By
Marcela Cartagena MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- The Internet, allows billions of people to
entertain and inform themselves, but it also can be a
priceless teaching tool for today's students. "A very
important advantage students get from using the Internet is
immediate access to information from all over the world,"
said Dr. Matt Raven, an associate professor with the
Mississippi State University's Agricultural Educational and
Experimental Statistics Department. The
Internet allows students and teachers to work together on
special projects and share their work with any other
classroom in the world. Raven said publishing their
creations for anyone in the world to view, can make students
highly motivated. "The
Internet also helps students develop communication skills.
Thanks to e-mail, students can develop writing skills," he
said. "And thanks to multicolored and engrossing sites, they
can cultivate their reading skills." Raven
said studies show students taught through the Internet have
developed not only greater communication skills, but also
learned better and faster than in a traditional
classroom. Raven
said students' creativity also increases. The computer
allows them to do many things because they have access to
work with visual, sound, graphics and many more
features. These
things allow them to turn in complete, interesting and fun
assignments. "Students
look forward to using the computer," Raven said. "There is
so much more motivation and excitement in classrooms with
Internet access." One
concern many people have is the quality and type of
information students will be exposed to the
Internet. Raven
said there is software and hardware available to block out
certain inappropriate sites for children. Raven
said teachers have a tremendous responsibility to prevent
students from seeing unsuitable sites. That's why
interaction between teachers and students is so
important. In
addition, students will eventually develop critical thinking
skills by learning to analyze, criticize and apply the
information they receive from the Internet. "Some
teachers may fear they are no longer a source of
information, but technology will never replace humans, it
will only help them," Raven said. "Technology will change
the traditional classroom in positive ways." Released:
July 13, 1998
Family,
Youth & Consumer News
Internet Holds
Unique Learning Opportunity
Contact: Dr. Matt Raven, (601) 325-3326
Visit: DAFVM
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