The trick to being a good reader, no matter the medium, is being an engaged reader, a fact that Pennington notes is well-supported by research. “It’s pretty clear that good readers are active readers engaged with the text,” he said.
- Oct 2016
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ww2.kqed.org ww2.kqed.org
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casual digital reading
Key word here is casual. Just as when we read for homework we do things we might not when reading for pleasure, so too online.
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Students are doing more reading on digital devices than they ever have before
Would like to see the numbers around this...
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information-literacy.blogspot.com information-literacy.blogspot.com
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quoted Wittgenstein "The meaning of a word is its use in the language".
This relates to Bruce's Frames - different people have different understandings of what IL is.
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you could teach for information literacy, but not teach information literacy
Interesting distinction. It is more effective to engage in the practice of IL than to teach about IL.
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dl.dropboxusercontent.com dl.dropboxusercontent.com
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This bold claim has led design and critical scholars to hotly debate if participants have a technological ideology imposed on them, or if thinking with technologies enable new civic perspectives.
Pueden estar ocurriendo ambas. La pregunta sería cuándo ocurre cuál. Unas pistas pueden estar del lado de la alfabetización crítica (Freire, Data Pop).
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- Sep 2016
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www.districtdispatch.org www.districtdispatch.org
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This report indicates we can connect with our digital learners to talk about trust and evaluation in the digital information sphere.
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newclasses.nyu.edu newclasses.nyu.edu
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In our view, crosscultural psychological research confirms anthropological findings of the universality of basic cognitive capacities. All culture groups thus far studied have demonstrated the capacity to remember, generalize, form concepts, operate with abstractions, and reason logically.
Also, connecting to Chomsky, all culture groups have the capacity to learn language (innate linguistic ability), which is imperative for the ability to remember, think abstractly, reason logically, etc.
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learn-us-east-1-prod-fleet02-xythos.content.blackboardcdn.com learn-us-east-1-prod-fleet02-xythos.content.blackboardcdn.com
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Ama-zonian groups, such as the Piraha, whose languages do not include numerals above three, are worse at distinguishing large quan-tities digitally than groups using extensive counting systems, but are similar in their abil-ity to approximate quantities.
This reminds me of a similar study on language with the Vai in Liberia (Scribner and Cole 1981) which suggests that formal literacy schooling in English does not give learners higher intelligence or better abstract reasoning skills, only the ability to talk about those skills in "contrived situations." So even though the numerical/literacy system one grows up with influences the way one thinks, it doesn't mean that one system can be prioritized over the other as "better" or "more intelligent."
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A commitment to sourcing every fact is laudible, of course. What’s missing is an understanding of citing and publishing models, not just the data derived from those models. This is a new problem — older media couldn’t generate data on their own. Authors will need to figure out journalistic standards around model citation, and readers will need to become literate in how to “read” a model and understand its limitations.
The idea of new media able not only to quote numbers, but also to produce them is interesting. In the case of some domain specific visualizations, like the ones we did for public medicine info, they are part of a bigger narrative, that introduce some conventions for interpreting the visuals, i.e. they teach some particular graphicacy (the ability to create and understand data visualizations, according to data pop alliance ). May be this new media needs to build that reader/explorer, by presenting her/him with works of literacy, numeracy and graphicacy, and setups and context to learn, discuss and build them.
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allaboardhe.org allaboardhe.org
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colostate.instructure.com colostate.instructure.com
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Rather than suggesting that we replace one understanding of literacy over another, we should simply expand on what we could (and should) include in a composition course or project.
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- Jul 2016
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books.google.ca books.google.ca
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Page 15
Rockwell and Sinclair call for
a new kind of literacy that allows us to continue our pursuits as humanities scholars in the changing world we find ourselves in.
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www.jisc.ac.uk www.jisc.ac.uk
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Beetham and Sharpe ‘pyramid model’ of digital literacy development model (2010)
like this model and the progression it represents. It might be interesting to compare it to imposter syndrome. Identity represents a level of confidence in one's abilities, confidence which can be independent of ability level.
