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Home/ Web 2.0: Enhancing Education Through Technology/ Contents contributed and discussions participated by Julie Doughty

Contents contributed and discussions participated by Julie Doughty

Julie Doughty

Your Brain on Computers - Series - The New York Times - 1 views

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    This link is to the NY Times series about technology and neuroscience. Perhaps it might interest some of you as per our discussions (particularly the Growing Up Digital article).
Julie Doughty

The Neuroscience of Your Brain on Fiction - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    This is the article about deep reading of fiction and how that works in your brain compared to other forms of reading, as per the discussion about students not reading deeply.
Julie Doughty

Social Media's Impact in Schools by Laura Devaney - 1 views

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    This short article (that I hope you don't have to sign in to read) outlines survey data about how students and schools are using social media to enhance collaboration and the development of a school community. Notably 96% of students surveyed say they use social networking sites and 50% of those say they discuss schoolwork on those sites. The last 5 paragraphs of the article explains ways in which teachers and schools can capitalize on this. The subtext is that schools should move away from bans on social media.
Julie Doughty

Using a Blog to Enhance Student Participation | Faculty Focus - 0 views

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    This professor uses blogs to have students discuss readings before they are due.  It supports HOTS because they are connecting the readings to current events as well as evaluating perspectives. Plus the prof. felt she was able to better tailor the class discussions after reading the posts to force students to think more deeply.  Students reported that the blogging helped them understand course content and improve their critical thinking and writing skills.  The prof. had students reflect as a part of their final about how their verbal exchanges on the blog shaped their understanding of the events.  In other words, students explored how they were constructing their knowledge through the blog.  Interestingly, this professor had her students post anonymously to the "class blog".  She believed this encouraged honest and open participation.
Julie Doughty

How (and why) to flip your classroom - 0 views

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    This article outlines the notion of flipping the classroom to ensure there is more time in class "doing" your discipline and working on skills together, rather than "listening" or "looking" at how it is done. Being selective about what media you ask students to consume for HW, having them do blogs or discussion posts as HW and then using class time to work in groups and go deeper with the analysis of bias, perspective, sourcing, etc. is a great model. If we want to push the thinking further on the media literacy, we need to have class time to do this work with them.
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