Page 10 - Ziptales Program Manual - US
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Digital Technology in Today’s Classroom

      The Research

      Does online learning improve children’s skill levels? The research tells us that it does. One literacy expert puts it
      this way: “readers are more engaged with online texts because they promote a more active orientation to reading
      … [and] make reading a more creative and playful activity.” (Donald Leu, The New Literacies, International
      Reading Association)

      British research has shown that computer-mediated learning produces “positive motivational impacts” across
      a wide range of ability levels - ‘learning support’ children being just as likely to benefit as more able students.
      It is correlated to “a decline in performance avoidance” and has “a positive effect … for boys, with no lowering
      of outcomes for girls”. (The Motivational Effect of ICT on Pupils, Department for Education, UK) One American
      case study showed a boy whose print reading abilities were statistically “below average”, but who excelled at
      online reading, because it was a more comfortable environment for him. (Maureen O’Neil, What is New about
      the New Literacies? National Council of Teachers of English)

      What Educational Principles govern the Ziptales Program?

      Ziptales draws on the latest research about what works for the effective delivery of literacy outcomes to all
      students. The key principles are these:

      (1)	 “Learners should have opportunities to work with whole meaningful texts. Content that offers
      	 learners a chance to process large chunks of related text, rather than bits of unrelated language
      	 fragments … extends reading comprehension.”* (Ziptales is effectively a ‘whole language’
      	 resource, focusing on the enjoyment of familiar literary genres, though Easy Readers adds
      	 the explicit teaching of phonics for beginning readers)
      (2)	 “Learners should have opportunities to encounter a wide variety of text types … a range of narrative
      	 and expository structures should be provided.”* (Ziptales offers well over 36 genre types for all
      	 elementary levels)
      (3)	 “Learners should have the opportunity to work with [texts] that use content and language that are
      	 within the range of children’s conceptual development. Tasks should be challenging but not
      	 frustrating.”* (Ziptales offers ten bands of reading levels, aligned to all levels of the elementary
      	 school, and maps these to three major internationally recognized readability measures)
      (4)	 “Learners should have opportunities to monitor their own learning. Tasks that offer students the
      	 chance to self-correct and amend their own errors support the development of independent
      	learners.”* (Ziptales offers immediate interactive feedback on comprehension, with the
      	 chance to reread and master a text in the child’s own time)
      (* All quotes from Department of Education and Skills)

      In short, digital online content should be exactly like traditional print-mediated reading - rich, properly
      contextualised, and integrated into the classroom reading program.

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