom."
Keri-Lee Beasley

Why You Should Never Center Align Paragraph Text - UX Movement - 0 views

  • Text is a beautiful thing. It not only has function, but form as well. When you’re creating text, it’s likely that you’re not only thinking about what your text should say, but how it should look. On the web, centered and left aligned text are the most widely used text alignments. How you use these text alignments can either help or harm your users when they read.
Keri-Lee Beasley

Using Technology to Break the Speed Barrier of Reading - Scientific American - 0 views

  • Unfortunately, the system of reading we inherited from the ancient scribes —the method of reading you are most likely using right now — has been fundamentally shaped by engineering constraints that were relevant in centuries past, but no longer appropriate in our information age.
  • search for innovative engineering solutions aimed at making reading more efficient and effective for more people
  • But then, by chance, I discovered that when I used the small screen of a smartphone to read my scientific papers required for work, I was able to read with much greater facility and ease.
  • ...9 more annotations...
  • hen, in a comprehensive study of over 100 high school students with dyslexia done in 2013, using techniques that included eye tracking, we were able to confirm that the shortened line formats produced a benefit for many who otherwise struggled with reading.
  • For example, Marco Zorzi and his colleagues in Italy and France showed in 2012 that when letter spacing is increased to reduce crowding, children with dyslexia read more effectively.
  • A clever web application called Beeline Reader, developed by Nick Lum, a lawyer from San Francisco, may accomplish something similar using colors to guide the reader’s attention forward along the line.  Beeline does this by washing each line of text in a color gradient, to create text that looks a bit like a tie-dyed tee-shirt.
  • one aims to increase the throughput of the brain’s reading buffers by changing their capacity for information processing, while the other seeks to activate alternate channels for reading that will allow information to be processed in parallel, and thereby increase the capacity of the language processing able to be performed during reading. 
  • The brain is said to be plastic, meaning that it is possible to change its abilities.
  • people can be taught to roughly double their reading speed, without compromising comprehension.
  • Consider that we process language, first and foremost, through speech. And yet, in the traditional design of reading we are forced to read using our eyes. Even though the brain already includes a fully developed auditory pathway for language, the traditional design for reading makes little use of the auditory processing capabilities of the brain
  • While the visual pathways are being strained to capacity by reading, the auditory network for language remains relatively under-utilized.
  • Importantly, our early indications suggest that the least effective method of reading may be the one society has been clinging to for centuries: reading on paper.
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    "Importantly, our early indications suggest that the least effective method of reading may be the one society has been clinging to for centuries: reading on paper."
Katie Day

Chris Anderson: How web video powers global innovation | Video on TED.com - 0 views

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    a powerful argument for the power of videos for learning and innovation - crowd accelerated innovation -- based on 1) crowds, 2) light (clear visibility), and 3) desire
Katie Day

Children's Websites: Usability Issues in Designing for Kids (Jakob Nielsen's Alertbox) - 0 views

  • Summary: New research with users aged 3–12 shows that older kids have gained substantial Web proficiency since our last studies, while younger kids still face many problems. Designing for children requires distinct usability approaches, including targeting content narrowly for different ages of kids.
Katie Day

Sugata Mitra: The child-driven education | Video on TED.com - 0 views

  • Education scientist Sugata Mitra tackles one of the greatest problems of education -- the best teachers and schools don't exist where they're needed most. In a series of real-life experiments from New Delhi to South Africa to Italy, he gave kids self-supervised access to the web and saw results that could revolutionize how we think about teaching.
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    Sugata Mitra's second TED talk (2010) in which he talks about how far he has taken his experiment.... children teaching children technology.... SOLEs (Self-Organizing Learning Environments)
Katie Day

Cambodia For Kids: Make Connects With The Arts, Culture, and the People of Cambodia Via... - 0 views

  • Cambodia 4 Kids is an evolving educational Web site for teachers, parents, and especially children who are interested in making connections with Cambodia, its people, and its arts & culture via the Internet.
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    website set up by Beth Kanter
Katie Day

Food Experts Worry as World Population and Hunger Grow - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Scientists and development experts across the globe are racing to increase food production by 50 percent over the next two decades to feed the world’s growing population, yet many doubt their chances despite a broad consensus that enough land, water and expertise exist.
  • The number of hungry people in the world rose to 1.02 billion this year, or nearly one in seven people, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, despite a 12-year concentrated effort to cut the number.
  • Agronomists and development experts who gathered in Rome last week generally agreed that the resources and technical knowledge were available to increase food production by 50 percent in 2030 and by 70 percent in 2050 — the amounts needed to feed a population expected to grow to 9.1 billion in 40 years.
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    Oct 21, 2009
Katie Day

Teaching Document Design, Not Formatting Requirements - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of H... - 0 views

  • I teach document design. When I teach composition, I spend a significant amount of the semester on visual design. I’m also a scholar of visual design. Obviously, then, I care about design, perhaps unhealthily so. And I want everyone else to care, too. But, even if you can’t bring yourself to care about visual design, then you should still care about formatting requirements on assignment prompts and/or syllabi. Everything we put on these documents tells our students something about us, about what we value, and about what they should value
  • while the ability to follow conventions of all stripes is certainly important, the ability to understand, historicize, negotiate, and even resist those conventions is far more important. Formatting conventions do not exist in a vacuum, and while they are solidified in style guides and other texts, they are often fluid and change depending on technologies and rhetorical situations. For instance, the gold standard of student paper formatting exists for several reasons, not the least of which involves Microsoft’s push to use Times as the default font in word processors and web browsers. A knowledge of why those conventions exist, how to negotiate them, and the consequences for following and/or breaking them is far more useful for students than simply being forced to follow them blindly.
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    An argument for encouraging the positive criteria/skill of designing a document rather than prescriptive formatting requirements
Keri-Lee Beasley

Virtual Manipulatives - 0 views

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    Great site for IWB - mathematical manipulatives, including clock, attribute blocks, base 10 blocks, etc etc. Heaps on here
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