Portal:Digital Education

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What is Digital Education?

Technology has always been an important factor for education, but the rapid development of Internet and digital technology over the past decade is changing more than just the equipment used in the classroom: kids' learning styles and school behavior are constantly being shaped by the growing presence of the Internet. This section examines digital education and the need for digital literacy while also looking at the pros/cons and problems/solutions of digital education.

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Benefits of Digital Education

“The Peak Group, an education technology research and consulting firm, expects that more than 1 million students will take advantage of "virtual schools" this school year. Another research firm, Eduventures, predicted the online distance learning market will grow more than 38 percent in 2004, taking in $5.1 billion in revenue” [1]

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Problems

But wait, this isn’t the end of the education story. Let’s look at Sara’s life again.

Sara’s a girl who knows what she wants. She’s juggling three sports each school year, ballet classes, and babysitting duty for her younger brother. What’s more, she wants to take a full load of rigorous academic courses her junior year, and there just isn’t time…


The temptation for students in high-pressure-cooker environments to cheat has always existed. However, in the new technological age, there are more options for them to do so.

Touches on graphing calculators, cell phone photos of tests, survey statistics on cheating and who cheats in high schools, plagiarism, etc.[2]

Dictating notes into an ipod, listen during test [3]

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Solutions

Creating a database turnitin.com where everyone’s paper is compared against each other [4]

And maybe the solution isn’t a quick-fix legal regulation. Maybe it requires cultural change, especially in wealthy high pressure cooker world where each kids feels obligated to do 7 sports and activities. Maybe we should instituted regulation that would not turn the tide of cheating (which is a symptom), but which would turn the tide of cultural mores and cultural message/tradition (which is the actually cause/disease).

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Narratives

Sara is a girl who knows what she wants. She’s juggling three sports each school year, ballet classes, and babysitting duty for her younger brother. What’s more, she wants to take a full load of rigorous academic courses her junior year, and there just isn’t time in her schedule for a PE class. The course offerings have been finalized over the summer, and she discovers that PE isn’t her only problem: her chemistry and US history classes are offered during the same period, and she’ll have to choose between the two.

10 years ago, Sara would just have to watch her perfectly planned schedule go up in flames. Now, she has access to more teachers than those who walk the halls of her high school and more choices than are offered in the recycled paper course catalog in the main office. She can go online.

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