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What it means to be digitally literate changes over time and across contexts, so digital literacies are essentially a set of academic and professional situated practices supported by diverse and changing technologies
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- Jun 2016
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hackeducation.com hackeducation.com
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it can mean that students see themselves as actively building their learning
This is the heart of the open ed/info lit connection. If the perception is that students go to school to be taught, the more important goal of learning how to learn is so much more difficult to achieve. But fostering lifelong learning means ceding some control over what is to be learned to the learner.
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literacyworldwide.org literacyworldwide.org
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many focus on skills rather than literacies.
To the "unskilled," the what and how may be a big hurdle. Skills seem prerequisite to literacy here.
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www.steve-wheeler.co.uk www.steve-wheeler.co.uk
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transliteracy is that it is the ability to be able to present your ideas, connect and manage your presence equally well no matter what tools and technologies you select
Interesting that transliteracy is at the heart. Information comes in may forms and flows through many channels. Transliteracy. IMO, recognizes the multiplicity.
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er.educause.edu er.educause.edu
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Find and vet information online. In the digital world, being able to not only find information online but also determine its quality and validity is crucial.
Vetting could be done through annotation/bookmarking.
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Some people have argued that widespread literacy (understood as reading at an eighth-grade level) was about making sure factory workers could read manuals well enough to keep machines running, rather than about providing for an informed citizenry. The equivalent for digital literacy would be to define it simply as being able to learn software quickly. Instead, digital literacy should be defined as knowing the effective practices suited to the dominant media. We should not teach students just the skills that will prepare them to follow instructions or quickly comprehend a user interface; instead we should aim to help students develop the expertise that will allow them to combine and create technologies to develop new and dynamic solutions. Just as traditional literacy and the liberal arts have been the key to independence since the advent of public schooling, digital literacy today is about intellectual freedom (see figure 1).
Very interesting.
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Despite having grown up with access to an increasing amount of technology, students now need to learn how to use technology to solve problems in academic and professional settings.
So "digital native" is not enough. Digital literacy is something different, something more.
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The people who were comfortable at this humanities-technology intersection helped to create the human-machine symbiosis that is at the core of this story. Walter Isaacson, "The Innovators: How a Group of Inventors, Hackers, Geniuses and Geeks Created the Digital Revolution" (2014)
Great line!
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Design and create digital solutions. Ultimately students should build a skill set that allows them to develop or customize their own digital tools. This does not necessarily mean that students need to be able to write their own applications from scratch. Rather, they should be comfortable customizing and combining tools to create a complete solution—for example, creating a web-form to automate the collection of customer evaluations and then outputting the results to a spreadsheet for analysis.
Is this an argument against online learning as a "management" problem?
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Resistance, however, is as futile

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- May 2016
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www.elearnspace.org www.elearnspace.org
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What does it mean to be human in a digital age?
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www.turnitin.com www.turnitin.com
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Users may submit their paper using a pseudonym and in formats that contain little, if any, identifying metadata.
Do elementary and secondary teachers know how to do this? A substantial assumption is that teachers know how to explain this to their students.
This requires much more than any definitions of computer literacy and is a wizard level skill.
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rossieronline.usc.edu rossieronline.usc.edu
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Toolkit for Digitally-Literate Teachers
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- Apr 2016
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www.azwaldo.com www.azwaldo.com
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Does the average high school or college graduate know where the alphabet comes from, something of its development, and anything about its psychic and social effects? Does he or she know anything about illuminated manuscripts, about the origin of the printing press and its role in reshaping Western culture, about the origins of newspapers and magazines? Do our students know where clocks, telescopes, microscopes, X rays, and computers come from? Do they have any idea about how such technologies have changed the economic, social, and political life of Western culture?
