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anonymous

Le livre numérique augmenté : un formidable potentiel éducatif - Villes - Le ... - 0 views

  • Lire dans les yeux du lecteur, lui fournir l'aide contextuelle au bon moment, le guider pas à pas : les techniques se développent pour aider les enfants à acquérir l'autonomie de lecture ou les préparer à maîtriser les langages informatiques.
anonymous

Gamification, ludification et éducation... | Mario tout de go - 0 views

  • J’ai toujours été jaloux du niveau d’attention des élèves en contexte de jeu; quand on compare avec les situations d’apprentissage qu’on leur propose, aucune ne les captive autant que le jeu. Dès mes premières lectures sur le sujet, j’ai été fasciné par la capacité des environnements ludiques à motiver, à aider les jeunes à apprendre comment résoudre des problèmes et aussi, comment ils peuvent donner accès à la culture.
Michel Roland-Guill

Rough Type: Nicholas Carr's Blog: Killing Mnemosyne - 2 views

  • Isidore, the bishop of Seville, remarked how reading “the sayings” of thinkers in books “render[ed] their escape from memory less easy.”
  • Shakespeare has Hamlet call his memory “the book and volume of my brain.”
  • Books provide a supplement to memory, but they also, as Eco puts it, “challenge and improve memory; they do not narcotize it.”
  • ...19 more annotations...
  • Erasmus, in his 1512 textbook De Copia, stressed the connection between memory and reading. He urged students to annotate their books
  • He also suggested that every student and teacher keep a notebook, organized by subject, “so that whenever he lights on anything worth noting down, he may write it in the appropriate section.”
  • Memory, for Seneca as for Erasmus, was as much a crucible as a container.
    • Michel Roland-Guill
       
      crucible = creuset
  • To him, memorizing was far more than a means of storage
  • Far from being a mechanical, mindless process, Erasmus’s brand of memorization engaged the mind fully
  • “We should imitate bees,” Seneca wrote, “and we should keep in separate compartments whatever we have collected from our diverse reading, for things conserved separately keep better. Then, diligently applying all the resources of our native talent, we should mingle all the various nectars we have tasted, and then turn them into a single sweet substance, in such a way that, even if it is apparent where it originated, it appears quite different from what it was in its original state.”
  • kinds of flowers
  • Francis Bacon
  • “commonplace books,”
  • “a gentleman’s commonplace book” served “both as a vehicle for and a chronicle of his intellectual development.”
  • The arrival of the limitless and easily searchable data banks of the Internet brought a further shift, not just in the way we view memorization but in the way we view memory itself.
  • Clive Thompson, the Wired writer, refers to the Net as an “outboard brain”
  • David Brooks
  • “I had thought that the magic of the information age was that it allowed us to know more,” he writes, “but then I realized the magic of the information age is that it allows us to know less. It provides us with external cognitive servants—silicon memory systems, collaborative online filters, consumer preference algorithms and networked knowledge. We can burden these servants and liberate ourselves.”
  • Peter Suderman
  • “it’s no longer terribly efficient to use our brains to store information.”
  • “Why memorize the content of a single book when you could be using your brain to hold a quick guide to an entire library? Rather than memorize information, we now store it digitally and just remember what we stored.”
  • Don Tapscott, the technology writer, puts it more bluntly. Now that we can look up anything “with a click on Google,” he says, “memorizing long passages or historical facts” is obsolete.
  • When, in an 1892 lecture before a group of teachers, William James declared that “the art of remembering is the art of thinking,” he was stating the obvious.
anonymous

Des résultats scolaires déterminés dès la maternelle | Pascale Breton | Éduca... - 0 views

  • Une nouvelle étude dévoilée hier par l'Institut de la statistique du Québec indique en effet qu'un élève de maternelle qui maîtrise les compétences de base en mathématiques, évaluées à l'aide d'un test de connaissance des nombres, obtient de meilleurs résultats scolaires lorsqu'il est rendu en quatrième année, non seulement en mathématiques, mais également en écriture, en lecture et en sciences.
anonymous

The Latest From Betaworks: Findings. A New Way To Share Book Passages And Web Marginali... - 1 views

  • Reading, which began as a solitary activity, is increasingly becoming a social experience. We share links constantly on Twitter and Facebook to the latest blog posts and articles we are reading, and electronic books such as Amazon’s Kindle allow you to share your highlights and notes with the world.
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