Computers and Education
Computers and Education | Computers Can Make Students More Interested in Learning
Leslie Bennetts was a writer for FamilyPC magazine when she wrote this article.
Summary: Many schools around the nation are using computers to make schoolwork exciting and challenging rather than tedious. The most successful of these schools use computers and the Internet to engage students in projects that show them how their knowledge and skills can be used in the real world. For example, students in one school created multimedia content for a CD-ROM designed to attract new businesses to their community, while another school held mock federal...
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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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