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Impact of the internet age on human culture and K-20 education policy/administration
Curated by Jim Lerman
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Rescooped by Jim Lerman from Into the Driver's Seat
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The Key to Media's Hidden Codes

Wow.  Somebody or some team worked very hard to create this effective video for helping students learn the importance of how to decode media messages.

KM

Colors, camera angles and logos in the media can all prompt immediate associations with emotions, activities and memories. 


Via Ken Morrison, Jim Lerman
Ken Morrison's comment, June 19, 2012 5:20 PM
Thank you for the rescoop. I really like this message.
Ken
Rescooped by Jim Lerman from An Eye on New Media
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Teaching the Net Generation: Teachers' perspectives in young Canadians in a wired world

Teaching the Net Generation: Teachers' perspectives in young Canadians in a wired world | :: The 4th Era :: | Scoop.it

From the website

 

Teachers had no trouble identifying several significant ways in which digital media are already enriching students' school experience. As well as providing access to a wealth of knowledge and learning resources (provided students were able to tell good information from bad), teachers told us that digital media gives students new opportunities to have an impact outside of the classroom, by publishing their work and communicating with people around the world, and to collaborate with their peers both during and outside of school hours. Finally, teachers also spoke of the value of digital media in allowing them to appeal to students' different learning styles – giving math instruction in a visual or kinesthetic form, for example, through a “virtual protractor.” This also held true for students with special needs, such as the student with autism who used a dictation program on his iPad to overcome his difficulties with writing.


Via Judy O'Connell, Ken Morrison
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