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College students' use of Kindle DX points to e-reader's role in academia - University o... - 3 views

  • “Most e-readers were designed for leisure reading – think romance novels on the beach,” said co-author Charlotte Lee, a UW assistant professor of Human Centered Design and Engineering. “We found that reading is just a small part of what students are doing. And when we realize how dynamic and complicated a process this is, it kind of redefines what it means to design an e-reader.”
  • The Kindle DX was more likely to replace students’ paper-based reading than their computer-based reading.
  • With paper, three quarters of students marked up texts as they read. This included highlighting key passages, underlining, drawing pictures and writing notes in margins.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • A drawback of the Kindle DX was the difficulty of switching between reading techniques, such as skimming an article’s illustrations or references just before reading the complete text. Students frequently made such switches as they read course material. The digital text also disrupted a technique called cognitive mapping, in which readers used physical cues such as the location on the page and the position in the book to go back and find a section of text or even to help retain and recall the information they had read.
  • “E-readers are not where they need to be in order to support academic reading,” Lee concludes. But asked when e-readers will reach that point, she predicts: “It’s going to be sooner than we think.”
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    This discusses the effect of e-readers on cognitive mapping and other reading techniques.
J. perry

Jefferson County Schools, TN - 6 views

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    Power Point and Slideshow Resources for Teachers to Download
David Wetzel

5 Top Things to Consider During Continuing Education Efforts - 4 views

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    How to build professional, personal, social, and lifelong learning networks is the focal point of this post.
Maggie Verster

Free eBooks - Technology Integration in Education - 6 views

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    "This ebook investigates the challenges to effectively using technology in the classroom and discusses key points of an effective technology integration program."
Jeff Johnson

Symbaloo - 5 views

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    It is our dream to make Symbaloo the easiest starting point on the Internet. It's that simple; you could have thought of it yourself! Symbaloo is an ancient Greek verb meaning 'gathering' 'assembling'. It perfectly reflects the mission of the company. Symbaloo is an idea of Tim Has and has the mission to make the web more accessible. It was founded together with Koen Dantuma and Robert Broeders early 2007. Since June 2007 Symbaloo is available in The Netherlands, Spain, France, the UK and the US in beta.
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    I've been using symbaloo and in particular edu.symbaloo.com to share a many types of web based toolsand resources with my students. Truly a great and useful tool.
gabriela anjos

High Techpectations: Spontaneous Advice - 0 views

  • What's a simple way to start infusing your curriculum with technology? What's a good starting point? Do you have a fav collab project? Courtesy of my Twitter Network: Suggest they take a part of their curriculum that they know well.... & consider if it could be made more collaborative, interactive, or personal for the students... then the tech tools are a win...  Need a GREAT project? Use Glogster to create and publish a WOW multimedia poster on any academic topic!http://tinyurl.com/3m799m  I've been thinking a lot about NETS-making tech "transparent and routine."  For tech neophytes, it's got to be non-threatening. so I've used GoogleGroups and GoogleDocs for out-of-class discussion and collaboration. As a language teacher, epals.com has been invaluable with connecting my students to native speakers.  Also, wikis & google earth Every faculty member has del.icio.us account-didn't support browser bkmrks when gave new machines-made em use del.icall summer collaboration and planning was done on wiki or google docs-all tech supprt documentation on wiki-students/teachers add  Visit ISTE student profiles. Pick a unit to enhance w/them. See http://tinyurl.com/6eybas  We start many a noobie on sharing online bookmarks, understanding how to share and access others bookmarks and subscribe to them. Use technology to reach it?  Sometimes I think when they see how well the objective is reached, and how engaged the students are We use wikis & google tools a LOT for collab started as tchr driven switched 2 stud recommend gaggle too Blogs would be my top suggestion... very collaborative.. easy learning curve... lots of possibilities.  My teachers found the http://1001tales.wikispaces.com collaboration to be a powerful and easily integrated project. locating images for a timeline project? posting a question of the day on a class blog? recording and sharing language mp3s? I started last year with podcasting and posted their work on the web, just like students in my class do. This year I showed teachers how to post and use a ning. They LOVED it. I call it Facebook for teachers. Set up Google Apps for Ed acct. for older students. Demonstrate the powerful uses of apps. Learn to organize Start with wikispaces. Look for other examples. Keep it simple & collborative. Kids work in teams to build wiki. Maybe info one? I'd say using tools such as Voki and Voicethread have been a good start for me :o)  Tchers have 2 start by letting go of the idea that they are "integratin tech" change to using tool for effective instruct ,that said...phone in response casts to gcast, post assign 2 wiki let kids discuss, storytelling 4 slide...feel post coming on:) The easiest way for this writing teacher is to pick a topic, any topic, and podcast students another starting point is to use VoiceThread to accomplish that.or start blogging and ask them to share their poetry (quick, simple success) then post that online. Have them drop poems into PPT Poetry then put it online with VoiceThread and invite feedback from other teachers' students on the poems, serious or fun. Take them to Thinkfinity.org and let them use the story mapper or bubbl.us to map a poem, story, nonfiction text Do something simple that can be successful and allow person to see tech can support and make easier initially...find easy web sites that kids can do (my background is EC) that excite them. Find place so they communik8 (such as ask an expert) Online enviros such as nings or wikis offer the most flexibility for just about any kind of content; images, video, audio,text basic start would be w digital camera and bulletin bd then putting pics into projects, especially w a technophobe....take a look at what is happening and see what could be done w tech--morning messages, sign in on the computer, parent notes etc. I think that there is incredible power in planning learning with other teachers, and inviting student input :-) I think wikis are an easy way in for teachers. they understand the collaborative nature of them. So do kids I think blogging is a simple way to start for humanities teachers. It's writing for an audience. That makes sense to teacher
    • gabriela anjos
       
