Title: Moving Beyond the Information Age
1Moving Beyond the Information Age Scott Kinney,
VP Outreach Professional Development
2similarities
consume differently
3TIVO or DVR?
4iPod
5Growth of the Internet
Source(2008, September 30). Retrieved October
19, 2008, from September 2008 Web Server Survey
Web site http//news.netcraft.com/archives/2008/0
9/30/september_2008_web_server_survey.html
6NBCOlympics.com
72M
1.2B
Source Stelter, Brian (August 24, 2008). Web
Audience for Games Soars for NBC and Yahoo.
Retrieved August 28, 2008, Web site
http//www.nytimes.com/2008/08/25/sports/olympics/
25online.html
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11now for the quiz.
Information obtained from the Pew Internet
American Life Project, eSchool News Online, MSNBC
WikiPedia.
12the information age
13Students and Media
- Young people (8-18) today, spend an average of 6
½ hours a day with media - 4 hours a day watching TV
- 2 ¼ hours with parents
- 1 ¾ listening to music
- 1 ½ doing physical activity
- Over an hour on the computer
- Under an hour doing homework
- They are exposed to the equivalent of 8 ½ hours
of media a day
Source Kaiser Family Foundation, (March 9,
2005). Retrieved August 28, 2008, from Generation
M Media in the Lives of 8-18 Year-olds Web site
http//www.kff.org/entmedia/entmedia030905pkg.cfm
14Multitasking
- Central Connecticut State University
- Students were randomly assigned to take part in
one of three groups - read the text on screen with no interruptions
- answered instant messages first and then did
their reading - multitasked, fielding instant messages as they
read - All three groups fared about the same on a test
given later to check their understanding of the
text - Students who send and receive instant messages
while completing a reading assignment take longer
to get through their texts but apparently still
manage to understand what theyre reading
Source Viadero, Debra (August 15, 2008).
Instant Messaging Found to Slow Students'
Reading. Retrieved August 28, 2008, from
Education Week Web site http//www.edweek.org/ew/
articles/2008/08/27/01im.h28.html?tmp1877392231
15As They Get Older
- Whats in on Campus
- Spring 2005
- Drinking beer
- Drinking other alcohol
- Spring 2006
- Drinking beer
- Drinking beer tied with Facebook.com
- Drinking other alcohol
- Text messaging
iPods
Source USA Today. June 8, 2006
16A Simple Example
- Who is the current President of the Portuguese
Republic? - Approximately how fast does the earth move around
the sun? - What year was the Washington Monument completed?
I need a volunteer/prizes included
17Why is this Significant?
18information
19Not just information
but also delivery
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21In the Classroom
Video Human Body Pushing the Limits Strength.
Discovery Education(2008). Retrieved April 1,
2008, from http//streaming.discoveryeducation.co
m/
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23What do we know about integrating media?
but not just what we think
24Proven Results
Scientific evaluations conducted by Cometrika.,
Inc., an independent research firm (Virginia
study conducted 2002 Los Angeles study conducted
2004)
25What Does the Research Say
- A review of hundreds of studies investigating the
effectiveness of multimedia in learning suggested
that
Source Macaulay, Michael (2003).The Effects of
Multimedia on Learning in Third World Children.
Journal of Educational Multimedia and Hypermedia.
12, 185-198.
26What Does the Research Say
- A review of hundreds of studies investigating the
effectiveness of multimedia in learning suggested
that people who used computer-based multimedia
instruction performed better in terms of test
scores, compared to those who received
instruction through traditional classroom
lectures.
Source Macaulay, Michael (2003).The Effects of
Multimedia on Learning in Third World Children.
Journal of Educational Multimedia and Hypermedia.
12, 185-198.
27Third World Children
- Elementary Mathematics
- Research methodology
- Students were randomly assigned to take part in
one of two groups - Learning materials using text only
- Multimedia (text, images, animation sound)
- the mean test score of the group that used the
multimedia application to learn elementary
mathematics was significantly higher than that of
the group that used the non-multimedia
application.
Source Macaulay, Michael (2003).The Effects of
Multimedia on Learning in Third World Children.
Journal of Educational Multimedia and Hypermedia.
12, 185-198.
28accessing this information
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30A Few Questions
- Who is the current President of the Portuguese
Republic? -
Aníbal António Cavaco Silva Portuguese
economist and political leader, prime minister
(1985-95) and president (2006-) of Portugal.
