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Lessie Williams

Critical Issue: Using Technology to Enhance Literacy Instruction - 1 views

    • Lessie Williams
       
      Has a lot of information about how people feel about technology working hand and hand with literacy in today generation.
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    Great in site on how Technology in use to enhance Literacy and how people feel about this.
linzjo

Where to start - 70 views

Sorry I was MIA this afternoon but I wanted to thank all of you for your work and Megan especially for handling the statement! Go Team B!!

Lessie Williams

The Future of Reading - Literacy Debate - Online, R U Really Reading? - Series - NYTime... - 0 views

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    Just another great story on how how social media is taking over literacy
Lessie Williams

5 viral stories about Boston attacks that aren't true - CNN.com - 0 views

  • "On days like this, Twitter shows its best & worst: loads of info at huge speed, but often false & sometimes deliberately so," said Mark Blank-Settle, of the BBC College of Journalism, in a post on the site
  • The image is, in fact, real. It comes from the Boston Globe and was shared through Getty Images. But the agency's caption merely describes the scene as a man comforting an injured woman at the finish line.
  • That didn't stop it from making the rounds in a big way. A somewhat misleading Facebook account pretending to represent actor Will Ferrell (it calls itself a "parody" but has 385,000 likes) shared the post. By Tuesday morning, the picture had more than 448,000 "likes" and had been shared over 92,000 times.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Another heart-wrenching image of a supposed victim went vira
  • In this one, a young girl running in a road race is pictured, with text saying she died in one of the blasts. As an added cruel twist, the post says she was "running for the Sandy Hook victims."
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    This article to caught my eyes on how the media can put false and misleading information out, by sometime trying to be the first to report a story in such a high demand field of work. Being the first to report and cover such major stories can be a life changing event. You can make history for breaking news on a major stories are you will make history for the first for breaking false information on a story.
Lessie Williams

Holocaust Deniers and Public Misinformation - 0 views

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    This article caught my eye, because it gives a statement insisting that the Holocaust in fact did not happen. In school I was taught that it did happen, I was shown evidence (Survivors, pictures, movies, etc). I believe this article is a myth. This is another example of misinformation, and how one can be mislead from things your taught in school vs things you read on the internet.
harvspecial

The High Cost of Digital Illiteracy | HASTAC - 0 views

  • Erick Sass has reported on two surveys concerning the negative impact social media can have on employment.  A 2013 survey found that 8% of individuals aged 16-24 had lost a job opportunity due to social media.  A 2012 survey reported that 40% of hiring managers consult social media when screening job applicants.  A third of the managers who consulted social media rejected an applicant based on what they found.  Yet, “70% of those [young people] surveyed said they weren’t concerned about social media harming their future career prospects.”
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    This article on a humanities I came across on google talks about a survey conducted with managers about hiring and using social media as a source of information. Working at Microsoft, I am careful what I post on social media. This is because I am a representative of the company. What I say on social media can be represented as an official statement.
harvspecial

Infographic: Twitter Named Most Illiterate Social Network | News & Opinion | PCMag.com - 1 views

  • According to the stats, Twitter hosts the least literate users, with 0.56 percent of words misspelled (1 in 179), ahead of Google+ with 0.42 percent (1 in 238), and Facebook's 0.31 percent (1 in 323). Even forums attract better writers, with only 0.18 percent misspelled words (1 in 556). Even more embarrassingly, the U.S. commits "spellchecker sins" more commonly than the Brits, who carry an only slightly lower 0.53 percent deviation rate.
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    PC Mag has to be one of my favorite magazines when it comes to technology. With a quick search I was able to come across this article that talks about Twitter. It goes into detail about how two marketing firms did research to determine that Twitter was the most illiterate social media site available.
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