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etrick

QUICK!!!! - 18 views

Ok people... heads up. the document was sent at 11:40. I included all information I could muster. If you can, please email me with your diigo handle, name and email so I can update him. I gave him ...

Carlos Ceballos

Quote by Albert Einstein: "I fear the day technology will surpass our huma..." - 0 views

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    ""I fear the day technology will surpass our human interaction. The world will have a generation of idiots." "
etrick

Our statement? - 28 views

After class I will try to get this taken care of. If anyone is on here, add me on aim (espfister@fullsail.edu) and I will be on til at least midnight. We have to whip this out by 1159

rboyfig

More Info: The 4 Negative Side Effects Of Technology - 2 views

"1. Elevated Exasperation These days, children indulge themselves in internet, games or texting. These activities have affected their psyche negatively, consequently leading to increased frustratio...

literacy decline Technology

started by rboyfig on 12 Sep 14 no follow-up yet
johncarterofmars

ProLiteracy - The Crisis - The U.S. Crisis - 0 views

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    In the U.S. today, there are 36 million adults who can't read better than the average 3rd grader. 1 And without basic reading, writing, math, and computer skills, these Americans are struggling to find jobs, stay healthy, and support their families. 36 million American adults need literacy help.
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    It is kind of ironic, that most articles are actually pro technology saying that "literacy" needs a new definition because technology is the new language. I think this article gets an important point across that illiteracy is effecting employment now.
djohnson4

Digital Reading Poses Learning Challenges for Students - 0 views

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    Comprehension may suffer when students read on the digital devices now flooding into classrooms, an emerging body of research suggests. In response, some academics, educators, and technology vendors are pushing to minimize the distracting bells and whistles that abound in high-tech instructional materials.
rboyfig

Article Findings: Children who read on iPads or Kindles have weaker literacy skills and... - 2 views

"The advance of technology means that young people who read on a screen have weaker literacy skills and fewer children now enjoy reading, experts have said." "A survey, conducted by The National L...

literacy decline Technology debate

started by rboyfig on 11 Sep 14 no follow-up yet
torpetey

Negative Effects of Text Messages & Social Media - 1 views

  • + Negative Aspects of Text Messaging  Text messages have their benefits, but also have negative aspects that can be harmful.  With everyone feeling the need to be extremely connected to their phones today, they often have issues if they do not have their phone with them.  Teenagers are having trouble focusing in school and have even been facing problems focusing in everyday life as they feel the need to be attached to their phone 24/7.
  • + School & Text Messaging  Students today feel that they can often multi-task while doing school work, talking to friends online, and texting.  They do not see that this is affecting their school performance when they do not devote the time to study and focus on their homework for a certain amount of time without constantly being in touch with their friends.  Parents have tried to limit the time that their children can limit their cellular devices, but it is becoming harder as they technology is continuing to grow.
  • Text Messaging & School (cont.)  Constant text messaging has become a concern to doctors & psychologists as they fear that constantly texting is leading to the downfall in school.  Grades, performance, and stress are some of the concerns as teenagers are often putting off projects until the last minute in order to complete them. This is leading to not as good of quality in their projects are worse and they are often unable to complete them fully.
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    Great article find! I really agree with what this is saying. Some people get so attached to their cell phones that they can't stay away for more than a minute. I know when I was in high school and even college, I would watch students sit on their phone the entire time or surf the web. I think this takes away from learning and effects their performance.
jwoody2014

Main findings: Teens, technology, and human potential in 2020 | Pew Research Center's I... - 1 views

