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Hickey, Daniel T.; McWilliams, Jenna; Honeyford, Michelle A. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2011
Traditional literacy instruction is perhaps still necessary but is certainly no longer sufficient to prepare learners for participation in the range of literacy practices that characterize an increasingly participatory culture. This article identifies discrepancies between traditional instructional practices that emphasize individual mastery of…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Media Literacy, Teaching Methods, Educational Assessment
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Vance, Lash Keith – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2012
The critical literature abounds with examples of possible educational uses of Web 2.0 technology in which students become active participants in the production of knowledge through blogging, social networking, creation of podcasts, and other forms of constructivist education. At the same time, teachers, whom the data indicate are somewhat…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, College Freshmen, College Instruction, Online Surveys
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Winkler, John D.; And Others – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 1985
Argues that classroom microcomputer use should be examined within the process of classroom instruction and describes several dimensions that the teacher instructional decision-making perspective suggests as criteria for evaluating whether classroom instruction using microcomputers is pedagogically sound: teacher instructional goals, curricula,…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Decision Making, Educational Objectives, Evaluation Criteria
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Waxman, Hersholt C.; Huang, Shwu-Yong L. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 1996
A study of middle school mathematics students concluded that classrooms using technology had less whole-class instruction and more independent work, and that students in classrooms using technology were on task more often than students who were not, supporting previous research that suggests technology use may change teaching from a…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Comparative Analysis, Computer Uses in Education, Educational Change