AMERICAN LANGUAGE HUB_Level2_Student'sBook_Answerkey.pdf
Lg14 not dead yetppt24f
1. Not dead yet:
The enduring import of the printed word
Katherine Watson, Coastline Distance Learning
1
2. Not dead yet…
What is “dead”, generally & with respect to the printed word?
Who says what “dead” means & what is “dead”?
When is “death” supposed to occur, or has it occurred?
How is death occurring & how will we know when the process is over?
Why might it happen/be happening & why should anyone care?
“Where is it written?”
Katherine Watson, Coastline Distance Learning
2
3. Not dead? Not yet!
Four areas of life for the printed word
Reading
Learning
Communicating
Remembering
Katherine Watson, Coastline Distance Learning
3
4. Not dead yet! Reading helps…
… physiologically
…mentally/intellectually
… practically
Katherine Watson, Coastline Distance Learning
4
5. Physiological benefits: Your brain on reading
Visual exercise
Imagination stimulation
Heightened connectivity
Katherine Watson, Coastline Distance Learning
5
6. Mental/intellectual benefits
Improved, more efficient information processing
Integrated, multiple modes of cognition
Improved analytical skills, understanding
Katherine Watson, Coastline Distance Learning
6
7. Practical benefits of reading
• Improved navigability of our world
• Reduction of the “woolly”
• Reduction in criminality
• Improved job prospects
Katherine Watson, Coastline Distance Learning
7
8. Not dead yet! Learning through words in print
Mental/intellectual benefits
Practical benefits
Katherine Watson, Coastline Distance Learning
8
10. Practical benefits of learning via words
Forced attentiveness to le mot juste
Ease of reading/understanding text v. multimedia
Katherine Watson, Coastline Distance Learning
10
11. Not dead yet: Communicating words
Physiological benefits
Mental/intellectual benefits
Cultural benefits
Katherine Watson, Coastline Distance Learning
11
12. Physiological benefits of communicating
• Brains change productively via linguistic cues
• Words can (and do) change your brain!
• Written words can change you
Katherine Watson, Coastline Distance Learning
12
13. Mental/intellectual benefits
Engaging the brain’s central, peripheral processing units
Forced improvement of intellect
Increased precision of thought
Katherine Watson, Coastline Distance Learning
13
14. Cultural benefits of communicating
Cultural transmission =“design feature” of human Language
Orality and literacy
Codes that “count”
Veracity
Katherine Watson, Coastline Distance Learning
14
15. Not dead yet: Remembering…
Benefits of doing it with words….
biological/neurological/mental/intellectual
social/cultural
Katherine Watson, Coastline Distance Learning
15
16. Remembering: The mental side of it…
Temporal & functional memory changes via words
“The written word is the enemy of memory”? Not!
“Mental landscape”, “topography”, etc.
The role of “graphicacy”
Katherine Watson, Coastline Distance Learning
16
17. Remembering, culture, and print
The literacy thesis
“Books bind our understanding”
The “font finding” & remembering
Desire to recall the “true”
Katherine Watson, Coastline Distance Learning
17
18. Not dead yet: Outliving…
Educators & words
Words & change
Dissonance & harmony
Video killed the radio star?
Katherine Watson, Coastline Distance Learning
18