  • Some 95% of teens ages 12-17 are online, 76% use social networking sites, and 77% have cell phones. Moreover, 96% of those ages 18-29 are internet users, 84% use social networking sites, and 97% have cell phones.
  • Nearly 20 million of the 225 million Twitter users follow 60 or more Twitter accounts and nearly 2 million follow more than 500 accounts.
  • YouTube users upload 60 hours of video per minute and they triggered more than 1 trillion playbacks in 2011 – roughly 140 video views per person on earth.
  • ...21 more annotations...
  • There are more than 800 million people now signed up for the social network Facebook; they spend 700 billion minutes using Facebook each month, and they install more than 20 million apps every day. Facebook users had uploaded more than 100 billion photos by mid-2011.
  • Negative effects include a need for instant gratification, loss of patience
  • expressed concerns about humans’ future ability to tackle complex challenges
  • The short attention spans resulting from the quick interactions will be detrimental to focusing on the harder problems, and we will probably see a stagnation in many areas: technology, even social venues such as literature,”
  • he impact of a future ‘re-wiring’ due to the multitasking and short-term mindset will be mostly negative not because it will reflect changes in the physical nature of thinking, but because the social incentives for deep engagement will erode,
  • Perhaps the issue is, how will deep thinking get done—including by whom—rather than will everyone be able to do deep thinking. In other words, division of labor may chang
  • People report having more difficulty with sustained attention (i.e., becoming immersed in a book). Today, we have very young, impressionable minds depending on technology for many things. It is hard to predict the ways in which this starves young brains of cognitive ability earned through early hands-on experiences.
  • “The biggest consequence I foresee is an expectation of immediacy and decreased patience among people. Those who grow up with immediate access to media, quick response to email and rapid answers to all questions may be less likely to take longer routes to find information, seeking ‘quick fixes’ rather than taking the time to come to a conclusion or investigate an answer.”
  • he fears “where technology is taking our collective consciousness and ability to conduct critical analysis and thinking, and, in effect, individual determinism in modern society.”
  • My sense is that society is becoming conditioned into dependence on technology in ways that, if that technology suddenly disappears or breaks down, will render people functionally useless
  • I wonder if we will even be able to sustain attention on one thing for a few hours—going to a classical concert or film, for instance. Will concerts be reduced to 30 minutes? Will feature-length films become anachronistic
  • Communication in all forms will be more direct; fewer of the niceties and supercilious greetings will exist. Idle conversation skills will be mostly lost.
  • Increasingly, teens and young adults rely on the first bit of information they find on a topic, assuming that they have found the ‘right’ answer, rather than using context and vetting/questioning the sources of information to gain a holistic view of a topic.
  • My friends are less interested in genuine human interaction than they are at looking at things on Facebook. People will always use a crutch when they can, and the distraction will only grow in the future
  • Fast-twitch’ wiring among today’s youth generally leads to more harm than good. Much of the communication and media consumed in an ‘always-on’ environment is mind-numbing chatter. While we may see increases in productivity, I question the value of what is produced
  • A number of respondents to the survey expressed concerns over the health and well-being of young people by 2020
  • Technology is taking more and more of our children’s time, and not much of the internet time is spent learning. Time once spent outside (as a child) is now spent on computers.
  • The overall effect will be negative, based on my own experience with technology, attention, and deep thinking
  • I see the effect of television as a primary example, in which people voluntarily spend large amounts of time in mentally unhealthy activity
  • The ability to express opinion and emotion is replaced with flaming and emoticons, which are much less nuanced. The level of knowledge of the world around many young adults—cultural, political, historical, scientific—seems reduced in favor of greater knowledge of pop culture.
  • There is also a blurring in their minds between facts and opinions because both are presented in quantity with similar polish and forcefulness, and verification and reasoning have been replaced by search engine results.
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    This article was rather long, but really worth reading! It talks about positives and negatives about technology in the future (2020) and what people expect to see happening. The negatives are what I read about, but very interesting to think about. Here are a few quotes that really got me thinking... "Technology is taking more and more of our children's time, and not much of the internet time is spent learning. Time once spent outside (as a child) is now spent on computers." "My sense is that society is becoming conditioned into dependence on technology in ways that, if that technology suddenly disappears or breaks down, will render people functionally useless." "Today, we have very young, impressionable minds depending on technology for many things. It is hard to predict the ways in which this starves young brains of cognitive ability earned through early hands-on experiences."
jwoody2014

