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Examining gender differences 普通类
Abstract An interactive classroom communication system (ICCS) involves the use of remote devices that permit all students in a class to respond to multiple choice questions displayed on a LCD projector. After responses are clicked in, the results are instantly aggregated and displayed in chart form. The purpose of this study was to examine gender differences in attitudes toward ICCSs for 659 secondary school students. The initial results suggested that male students had significantly more positive attitudes than female students with respect to student involvement, assessment, and perceived learning. However, a number of these differences disappeared when computer comfort level and type of use were added as covariates. Male students still perceived that ICCSs improved the overall learning process more than female students regardless of computer comfort level or type of use.
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Designing technology 普通类
PictoPal is the name of a technology-supported intervention designed to foster the development of emergent reading and writing skills in four and five year old children. Following the theoretical underpinnings and a brief description of PictoPal, this article describes how children worked with the technology; how the intervention elicited their engagement with literacy concepts both on the computer and off; and effects on early literacy learning. Observation results indicate that children are able to work independently with the program after a few instruction sessions. Observation data yield insight in the nature of adult guidance and the way the results of computer activities were implemented in off-computer classroom activities, as well as areas where this could be improved. Comparison of the four pre–post test experiments used to assess learning effects, suggest that the on-computer activities in PictoPal can yield a statistically significant learning effect, but only when integration with off-computer activities is present.
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Building digital libraries 普通类
The book sits firmly in the context of the shift from the “i” to the “c” of ict (information and communications technology) that has been enabled by the developments in user-friendly software shown by the explosion of social networking sites and the engagement of young people inWeb 2.0 practices. It offers for consideration the premise that, if communication is central to the learning process, thenWeb 2.0 applications could offer exciting possibilities. The authors then explore these possibilities. They begin with a definition of Web 2.0; they identify its key characteristics, evaluate the educational potential of significant Web 2.0 practices and provide the theoretical underpinning for this work. While making a strong case for the incorporation of Web 2.0 in education, they also make clear that they do not consider it as the panacea for all educational evils.
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Blogs wikis podcasts & more 普通类
This absorbing book argues its case persuasively and should be an invaluable resource for its target audience of teachers, teacher educators, researchers and local authority professionals. I cannot help wishing, however, that the narrative had indicated more specifically that, though digital technologies require and support learning understood as a social activity, this understanding is not a discovery of our digital age, but has been advocated by Dewey and other prophetic voices since at latest the start of the 20th century. This minor reservation apart, I highly recommend this book. It actually gives me sound reason to hope that, with the integration of digital literacies in the curriculum, those prophetic voices will finally be heard and their message will fully be incorporated into classroom practice.
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Instructional design theories 普通类
This absorbing book argues its case persuasively and should be an invaluable resource for its target audience of teachers, teacher educators, researchers and local authority professionals. I cannot help wishing, however, that the narrative had indicated more specifically that, though digital technologies require and support learning understood as a social activity, this understanding is not a discovery of our digital age, but has been advocated by Dewey and other prophetic voices since at latest the start of the 20th century. This minor reservation apart, I highly recommend this book. It actually gives me sound reason to hope that, with the integration of digital literacies in the curriculum, those prophetic voices will finally be heard and their message will fully be incorporated into classroom practice.
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Effective blended learning practices 普通类
The structure of the book, which is in four parts, helps weave the narrative seamlessly in and out of the classroom. Part A examines digital texts in school and outside, focussing on informal learning and the social construction of knowledge and arguing the case for critical digital literacy. Part B looks at instances of changing literacy practices in the classroom in the context of Web 2.0, and considers issues arising out of this. Part C deals with changing literacies and changing pedagogies and stresses the need for teacher education to respond to these challenges at both preservice and post-qualifying level. There is a strong case here for a parallel pedagogy that enables teachers to work across both old and new literacy practices.
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Children and the internet 普通类
The structure of the book, which is in four parts, helps weave the narrative seamlessly in and out of the classroom. Part A examines digital texts in school and outside, focussing on informal learning and the social construction of knowledge and arguing the case for critical digital literacy. Part B looks at instances of changing literacy practices in the classroom in the context of Web 2.0, and considers issues arising out of this. Part C deals with changing literacies and changing pedagogies and stresses the need for teacher education to respond to these challenges at both preservice and post-qualifying level. There is a strong case here for a parallel pedagogy that enables teachers to work across both old and new literacy practices.
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Distance and blended learning in Asia 普通类
It argues the case from a range of international perspectives, with contributors from the UK, US, and Australia. The case quite simply is that we need to understand literacy as a plural concept that embraces both printed texts and texts created with new and emerging digital technologies. As the book’s subtitle implies, we also need to focus on classroom practices that foster this understanding and promote social learning. The book aims to replace the still prevalent “deficit view” of digital technologies as irrelevant to learning and potentially dangerous to children with an “asset view” that builds on the digital skills and competences children bring to school but are often compelled to leave at the school gates.
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Digital simulations for improving education 普通类
Parts A-C are each framed within an introduction and conclusion, both written in Hong Kong. For me, this city, brilliantly evoked in the editors’ thick description, serves as a metaphor for our 21st century multimodal textual landscape and provides a poignant contrast with the almost exclusively print-based literacy practices of schools embedded in this landscape.
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Digital literacies 普通类
This immensely readable book injects a note of passion and urgency into the ongoing discourse on the place of digital literacies in the school curriculum. Written as part of a series published in association with the United Kingdom’s Literacy Association, it looks at the challenges to classroom practice—or “wicked issues”—thrown up by “contentious” digital technologies—and it holds out a vision of classrooms as places where digital and print literacies come together to empower children to navigate the multimodal textual complexity of the world outside school.