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[Technology 1692] Re: Technology Digest, Vol 34, Issue 15

George Demetrion

George.Demetrion at lvgh.org
Wed Jul 30 15:53:58 EDT 2008


I'm in a book club and over the past few years we've read classics like
Bleak House, Of Human Bondage, East of Eden, Middlemarch, Madame Bovary
and others.

This is probably my only pleasure reading (other than the Bible) and I
wouldn't be reading any of these novels unless I was in a book club.
This type of reading takes time, but I have found it an enjoyable and
worthwhile experience.

George Demetrion



________________________________

From: technology-bounces at nifl.gov [mailto:technology-bounces at nifl.gov]
On Behalf Of Lobaccaro Gina (DOC)
Sent: Wednesday, July 30, 2008 3:01 PM
To: The Technology and Literacy Discussion List
Subject: [Technology 1689] Re: Technology Digest, Vol 34, Issue 15



Hi David - and others!

I (an adult correctional educator and doctorate student and frequent
Internet user)- like the students mentioned in the article - no longer
read books for pleasure EVER. I don't read newspapers or magazines
anymore; I check out local and national news daily online. My eyes are
exhausted from the work I do online and from reading textbooks or online
readings for my classes.

I purchased an IPod a few years ago, and now download a book (for
pleasure "listening") now and again - to listen to when I am driving or
before I fall asleep. Or, I have podcasts downloaded to listen to (as
opposed to reading magazines).

I do "read seriously" but I don't read for pleasure anymore. I wonder
how many other adult "professionals" (as opposed to students in general)
who spend a great deal of time doing computer work (including work
online) still do read books for pleasure and/or read the newspaper and
magazines regularly.


:-)


Gina



________________________________

From: technology-bounces at nifl.gov [mailto:technology-bounces at nifl.gov]
On Behalf Of Cindy Fischer
Sent: Wednesday, July 30, 2008 10:04 AM
To: technology at nifl.gov
Cc: Cindy Fischer
Subject: [Technology 1688] Re: Technology Digest, Vol 34, Issue 15



David,

Thank you for this great article and great topic. I am constantly
amazed at what our students, who score below 8th grade level in reading
and math can do. They can text with one finger on a tiny machine and
talk at the same time. A few weeks ago, I brought my niece back to
Maryland with me after I visited my family in Ohio. During the 10 hour
drive, she managed to carry on a pleasant conversation and text over 900
times! (I know this because her father got the bill -- he gets a
printout even though she has unlimited now). Her phone is so tiny, I
couldn't make out the letters she used to text. She used her thumb most
of the time. She is a straight A student and does some reading. She
was made to read Three Cups of Tea before entering her 1st year of
college, but she was reluctant and didn't want to read it. She brought
it along, but I don't believe she ever opened the book in the two weeks
she was with us. She spent hours on our computer.

My point is that our "students" are living in a different world. What a
cliche'. I have so much trouble with my online credit students getting
them to understand that the Wikipedia is not a reliable source. They
have fallen for the Octopus hoax (not all, but far too many). I'm
wondering if what we have to do is teach reliability, credibility,
skills etc. and be glad they're reading and writing so much more!

Cindy





"If you believe in good things, you can make them happen."

Cindy




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Today's Topics:

1. [Technology 1687] Literacy Debate: Online, R U Really
Reading? (David J. Rosen)


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Sun, 27 Jul 2008 18:55:26 -0400
From: "David J. Rosen" <djrosen at comcast.net>
Subject: [Technology 1687] Literacy Debate: Online, R U Really
Reading?
To: The Technology and Literacy Discussion List <technology at nifl.gov>
Message-ID: <55EFFB5E-9D33-438C-B552-37196464C82B at comcast.net>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=WINDOWS-1252; delsp=yes;
format=flowed

Technology colleagues,

Today's New York Times has an article (online, of course) on reading
online vs reading books. Among other things mentioned are:

? a spoof web site about an endangered Pacific Northwest Tree Octopus
that 90% of the students of the teacher who assigned the web site
thought was authentic,
? an Internet literacy test which will be taken by students in OECD
countries (except the U.S.), and
? various views about whether reading online is an essential kind of
reading now or distracting from serious reading.

You'll find the article at:

http://tinyurl.com/6n7vjk

I wonder what you think of this article (the first in a series).

David J. Rosen
djrosen at comcast.net





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