Is Technology Producing A Decline In Critical Thinking And Analysis? -- ScienceDaily - 0 views

  • As technology has played a bigger role in our lives, our skills in critical thinking and analysis have declined, while our visual skills have improved,
  • Reading for pleasure, which has declined among young people in recent decades, enhances thinking and engages the imagination in a way that visual media such as video games and television do not,
  • "If we want to develop a variety of skills, we need a balanced media diet
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  • By using more visual media, students will process information better," she said. "However, most visual media are real-time media that do not allow time for reflection, analysis or imagination
  • Technology is not a panacea in education, because of the skills that are being lost.
  • Students today have more visual literacy and less print literacy. Many students do not read for pleasure and have not for decades.
  • Studies show that reading develops imagination, induction, reflection and critical thinking, as well as vocabulary,
  • a classroom study showing that students who were given access to the Internet during class and were encouraged to use it during lectures did not process what the speaker said as well as students who did not have Internet access. When students were tested after class lectures, those who did not have Internet access performed better than those who did.
  • "Wiring classrooms for Internet access does not enhance learning
  • college students who watched "CNN Headline News" with just the news anchor on screen and without the "news crawl" across the bottom of the screen remembered significantly more facts from the televised broadcast than those who watched it with the distraction of the crawling text and with additional stock market and weather information on the screen.
  • More than 85 percent of video games contain violence, one study found, and multiple studies of violent media games have shown that they can produce many negative effects, including aggressive behavior and desensitization to real-life violence
gocloud

How social media and technology is making our society illiterate by sean clawson on Prezi - 1 views

  • Using devices like spell check are hurting us because it teaches use how not to remember a word, just type in something that looks like it and the answer will pop up. There are tons and tons of words that I have forgotten how to write because of spell check. In the modern age of communicating, texting has become the new fashion.
  • Using phrases like omg, brb, u, r, lmao are making it faster to send a message, but it is slowly making use more illiterate.
  • Also, I feel like students are now negatively influenced by apps such as Twitter and Facebook. I constantly see the misuse of your, you’re, there, their, they’re and so on.
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  • The use of texting, spell check and the internet and slowly making us more illiterate and moving use in the opposite derection of what we should be going in.
  • Texting is teaching us how to spell words wrong, and sometimes we can’t spell them right anymore. Shorting words like U and R, are making us illiterate.
  • I (Dan) can say that I have been affected by this because sometimes, when typing, I will abbreviate things or knowingly spell things wrong hoping that spellcheck will fix it for me.
  • A study from CNW’s news team found in Canada in 2010 that 4 in 10 adults struggle with low literacy. Children are at an even larger risk for being illiterate in adulthood because of their access to technology. According to a 2007 survey carried out by the U.K. Government Department for Children, Schools and Families (DCSF), more than 4 in 5 children ages 5–15 have access to a home computer, and levels of Internet use are at 46% for 5- to 7-year-olds and 75% for 12- to 15-year-olds. Furthermore, children in the12–15 age group reported that use of the Internet was “the most important technology in their lives—more important than television” (DCSF, 2007). Ofcom, 2008, also say that 84% of girls compated to 75% of boys use the internet at least once a week for instant messaging. According to a study, 20% of students never read fiction or nonfiction books, but about 67% surf websites weekly. The study found that 20% of older students attributed their poor writing skills to the fact that they do not write much.
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    I agree that technology is making society illiterate. Spell check can be helpful, but it doesn't teach people how to remember that spelling of the word. They quickly change it and move on to the next item that needs fixed without even thinking. I think we depend on technology too much and it is starting to take away from our critical thinking skills.
jwoody2014

