Posts Tagged: literacy


3
Feb 10

Daily Links for January 15th through February 3rd

All excerpts are quoted from the respective link(s).


  • The Future of Search: Social Relevancy Rank – What we are about to get is a Social Relevancy Rank. Whenever you search streams of activity, the results will be ordered not chronologically but by how relevant each is to you based on your social graph. That is, people who matter more to you will bubble up. How does this work? Well, there will be a formula, just as there is a formula for Page Rank.

5
Dec 09

Daily Links for December 2nd through December 4th

All excerpts are quoted from the respective link(s).



28
Nov 09

Daily Links for November 27th through November 28th

All excerpts are quoted from the respective link(s).


  • Visual Literacy: An E-Learning Tutorial on Visualization for Communication, Engineering and Business – The Visual-Literacy.org e-learning course will be used as an online leveling course as well as a blended skill-building course for students of fourteen different university courses in four universities (for more than 500 students). These courses require advanced analytical and conceptual visualization skills in order to transform abstract thought efficiently into graphic, tangible forms and to manage the topic complexity and the problems addressed in each class.

8
Nov 09

Daily Links for November 5th through November 8th

All excerpts are quoted from the respective link(s).

  • NSFW: After Fort Hood, another example of how ‘citizen journalists’ can’t handle the truth – There was just one problem: Moore’s information was bullshit too.

    As we now know, Major Hassan was not killed, but rather captured alive. Reports of a second – and third – shooter also now appear to be inaccurate. Whether someone was shot “in the balls” hasn’t been publicly confirmed and, for the sake the of the victim’s privacy, let’s hope it never is – but the point is that many of Moore’s eye-witness reports weren’t worth the bits they were written on. They had no value whatsoever, except as entertainment and tragi-porn.


21
Sep 09

Daily Links for September 19th through September 21st

All excerpts are quoted from the respective link(s).

  • Clive Thompson on the New Literacy – The fact that students today almost always write for an audience (something virtually no one in my generation did) gives them a different sense of what constitutes good writing. In interviews, they defined good prose as something that had an effect on the world. For them, writing is about persuading and organizing and debating, even if it's over something as quotidian as what movie to go see. The Stanford students were almost always less enthusiastic about their in-class writing because it had no audience but the professor: It didn't serve any purpose other than to get them a grade. As for those texting short-forms and smileys defiling serious academic writing? Another myth. When Lunsford examined the work of first-year students, she didn't find a single example of texting speak in an academic paper.

18
Jan 09

Daily Links for January 18th


1
Jan 06

Wanna be scared? Check out what Bush and the White House are reading?

Bush, known as being uncurious and not one to read for either work or personal gain is reading two books – one focusing on his (Bush’s) role model, Teddy Roosevelt (ha-ha!), and the second focusing on an Imperialistic Vision of America focusing on a worldwide war on terror.  Link via Sploid:

In his view (and one that would be shockingly familiar to Roosevelt in his “Rough Riding” days in Cuba more than 100 years ago), the “war on terror” and associated conflicts is simply a repeat of the U.S. Army’s Indian Wars, but on a nearly planetary scale.

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