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El. knyga: Remembering and Forgetting in the Age of Technology: Teaching, Learning, and the Science of Memory in a Wired World

4.22/5 (18 ratings by Goodreads)

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"Concise, nontechnical explanations of major principles of memory and attention, plus ideas for handling technology use in the classroom"--

What does memory mean for learning in an age of smartphones and search engines



What does memory mean for learning in an age of smartphones and search engines

Human minds are made of memories, and today those memories have competition. Biological memory capacities are being supplanted, or at least supplemented, by digital ones, as we rely on recording—phone cameras, digital video, speech-to-text—to capture information we’ll need in the future and then rely on those stored recordings to know what happened in the past. Search engines have taken over not only traditional reference materials but also the knowledge base that used to be encoded in our own brains. Google remembers, so we don’t have to. And when we don’t have to, we no longer can. Or can we

Remembering and Forgetting in the Age of Technology offers concise, nontechnical explanations of major principles of memory and attention—concepts that all teachers should know and that can inform how technology is used in their classes. Teachers will come away with a new appreciation of the importance of memory for learning, useful ideas for handling and discussing technology with their students, and an understanding of how memory is changing in our technology-saturated world.

Introduction: Machines, Memory, and Learning 1(18)
1 What Technology Does to Us (and for Us): Taking a Critical Look at Common Narratives
19(26)
2 Why We Remember, Why We Forget
45(42)
3 Enhancing Memory and Why It Matters (Even though Google Exists)
87(46)
4 Memory Requires Attention
133(38)
5 The Devices We Can't Put Down: Smartphones, Laptops, Memory, and Learning
171(40)
Conclusion: How Memory Can Thrive in a Technology-Saturated Future 211(16)
Notes 227(26)
Acknowledgments 253(4)
Index 257
Michelle D. Miller is a professor of psychological sciences and President's Distinguished Teaching Fellow at Northern Arizona University. She is the author of Minds Online: Teaching Effectively with Technology.