Does texting hurt writing skills? - TimesDaily: Archives - 0 views

  • Out of 700 youth aged 12-17 who participated in the phone survey, 60 percent say they don't consider electronic communications - e-mail, instant messaging, mobile text - to be writing in the formal sense; 63 percent say it has no impact on the writing they do for school and 64 percent report inadvertently using some form of shorthand common to electronic text, including emotions, incorrect grammar or punctuation
  • to excuse bad writing by saying it's just how their world is now "is ignoring the fact that formal communication is still important and necessary."
  • Many struggle with the formal writing process
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  • I've realized they very often write the way they speak and they speak the way they text. And yes, I've had a few students turn in papers with numbers instead of words and letters used inappropriately. It's definitely the texting influence.
  • Among the 64 percent of students who say they incorporated text language in their writing, 25 percent said they did so to convey emotion and 38 percent said they have used text shortcut
  • Billy Ray Warren, secondary curriculum director for Florence schools, said texting has definitely contributed to the decline in writing skills. And there's another issue that concerns him as well: a lack of cursive writing ability.
  • Keyboarding, in general, whether at the computer or on a cell phone, is a definite culprit in the lack of cursive writing skills among high school students
  • She admits she gets lazy from time to time and allows text talk to enter her school writing.
  • "I might use the number 2 instead of spelling out "to", or for the word "into" I might write n2
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    I think texting can make some people lazy. I couldn't imagine writing a paper and putting abbreviations of words in instead of spelling out what I meant or even putting emoticons in. I had never even thought of the decline in cursive handwriting because of technology and the use of a keyboard!
jwoody2014

Texting, Twitter contributing to students' poor grammar skills, profs say - The Globe a... - 0 views

  • Little or no grammar teaching, cell phone texting, social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter, are all being blamed for an increasingly unacceptable number of post-secondary students who can't write.
  • Emoticons, truncated and butchered words such as 'cuz,' are just some of the writing horrors being handed in
  • Thirty per cent of students who are admitted are not able to pass at a minimum level,
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  • Barrett says the failure rate has jumped five percentage points in the past few years, up to 30 per cent from 25 per cent.
  • Punctuation errors are huge, and apostrophe errors. Students seem to have absolutely no idea what an apostrophe is for
  • require the students they accept to pass an exam testing their English language skills. Almost a third of those students are failing.
  • Little happy faces ... or a sad face ... little abbreviations," show up even in letters of academic appeal,
  • I get their essays and I go 'You obviously don't know what a sentence fragment is. You think commas are sort of like parmesan cheese that you sprinkle on your words
  • Then he's reduced to teaching basic grammar to them himself.
  • Cellphone texting and social networking on Internet sites are degrading writing skill
  • The Internet norm of ignoring punctuation and capitalization as well as using emoticons may be acceptable in an e-mail to friends and family, but it can have a deadly effect on one's career if used at work.
jwoody2014

The Decreasing Literacy Skills of the Workforce - Changing Responsibilities of Business... - 0 views

  • Employers are finding that the ability to write clearly, concisely and correctly among their workforce is becoming a rarer and rarer skill. And nearly everyone in the workplace is frustrated at how slowly they read and how little they remember.
  • In 2001, the American Management Association found that one-third of job applicants flunked basic literacy and math tests.
  • Employers view reading and writing as critical basic skills, yet they are often at a loss about how to improve those skills among their workforce without incurring huge costs and loss of on-the-job time
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  • few programs exist to teach basic skills and employers find it difficult to justify such expenditures. 
  • more and more job applicants have serious literacy and communication deficiencies
  • most excellent students and even experienced VPs or CEOs have inferior reading skills that are not adequate to support the increased literacy demands of the modern workplace.
  • even qualified applicants and highly sought-after executives are feeling information overload and experiencing at least a 30 percent drop in productivity since the Internet dominated the workplace. They are reading with outdated, inefficient techniques that are unchanged since the first grade.
gocloud