Source ChaCha text message
31- access
- formats
information
32moving beyond the information age
33not just about accessing information
34engage
35Presidential Debates
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37NFL
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39Engaging with Content
Name Kayla Age 3 1/2 About Kayla Kayla is three
and is no longer satisfied with simply watching
Elmo and Dora. Instead, she wants to interact
with them, answer questions and guide them in
their journey.
40Tools to Engage with Content
41engage or interact
- access
- formats
meaning or context
information
42the next step
create!
43Telling Their Story
Name Uriel Favorite Subject Science My
Notes Uriel is creative and extremely
intelligent. However, Uriel just doesnt care to
write all of the time. He wants to express
himself in a variety of ways.
44What is the value of students telling their
story?
Source Pink, D (2006). A whole new mind Why
right-brainers will rule the future. New York,
NY Penguin Group.
45What is the value of students telling their
story?
Source Pink, D (2006). A whole new mind Why
right-brainers will rule the future. New York,
NY Penguin Group.
46not just for students.
47and this is much easier than it used to be.
48another student example.
49What are the skills these students must have to
produce these products?
50If they build itthey will learn.
- Sharon Sam Sakai-Miller
51engage or interact
tap global knowledge
- access
- formats
meaning or context
information
52How People Learn
- A research-based synthesis consisting of 30 years
of educational research indicates - participation in social practice is a fundamental
form of learning - learning is increased by a diversity of cultural
experience and community participation
Brown, Ann L, Cocking, Rodney R Bransford ,
John D. How People Learn Brain, Mind,
Experience, and School. Washington National
Academies Press, 2000.
53Source http//www.sfett.com/html_movie/Ican/4.htm
l
54and these are not isolated examples.
55Social Networking Tools
- 96 percent of U.S. students ages 9 to 17 who
have internet access use social-networking
technology to connect with their peers (chatting,
text-messaging, blogging, or visiting online
communities such as Facebook, MySpace, and
Webkinz) - One of the most common topics of
discussioneducation - Nearly 60 percent of students report discussing
education-related topics
Source National School Boards Association,
(2007).CREATING CONNECTING//Research and
Guidelines on Online Social and Educational
Networking. 12.
56My Little GirlNow
Name Kayla Age 5 About Kayla Not even Dora is
good enough anymore now its social networking
through WebKinz.
57Social Practice in Action
- How many people have learned something new they
intend to utilize/apply when you return to school
(i.e. a tool or educational resource)? - Groups of 2-3
- Share what you have learned
58Social Practice in Action
- How many people shared the exact same thing?
- How many people intend to utilize/apply something
they just learned in the last three minutes?
59Source Top Sites United States. Retrieved July
29, 2008, from Alexa Top 100 Sites Web site
http//www.alexa.com/site/ds/top_sites?ccUSts_mo
decountrylangnone
60The Nations Response
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62Change in Florida Legislation
- 1082 (1) DISTRICT SCHOOL BOARD The district
school board has - 1083 the duty to provide adequate instructional
materials for all - 1084 students in accordance with the requirements
of this part. The - 1085 term adequate instructional materials
means a sufficient - 1086 number of textbooks or sets of materials
that are available in - 1087 bound, unbound, kit, or package form and may
consist of hard - 1088 backed or soft-backed textbooks,
consumables, learning - 1089 laboratories, manipulatives, electronic
media, and computer - 1090 courseware or software that serve as the
basis for - 1091 instruction for each student in the core
courses
63California Digital Textbook Initiative
- High School students will have access to science
and math digital textbooks by the beginning of
the school year. A list of standards-aligned
digital textbooks for subjects such as geometry,
algebra II, trigonometry, calculus, physics,
chemistry, biology/life science and earth science
courses will be released this August. - Phase two of the initiative is currently being
developed. This includes making digital textbooks
available for all grades, incorporating
interactive content
64Texas Adopted Language
- SECTIONA1.AA, Subchapter A, Chapter 31, Education
Code, is amended by adding Section 31.004 to read
as follows - the district provides each student with
textbooks, electronic textbooks, or instructional
materials that cover all elements of the
essential knowledge and skills adopted by the
State Board of Education for that subject and
grade level.
65We can no longer teach as we learned. We must
combine the best of the old with the best of the
new and plunge forward to meet the increasing
demands of an ever-changing technological
environment.
Linda Wells, Fifth Grade Teacher Cambridge
Elementary School San Antonio, Texas
66Contact Information
- Scott Kinney
- Vice President
- Outreach Professional Development
- Email scott_kinney_at_discovery.com
- Websites
- discoveryeducation.com
- community.discoveryeducation.com
- discoveryedspeakersbureau.com
67engage or interact
tap global knowledge
- access
- formats
meaning or context
information