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Laptops and Literacy: Learning in the Wireless Classroom [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 192 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 228x163x10 mm, kaal: 284 g, illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Sep-2006
  • Kirjastus: Teachers' College Press
  • ISBN-10: 0807747262
  • ISBN-13: 9780807747261
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 192 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 228x163x10 mm, kaal: 284 g, illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Sep-2006
  • Kirjastus: Teachers' College Press
  • ISBN-10: 0807747262
  • ISBN-13: 9780807747261
The number of laptop computers in U.S. schools is growing at a rapid rate. This timely book analyzes the types of learning that take place in one-to-one wireless classrooms where all students use laptop computers. With a particular focus on students' literacy practices, the text covers reading and writing, information use, and multimedia development. Featuring critical analysis and practical examples, this book is essential reading for everyone concerned with making effective use of new technology to meet the educational needs of culturally and linguistically diverse students. This book: looks at the literacy challenges of the 21st century and examines whether and how laptop use contributes to meeting them; draws on extensive research in schools that have implemented one-to-one computing and provides details from those that are successfully using technology to enhance learning; uses rich examples from urban, suburban, and rural areas, with children in regular classrooms as well as in ESL, gifted, and special education programs; and, provides details from schools that are successfully using technology to enhance learning.

Arvustused

A must read. Warschauer's is the most intellectually serious discussion in print of the current movement towards laptops in education. - Seymour Papert, Professor Emeritus, Massachusetts Institute of Technology ""A lot has been written about computers in schools, but Warschauer's Laptops and Literacy is now a definitive source. His excellent book, though partly a cautionary tale, is yet full of a rare commodity these days, optimism about the possibilities of our schools."" - James Paul Gee, Tashia Morgridge Professor of Reading, University of Wisconsin

Preface ix
Literacy Challenges of the Twenty-First Century
1(17)
Defining Literacy
2(3)
A Literacy Crisis?
5(12)
The Hope of Technology
17(1)
Educational Computing's Third Wave
18(20)
The First Wave: Teaching Machines
18(1)
The Second Wave: Computers as Tools
19(1)
Challenges of Computer Integration
20(3)
History of One-to-One Computing in Schools
23(1)
Mobile Laptop Carts
24(1)
Handheld Computers
25(3)
One-to-One Laptop Programs
28(4)
Research on One-to-One Laptop Programs
32(2)
The Laptops and Literacy Study
34(4)
Reading
38(24)
Academic Language Proficiency
40(1)
Cultural Capital
40(2)
Addressing the Gap
42(1)
The California Schools
43(13)
Using Technology to Promote Reading
56(4)
Conclusion
60(2)
Writing
62(22)
Prewriting
63(2)
Writing Drafts
65(3)
Rewriting
68(2)
Dissemination
70(2)
Automated Writing Evaluation
72(4)
Summary
76(6)
A New Type of Writing
82(2)
Information and Research
84(21)
Information and Research in Laptop Schools
86(7)
Variation Among Schools: The Amplification Effect
93(10)
Conclusion
103(2)
Media and Design
105(21)
Representing Knowledge in Multiple Media
106(2)
Resemiotization
108(2)
Hybridity
110(2)
Persuasion
112(1)
Genre
113(5)
Reflection
118(4)
Audience
122(2)
Conclusion
124(2)
Habits of Mind
126(18)
Engagement
127(6)
Study Habits
133(2)
Inventive Thinking
135(2)
Inventive Thinking in a Gifted Program
137(3)
Self-Regulation in an Alternative Education Project
140(2)
Conclusion
142(2)
Teaching the Word and the World
144(13)
Past and Future
144(2)
Home and School
146(2)
Rich and Poor
148(3)
The Future of Laptop Programs
151(2)
Teaching the Word and the World
153(4)
References 157(14)
Index 171(8)
About the Author 179


Mark Warschauer is Associate Professor in the Department of Education and the Department of Informatics at the University of California, Irvine. He is also Associate Director for Research of the Ada Byron Research Center for Diversity in Computing and Information Technology