Betsy Bowen is a contributing author, “Telecommunications networks: Expanding the contexts for literacy”, pp. 113-129. Book description: Computers, this collection of essays suggests, are transforming texts, language, and literacy itself. In easy-to-understand language, Literacy and Computers discusses computer-related issues within several larger contexts: the politics, social implications, and economics of literacy education; the roles of authors and readers; the nature of interpretation and subjectivity; and the ways in which human beings construct meaning. The first three parts of the volume examine: how computers have become part of the classroom; how electronic networks function as tools for reading, writing, and interpreting texts; h...
Electronic and digital technologies are shaping the way students communicate. They are cultural text...
“Today, the definition of literacy has expanded from traditional notions of reading and writing to i...
Bibliography: leaves 28-30Supported by the National Institute of Education under contract no. US-NIE...
"Electronic communication is radically altering literacy practices. Silicon Literacies unravels the ...
Chapters 1 and 2 available on Berkeley's website. Extracts also available on Google Books. For integ...
Computers have become powerful tools and important resources in education. While the computer can be...
The changing nature of literacy is well documented within the literature, challenging educators to e...
Beginning with a brief history of the synergistic relationship between technology and literacy, this...
Computers and language are intimately connected in four ways: (1) the computer is a tool for represe...
The use of information technologies brings changes to the literacies of reading, writing, and socioc...
This introduction to the symposium provides a historical and comparative background to the controver...
Betsy Bowen, Elizabeth Boquet, and Richard Regan are contributing authors, Making connections: Tea...
In the mid-1990s, we asked a question that has likely been asked in one way or another by educators ...
Hypertext, e-mail, word processing: electronic technologies have revolutionized textual practices. H...
This chapter describes how new technologies are challenging the traditional concept of literacy and ...
Electronic and digital technologies are shaping the way students communicate. They are cultural text...
“Today, the definition of literacy has expanded from traditional notions of reading and writing to i...
Bibliography: leaves 28-30Supported by the National Institute of Education under contract no. US-NIE...
"Electronic communication is radically altering literacy practices. Silicon Literacies unravels the ...
Chapters 1 and 2 available on Berkeley's website. Extracts also available on Google Books. For integ...
Computers have become powerful tools and important resources in education. While the computer can be...
The changing nature of literacy is well documented within the literature, challenging educators to e...
Beginning with a brief history of the synergistic relationship between technology and literacy, this...
Computers and language are intimately connected in four ways: (1) the computer is a tool for represe...
The use of information technologies brings changes to the literacies of reading, writing, and socioc...
This introduction to the symposium provides a historical and comparative background to the controver...
Betsy Bowen, Elizabeth Boquet, and Richard Regan are contributing authors, Making connections: Tea...
In the mid-1990s, we asked a question that has likely been asked in one way or another by educators ...
Hypertext, e-mail, word processing: electronic technologies have revolutionized textual practices. H...
This chapter describes how new technologies are challenging the traditional concept of literacy and ...
Electronic and digital technologies are shaping the way students communicate. They are cultural text...
“Today, the definition of literacy has expanded from traditional notions of reading and writing to i...
Bibliography: leaves 28-30Supported by the National Institute of Education under contract no. US-NIE...