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Showing 1 to 15 of 38 results Save | Export
Cushman, Mike – Adults Learning, 2012
Michael Gove has correctly lambasted the current curriculum for information and communication technology (ICT): his proposed solution is as wrong as the current curriculum, as findings from the Penceil Research Project on how to engage non-users of ICTs demonstrate. Learning how to use a word processor and a spreadsheet is a useful low-level…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Word Processing, Information Technology, Spreadsheets
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Parry, David – EDUCAUSE Review, 2011
While recognizing that digital access is not evenly distributed in the United States, which is to say nothing of the global distribution, one can safely say that this transformation is already here; people are already at the moment in which the ability to use social media, and particularly social media as amplified through the power of the mobile…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Multiple Literacies, Access to Information, Spatial Ability
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Livingstone, Sonia – Oxford Review of Education, 2012
In both schools and homes, information and communication technologies (ICT) are widely seen as enhancing learning, this hope fuelling their rapid diffusion and adoption throughout developed societies. But they are not yet so embedded in the social practices of everyday life as to be taken for granted, with schools proving slower to change their…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Information Technology, Evidence, Educational Policy
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David, Jane L. – Educational Leadership, 2009
Media literacy is making a comeback, spurred by students' access to unlimited information on the Internet. Can schools provide the skills students need to become media literate in a digital world? Researchers find that reading for understanding online requires the same skills as offline reading, including using prior knowledge and making…
Descriptors: Media Literacy, Internet, Computer Literacy, Search Engines
Gorard, Stephen; Selwyn, Neil – Adults Learning, 2008
In this article, the authors write about the myth of the "silver surfers"--those third-age learners adept at using the internet and other technologies for a mixture of formal and informal learning episodes. The notion of the silver surfer has endured since the latter half of the 1990s. It is sustained by the annual Silver Surfer week, media…
Descriptors: Informal Education, Older Adults, Internet, Computer Literacy
Rahman, K. M. Rezanur; Anwar, Sadat; Numan, Sharker Md. – Online Submission, 2008
Today computer has replaced all means of traditional communication significantly. Many distant learning tools claim to be interactive, but few can offer two-way communication. Email is the most popular means of communication medium now-a-days. Therefore, it may be used as an educational tool for learning. In present socioeconomic condition of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Internet, Educational Technology, Computer Mediated Communication
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Avgerinou, Maria D. – TechTrends: Linking Research and Practice to Improve Learning, 2009
In this article, the author has advanced the view that the world is currently on the threshold of a new status quo--the hegemony of the image. Yet, this seems a mixed blessing, for people, and especially young people, are not equipped with the necessary critical viewing and thinking skills to survive it. Nevertheless, this unfortunate situation…
Descriptors: Definitions, Critical Viewing, Lifelong Learning, Visual Literacy
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Lawhon, Tommie; And Others – Educational Gerontology, 1996
Older adults use computers for entertainment, education, and creative and business endeavors. Computer training helps them increase productivity, learn skills, and boost short-term memory. Electronic mail, online services, and the Internet encourage socialization. Adapted technology helps disabled and ill elders use computers. (SK)
Descriptors: Computer Literacy, Computers, Electronic Mail, Internet
Selwyn, Neil; Gorard, Stephen – Adults Learning, 2008
In last month's "Adult Learning," the authors introduced the notion of "the silver surfer", a third-age learner adept at using the internet and other technologies for a mixture of formal and informal learning episodes. They suggested that neither this image nor its obverse, the truly disconnected older adult, is helpful in understanding the ICT…
Descriptors: Informal Education, Computer Uses in Education, Adult Learning, Older Adults
Marquardt, Michael J. – Training and Development, 1996
Technology is increasing crucial in human resource development. The Internet, intranets, multimedia, virtual reality, distance learning, and electronic performance support systems are some of the technologies with which trainers must become familiar. (SK)
Descriptors: Computer Literacy, Distance Education, Educational Change, Educational Technology
Huwe, Terence K. – Computers in Libraries, 2005
Technostress--the challenge of keeping up with changing technology--has been one of the few constants in professional lives for the past 30 or more years. In this paper, the author addresses what constitutes "best practices" for keeping up with rapidly changing technology.
Descriptors: Electronic Libraries, Strategic Planning, Information Technology, Internet
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American Journal of Distance Education, 2007
This article presents an interview with Dr. James Johnson Duderstadt, founder of the Millennium Project, the president emeritus and university professor of science and engineering at the University of Michigan. In this interview, Duderstadt talks about how he became an educator and how he decided to specialize in technology and distance education.…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Computer Literacy, Personal Narratives, Interviews
Olsen, Florence – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2000
In the fall of 2000, half the freshman class arrived at college with their own computers, proficient at using Windows, word-processing software, the Internet and electronic mail. The author offers a look at the computing lifestyles of freshmen on five college campuses. (JM)
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Computer Literacy, Computer Uses in Education, Higher Education
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Brunelle, Michael D.; Bruce, Bertram C. – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2002
Notes that understanding what "free software" means and its implications for access and use of new technologies is an important component of the new literacies. Concludes that if free speech and free press are essential to the development of a general literacy, then free software can promote the development of computer literacy. (SG)
Descriptors: Computer Literacy, Computer Software, Computer Software Evaluation, Computer Uses in Education
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Caverly, David C.; Broderick, Bill – Journal of Developmental Education, 1995
Discusses the uses of the Internet, particularly the World Wide Web (WWW), in developmental education courses. Examines the underpinnings of the WWW, means by which users can access information, and some potential applications for developmental students. Includes addresses of sample WWW sites. (MAB)
Descriptors: Computer Literacy, Computer Networks, Computer Uses in Education, Developmental Studies Programs
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