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Penny Taeuber's personal annotations on this page

taeu0006
Taeu0006 bookmarked on 2008-10-28
  • were trained to integrate technology into their instruction

This link has been bookmarked by 19 people . It was first bookmarked on 21 Oct 2008, by someone privately.

  • 01 Jul 09
  • 27 May 09
    • Students cannot “create prose that is precise, engaging, and coherent,” it said,
      which means that “they cannot write well enough to
  • 20 May 09
    • $3.1 billion per year
    • for every student and teacher in the nation.”
      • Trudy Sweeney

        Trudy Sweeney on 2009-05-27

        This is an example of a diigo sticky note.

  • 12 Apr 09
    mjdaniel
    Matthew Daniel

    Despite widespread technology use in schools an abundance of free and easily accessed information, gen-y has shown decreasing literacy and writing skills, and poorer results on standardized tests, particularly with historical info and facts.

    Author doesn't not argue, but notes improvements have been made where teachers were trained to integrate technology into instruction.

    • Students cannot “create prose that is precise, engaging, and coherent,” it said, which means that “they cannot write well enough to meet the demands they face in higher education and the emerging work environment.” Indeed, other reports by the Commission estimated that poor workplace writing costs corporate America $3.1 billion per year and state governments $250 million per year.
    • Students with at least weekly computer instruction by well-prepared teachers do not perform any better on the NAEP reading test than do students who have less or no computer instruction.”
    • 2 more annotations...
  • 12 Nov 08
    • engaging, and coherent,” it said, which means that “they cannot write well
      enough to meet the demands they face in higher education and the emerging work
    • month, it seems, a flashy new initiative to digitalize schools
    • 2 more annotations...
  • 07 Nov 08
  • 05 Nov 08
  • 02 Nov 08
    • Social, economic and cultural factors will continue to play a powerful role in determining outcomes, as the Coleman Report made clear. But we cannot wait until inequities are corrected before taking action with the tools at hand.
  • 01 Nov 08
    • when asked to choose a U.S. ally in World War II, 52 percent of high school seniors chose Germany, Japan, or Italy instead of the Soviet Union.
  • 30 Oct 08
    • math scores didn’t improve at all, while reading scores actually dropped three points
  • 28 Oct 08
    • were trained to integrate technology into their instruction
    • No generation has experienced so many techno-enhancements and produced so little
      intellectual progress.
  • 27 Oct 08
    lynnejones
    Lynne Jones

    Turned On, Plugged In, Online, & Dumb:
    Student Failure Despite the Techno Revolution Mark Bauerlein - October 21st, 2008 - (Brave New Classroom 2.0)

    Back in 2003, the National Commission on Writing issued “The Neglected ‘R’: The Need for a Writing Revol

    trends blog Britannica_Blog education read_write

  • 26 Oct 08
    • if unsurprising, picture of the state of student prose in the United States. Noting that relatively little attention had been paid to writing in high schoo
    • Writing scores aren’t the only disappointment.
    • 2 more annotations...
  • tsheko
    Tania Sheko

    Mark Bauerlein about student failure despite the techno revolution from Brave new classroom 2.0

    britannica dumb web2.0 21stcenturylearning 21stcentury students learning teaching controversial internationalplp21

  • 22 Oct 08