      Good hints on how to add more tech richness to our curriculum
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    Some good hints on how to add techrichness to our curriculum!
dani lyra

Genki English Songs for Adult Learners - 12 views

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    A site to look for games, songs by topic or grammar point.
duncwilson

FREE Report Card Comments - 16 views

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    This tool lets you point and click and write your school reports - awesome !!
claudio azevedo

GRAMMAR WORKSHEETS - 0 views

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    A blog with fun worksheets for various grammar points and vocabulary. It's free and easy to print.
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    Thanks, Cláudio, for sharing it with us. Great to see you around!
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    Claudio, I have just added your suggestion to my dashboard. Thank you for your great sharing. Mirian
Celina Borges

Grammar : Present perfect - ESL Resources - 14 views

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    Different kinds of tasks and practice for a chosen grammar point or structure
Carla Arena

Splicd lets you edit other people's YouTube videos | - 0 views

  • If there's one bothersome side effect of getting a long Web video sent to you, it's getting to the good parts. In some cases, the part your friend wanted you to see could be a few minutes in, and you might not have the time (or patience) to sit through the rest. A service called Splicd fixes this, by letting anyone drop in a YouTube video URL, then pick the start and end point. It's not a very pretty implementation, but it works. You've got to manually plug in the start and end times, which requires skipping around to the part you want in YouTube, then heading back to Splicd. Once it's worked it through, you get a permalinked page that you can share with friends. What's nice about this system is that it doesn't require extra time to re-encode the video; when you've put in those changes it's instantaneous. The downside to that is that the finished product cannot be shared outside of Splicd's site.
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    Aha! Now you can get just parts of a YouTube video. Might be handy in the classroom. I need to test it!
Maria Pires

7 Things You Should Know About Social Bookmarking - 0 views

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    Excellent text that will really help you understand the concept of social bookmarking and the power it holds. The text is straight to the point and easy to read.
Carla Arena

The Bamboo Project Blog: Six Reasons People Aren't Commenting On Your Blog - 0 views

  • Six Reasons People Aren't Commenting on Your Blog
  • 1. You sound like a press release.
  • 2. You sound like an infomercial.
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  • 5. You haven't created the right atmosphere
  • 4. You haven't showed them how.
  • 3. You sound like a know-it-all.
  • 6. You just don't seem that into it.
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    Excellent post and it gives excellent tips why people don't comment. also, great to show that commenting is one of the crucial points of blogging and the most difficult aspect of it .
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