Computers and Education
Computers and Education | Computer-Assisted Education Benefits Young Children
The Children’s Partnership is a national nonprofit organization whose mission is to inform leaders and the public about the needs of America’s 70 million children, and to engage them in ways that benefit children.
Summary: The information age has arrived, and good parents should prepare their children for it by promoting computer literacy as soon as children are ready for it. Children as young as two and three can play with a computer in the home, and by age eight children can begin using the Internet for school reports. Parents should especially...
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- Introduction
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Table of Contents
- Schools Should Adopt Computer-Assisted Education
- Schools Should Not Adopt Computer-Assisted Education
- Computer-Assisted Education Can Enhance Learning
- Computer-Assisted Education May Not Enhance Learning
- Computers Can Make Students More Interested in Learning
- Computer-Assisted Education Can Undermine Serious Study
- Computer-Assisted Education Benefits Young Children
- Computer-Assisted Education Does Not Benefit Young Children
- Computer Literacy Is Vital to Students’ Future Success
- Traditional Literacy Is More Important than Computer Literacy to Students’ Future Success
- Computer-Assisted Education Could Radically Alter the Role of Teachers
- Computers Cannot Replace Teachers
- Organizations to Contact
- Bibliography
- Copyright
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