Is Technology Affecting Teens' Education Negatively? | LIVESTRONG.COM - 0 views

  • Using Fewer Basic Skills
  • One of the major concerns about technology in the classroom is that it prevents students from developing and using basic literacy, math and communication skills, all of which are essential in both day-to-day living and working life. The exclusive use of computer-based tools such as spelling and grammar checkers, as well as calculators, enable students to complete assignments without knowing how to manually perform those same functions.
  • Technical Difficulties
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  • A common problem in classrooms is the failure of technology due to technical difficulties. While equipment is being repaired, students experience delays in their learning. This counteracts the time-saving benefits of technology.
  • A Distraction in the Classroom
  • A serious negative effect of technology on teens' education is the distraction that it may pose within the learning environment. The opportunity to access social network sites and games can tempt students away from planned learning activities. Such distractions can hamper their overall progress and their potential to succeed.
gocloud

Is technology producing a decline in critical thinking and analysis? | UCLA - 1 views

  • Reading for pleasure, which has declined among young people in recent decades, enhances thinking and engages the imagination in a way that visual media such as video games and television do not, Greenfield said.
  • "However, most visual media are real-time media that do not allow time for reflection, analysis or imagination — those do not get developed by real-time media such as television or video games. Technology is not a panacea in education, because of the skills that are being lost.
  • "Studies show that reading develops imagination, induction, reflection and critical thinking, as well as vocabulary,"
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • "Reading for pleasure is the key to developing these skills. Students today have more visual literacy and less print literacy. Many students do not read for pleasure and have not for decades."
  • Among the studies Greenfield analyzed was a classroom study showing that students who were given access to the Internet during class and were encouraged to use it during lectures did not process what the speaker said as well as students who did not have Internet access. When students were tested after class lectures, those who did not have Internet access performed better than those who did.
  • Another study Greenfield analyzed found that college students who watched "CNN Headline News" with just the news anchor on screen and without the "news crawl" across the bottom of the screen remembered significantly more facts from the televised broadcast than those who watched it with the distraction of the crawling text and with additional stock market and weather information on the screen.
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    An article from a great source on why technology is hurting critical thinking. We can use his research to also say since people no longer need to remember things like they used to, because it's all at their finger tips, then this hurts literacy. Also the amount of information you get while reading is not the fast paced information the new generation is used to so they are no longer reading to get information.
etrick

How TV Affects Your Child - 0 views

  • The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends that kids under 2 years old not watch any TV and that those older than 2 watch no more than 1 to 2 hours a day of quality programming
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    "The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends that kids under 2 years old not watch any TV and that those older than 2 watch no more than 1 to 2 hours a day of quality programming." This is a good quote to use... Specific Recommendation to keep children extremely limited on television use by an authority on childhood learning.
etrick

N.D. woman surfing Facebook while driving crashes into SUV, killing great-gra... - 0 views

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    Abby Sletten, 20, was also texting while driving along Interstate 29 in May, police say, as she plowed into an SUV where Phyllis Gordon, 89, was a passenger. Gordon died and Sletten, who reportedly did not brake before the crash, has been charged with negligent homicide.
etrick

Misinformation Debate Group B - 4 views

cceballos@fullsail.edu, prgrady@fullsail.edu, kharris@fullsail.edu, dmlove@fullsail.edu, jlwoody@fullsail.edu MORE PEOPLE!!! If you haven't already added them...

etrick

Measuring America's Decline, in Three Charts - The New Yorker - 0 views

  • a number of international surveys have raised alarms that the United States is falling behind other countries in terms of educational achievement
  • In basic literacy, numeracy, and problem-solving skills, the new study shows, younger Americans are at or near the bottom of the standings among advanced countries
  • The United States scored 260.9, which put it second to last, above Italy
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    "a number of international surveys have raised alarms that the United States is falling behind other countries in terms of educational achievement"
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