Social & Cultural Aspects of Technology, Computer Programming, Web Programming/Development, Teaching & Teacher Training, Education - General & Miscellaneous, Social & Cultural Aspects of Technology
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Overview
Hypertext, e-mail, word processing: electronic technologies have revolutionized textual practices. How does language on screen work differently from language on the page? What new literacy skills are needed and how do we teach them?Page to Screen collects some of the best contemporary thinkers in the field of technology and literacy. They analyze the potential of the new forms of text, the increased emphasis on visual communication, new forms of rhetoric, learning in the age of global communication networks and new approaches to storytelling.
Page to Screen is compelling reading for anyone interested in Literacy Education, Language Studies, English, Library Studies, Multimedia and Communication Studies.
International contributors include Gunther Kress, Cynthia Selfe, Gail E. Hawisher and Colin Lankshear.
Editorials
Booknews
Not about filming novels, but how literacy and the teaching of it is being affected by the introduction of hypertext, email, word processing, and other electronic media. Addresses such concerns as how language on the screen works differently than on the page, what new literacy skills are needed and how they can be taught, the potential for new forms of text, the increased emphasis on visual representation, new forms of rhetoric, learning inside global communications, and new approaches to storytelling. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.Book Details
Published
February 1, 2004
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Pages
240
ISBN
9781136858369