3. We live in a fast-changing ‘runaway world’ where the social, economic, cultural and political foundations of society are being redefined on a continual basis (Giddens 2000) We are living in the age of information.
4. There are clearly wide differences in the ways children respond to, benefit from, or are excluded by specific uses of digital technologies.
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6. Weinberger(2006) described knowledge as no longer being organised as trees but as a pile of leaves. How has ICT changed our perception of Knowledge?
7. No longer is it enough to be able to read the printed word; children, youth, and adults, too, need the ability to both critically interpret the powerful images of a multimedia culture and express themselves in multiple media forms. (Thoman and Jolls (2005))
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9. Social Media/Software The activities that social software allows may facilitate an education revolution. The development of practices that place the learner at the heart, through the creation of collaborative, community-based learning experiences.
13. What is the role of new digital technologies in the creation of new learning environments? How does ICT control how space is used in the classroom?
14. What is the role of new digital technologies in the creation of new learning environments? How does ICT control how space is used in the classroom?
15. Input technologies Touch Voice Gesture The future will bring an even greater selection of ways to interact with computers and information.
16. Avatar signing Video communications Speech synthesisers Real-time speech to sign translator
17. Using ICT for it's motivational affordances will not be enough to assure young people have the opportunities to achieve.
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20. As Douglas Adams once observed, “ the best way to predict the future is to build it.”