This link has been bookmarked by 11 people . It was first bookmarked on 12 Nov 2008, by Emily Vickery.
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16 Nov 08
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13 Nov 08
edtechtalk"Many teachers are embracing social networking sites, blogs and text messaging as a way to revive interest in creative writing." Some research, some opinion. Gary
"Many teachers are embracing social networking sites, blogs and text messaging as a way to revive interest in creative writing." Some research, some opinion. Gary -
Jennifer Maddrell"Many teachers are embracing social networking sites, blogs and text messaging as a way to revive interest in creative writing." Some research, some opinion. Gary
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12 Nov 08
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all have potential for improving a student's ability to write
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They give students a real audience, rather than the outdated `student-to-teacher' writing
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Students put more effort into their critical thinking and writing because they want to be the post that gets commented on. In composition, we like to talk about reading and writing as an ongoing dialogue. With the Internet, this becomes a reality
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found that writing for an audience motivates teens to write and write well
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Dennis OConnorIt's the Internet, according to Richard Sterling, former director of the National Writing Project and a faculty member of the Graduate School of Education at Berkeley University. Sterling notes that for many years writing has been neglected in schools, but the Internet has triggered an ``explosion of writing.''
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Gary McFarlane"Many teachers are embracing social networking sites, blogs and text messaging as a way to revive interest in creative writing." Some research, some opinion. Gary
education technology online social_networking blogging literacy writing for:edtechtalk
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Many teachers are embracing social networking sites, blogs and text messaging as a way to revive interest in creative writing.
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