What are the "Six Big Questions" regarding digital literacy and digital citizenship? (See http://azwaldo.com/wordpress/the-interface-layer/ )
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blog.enkerli.com blog.enkerli.com
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In Switzerland, one of my recent ancestors was functionally illiterate. Because of this, she “signed away” most of her wealth. Down the line, I’m one of her very few heirs. So, in a way, I lost part of my inheritance due to illiteracy.
Explained further in the screencast. My paternal grandfather’s mother came from a well-to-do Schneider family and was a devout Christian, but she “read” the Bible upside-down, according to my paternal grandmother.
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- Mar 2016
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idstuff.blogspot.com idstuff.blogspot.com
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Do learners have the necessary skills to be able to learn in such a free range environment?
This is exactly the set of skills that students should develop in college. They should walk away as independent lifelong learners.That's why we push information literacy - so that students will have the tools to learn on their own.
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www.literacyworldwide.org www.literacyworldwide.org
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Knowing the Difference Between Digital Skills and Digital Literacies, and Teaching Both
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www.insidehighered.com www.insidehighered.com
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But I see some promising changes that align with the emphasis in the Framework on creating rather than consuming, on understanding systems of information rather than how to find stuff, on context and making critical judgments that go beyond making convenient consumer choices. If we think about information as something communities create in conversation within a social and economic context rather than as a consumer good, we may put less emphasis on being local franchises for big information conglomerates and put more time, resources, and creativity into supporting local creativity and discovery. We may begin to do better at working across boundaries to support and fund open access to research rather than focusing most of our efforts on paying the rent and maintaining the security of our walled gardens. And as we make this shift, we may be able to stop teaching students how to shop efficiently for information that won’t be available once they graduate. We may help them think more critically about where knowledge comes from and how they can participate in making sense of things.
Nice!!!
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www.questia.com www.questia.com
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"Information Literacy" (IL) subject or course specific integration - examples
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- Feb 2016
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dlsanthology.commons.mla.org dlsanthology.commons.mla.org
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Wido van Peursen
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- Dec 2015
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www.artofmanliness.com www.artofmanliness.com
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The Benefits of Installing a Little Free Library in Your Front Yard (An example of the genuine sharing economy.)
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- Oct 2015
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mozilla.github.io mozilla.github.io
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Web Literacy Competencies
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medium.com medium.com
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First I review the benefits of learning in the open to build a web presence.
What is your favorite phrase to describe what this process is (e.t. digital identity, open learning, digital literacy, etc.)?
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- Sep 2015
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www.schooljournalism.org www.schooljournalism.orgAbout3
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ASNE
American Society of News Editors=possible partner/funder
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news literacy curriculum
I like this idea a lot. Annotation seems as though it could play a major role here.
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John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, the Robert R. McCormick Foundation and the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation.
Funders of this theme.
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- Jul 2015
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www.civicyouth.org www.civicyouth.org
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Strengthen standards and curricula for digital media literacy and coordinate digital media literacy and civic education.
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www.ncte.org www.ncte.org
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intellectual property?
I'm curious why this term/concept need to be invoked to value informal student writing?
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as students gain proficiency in expert discourses, they learn also to surrender their writing and writerly identifications—in the form of intellectual property and intellectual property rights—to the workings of a largely hid- den curriculum that equates literacy achievement with public conformity to its laws.
Powerful statement!
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- May 2015
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www.corestandards.org www.corestandards.org
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including visually and quantitatively, as well as in words.

The possibilities of digital writing, given the WYSIWYG interface above, allow for students to integrate a variety of media into their own annotation compositions. Moreover, this use of media is not simply illustrative but as an integral part of the overall argument.

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- Mar 2015
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Local file Local file
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americanlibrariesmagazine.org americanlibrariesmagazine.org
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the greatest opportunities for librarians lie in deeper connections to the curriculum, adapting to new modes of pedagogy, linking technology-rich and collaborative spaces in libraries to learning
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- Jan 2015
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dev-stem-ethics.gotpantheon.com dev-stem-ethics.gotpantheon.com
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prevented you from
Add: , or helped you in, ...
