Elizabeth Weil (New York Times) has an interesting article in this week’s Education magazine section. In it, she quotes Evan Schnittman, a managing director at Bloomsbury Publishing, who breaks down reading into three kinds as follows
• extractive reading (say, looking up words in the dictionary);
• immersive reading (sinking into “Moby-Dick”) and
• pedagogic reading (studying a physics curriculum).
Clearly, we teach the first when we instruct about searching and using databases, table of contents, the index, etc. In her article, Weil writes that the second "works beautifully on e-ink readers" while noting that e-reading expert Schnittman says a digital device providing a the solution for the third type of reading might be in tablets like the iPad. View the entire September 19 2010 Education issue for more articles with titles like
• Achieving Techno-Literacy;
• Does the Digital Classroom Enfeeble the Mind?;
• Online Curiosity Killer; and
• Anytime, Anywhere which is about online learning and references the soon-to-be-released National Education Technology Plan
There is also an Interactive on the History of Technology in the Classroom. Makes one wonder: have we gone from one handheld device (slate/horn book) to another (Kindle/iPad/netbook)? Join the discussion at The New York Times.
Let's continue a discussion of powerful web tools that may change the way we teach and learn.
Showing posts with label reading lists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reading lists. Show all posts
Saturday, September 18, 2010
Three Types of Reading ...
Labels:
"digital textbooks",
ebooks,
reading lists
Friday, June 22, 2007
WorldCat for Sharing Lists of Books
Today I created a list in World Cat of Recommended Reads:
http://www.worldcat.org/profiles/gresselj/lists/5632
In order to set this up you have to create an account in WorldCat. It's very simple to search World Cat and then set up a variety of lists for citation lists, for subject bibliographies, for personal reading lists, etc. You can keep the list private or make it viewable by the public. You can also share your list with others, link it to your blog or webpage, or search other people's lists. Give it a spin. I think there could be useful ways to promote reading with librarian generated lists.
Judy Gressel
http://www.worldcat.org/profiles/gresselj/lists/5632
In order to set this up you have to create an account in WorldCat. It's very simple to search World Cat and then set up a variety of lists for citation lists, for subject bibliographies, for personal reading lists, etc. You can keep the list private or make it viewable by the public. You can also share your list with others, link it to your blog or webpage, or search other people's lists. Give it a spin. I think there could be useful ways to promote reading with librarian generated lists.
Judy Gressel
Labels:
bibliographies,
reading lists,
worldcat
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