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Veteran reporter Debra Viadero has written more than 1,400 stories for Education Week and most of them have been about research. Not bored yet, she translates, shares, and dissects research findings on schools and learning, along with news about education research, for audiences that extend far beyond the Ivory Tower.

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September 11, 2009

U.K. Scholar Says Facebook Boosts IQ—But Not Twitter

A Scottish researcher is making the case that spending time on Facebook can make you smarter. Tracy Alloway of the University of Stirling told the British Research Association that Facebook brings about educational benefits because it requires users to exercise their working memory—their ability, in other words, to store and manipulate information. The same goes, she says, for video games that require planning and strategy and for Sudoku.

Alloway bases her conclusions on studies of low-achieving children between the ages of 11 and 14 who spent time on a brain-training program that involved social-networking sites, playing video games, or using other kinds of digital media. The heaviest Facebook users, she found, boosted their IQ scores by as much as 10 points over the course of the study.

Twitter, text-messaging, and YouTube are an entirely different matter, Alloway says. They seem to have no IQ-enhancing effect, and may even harm the development of working memory.

β€œOn Twitter, you receive an endless stream of information, but it's also very succinct,” Alloway says. "You don't have to process that information.”

Read more about it at IB Times, Mashable, and Telegraph.co.uk. Then keep it to yourself. We wouldn't want the word to get out among our teenagers.
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May 27, 2009

Growing Up in a Digital Age

"Today's children are coming of age in yesterday's science fiction future," according to one of the authors writing in the current issue of the journal Children, Youth and Environments. Released yesterday, the entire issue is devoted to exploring the promises and perils of growing up in a digital age.

Be prepared for some out-of-the-box thinking—one article, for instance, focuses on "seeing young people's hacking as creative practice"—as well as laments about the shrinking role of nature in children's lives. But educators and those who study them might find some use in the journal's offerings on designing digital libraries, using remotely operated vehicles to engage kids in underwater environments, and the learning power of video games for students with disabilities.

DebbieViadero

Debbie Viadero
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