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Can you think of a time when you were pretty sure about what the right thing to do was, but you didn’t do it?
Add: Can you think of a time you did?
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- Sep 2014
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dev-stem-ethics.gotpantheon.com dev-stem-ethics.gotpantheon.com
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Step 3: My Initial Read
Sensitivity Exercise Step 3:
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dev-stem-ethics.gotpantheon.com dev-stem-ethics.gotpantheon.com
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Feel free to share your observations and thoughts with others below before moving on to the next exercise.
Discussion
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must
need to
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must
need to
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dev-stem-ethics.gotpantheon.com dev-stem-ethics.gotpantheon.com
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DISCUSSION QUESTIONS (SHARE YOUR ANSWERS BELOW IN THE COMMENTS SECTION)
What are we doing about discussion?
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dev-stem-ethics.gotpantheon.com dev-stem-ethics.gotpantheon.com
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A final exercise will challenge you to bring the skills you hone through this process to bear on a complex scenario involving several ethical issues.
change to reflect change in module
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- May 2014
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stratechery.com stratechery.com
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Usage-based pricing, where you pay for the capacity that you use, would properly incentivize ISPs to support net neutrality
YES!!! And if people want to oppose this on the basis that Internet access is an important element of basic literacy then we can invest it in like we once did with libraries and public educational institutions. Subsidize access to reference websites, etc. The libraries of the future could be free, but you must pay for frivolous cat videos. I'm all for this.
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www.newrepublic.com www.newrepublic.com
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Personally, I think Digital Humanities is about building things,” said Ramsay in a polarizing talk at the MLA convention in 2011, printed in Defining Digital Humanities. Unlike many theorists, however, he was willing to make this demand concrete: “Do you have to know how to code? I’m a tenured professor of digital humanities and I say ‘yes.’ ”
http://www.one-tab.com/page/Nx--r0sKQNir8QoKxnU-0g
https://www.google.com/search?q=mla+2011+ramsay+defining+digital+humanities&oq=mla+2011+ramsay+defining+digital+humanities&aqs=chrome..69i57.13899j0j7&sourceid=chrome&es_sm=106&ie=UTF-8 http://dhdebates.gc.cuny.edu/debates http://stephenramsay.us/text/2011/01/08/whos-in-and-whos-out/ http://www.briancroxall.net/buildingDH/ http://townsendcenter.berkeley.edu/blog/lines-sand-or-growing-pains-stephen-ramsay-and-digital-humanities-2011-mla http://journalofdigitalhumanities.org/1-1/introduction-theory-and-the-virtues-of-digital-humanities-by-natalia-cecire/ http://sites.library.northwestern.edu/dh/ https://www.google.com/search?q=stephen+ramsay+humanities&oq=stephen+ramsay+humanities&aqs=chrome..69i57j0.4522j0j7&sourceid=chrome&es_sm=106&ie=UTF-8 http://cdrh.unl.edu/about/faculty/ramsay.php https://twitter.com/CDRH_UNL http://www.amazon.com/Reading-Machines-Algorithmic-Criticism-Humanities/dp/0252078209 http://www.unl.edu/english/faculty/profs/sramsay.html http://stephenramsay.us/ http://stephenramsay.us/2013/09/25/dh-job/ http://stephenramsay.us/2013/09/12/why_im_in_it/
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wiki.mozilla.org wiki.mozilla.org
- Jan 2014
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onlinelibrary.wiley.com onlinelibrary.wiley.com
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The challenge is that while biologists best understand the questions that can be addressed using the atlas, they may not always possess the computational and mathematical skills needed to conduct sophisticated analyses of such data files. For this reason, biologists generally collaborate with computational scientists. It is not always clear, though, what is the best way to frame the analysis.
1) The challenge 2) Literacy 3) Framing the analysis
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