Students who are exposed to technology in writing, have a much larger exposure to a broad range of information. Students must be taught the most basic skills, so their technology writing experiences will be an effective and adequate addition to the classroom. MultimodalLiteracies seem like they are here to stay.
All the research points toward the favor of digital technologies as a method of enhancing classroom reading instruction. I have, however, yest to read that it would be a great "replacement" of traditional methods. I have to agree the trend toward technology in the classroom continues to grow and becomes a part of my daily classroom routine, but I could hardly feel ready to rely completely on technology as thee source of instruction for my readers. Research points to the importance of using technology as an enhancement to reading instruction, but students posting their work on the internet creates some interesting debates. While it provides students the opportunity to put new literacy into practice it does pose a problem with privacy. There are safeguards to protect the identity of students on the web, but there is also credit protection plans that do little when an identity is stolen. I worry about plagiarism, identity, and fraud.
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