The Project eMysteries – From reading to writing
Digital culture is impacting heavily on young people’s lives, be it through their own attachment to social media through mobile devices or the new Covid-19 demands on distance online education. Maryanne Wolf in Reader, Come Home (2018) argues through her cognitive neuroscientific studies on reading...
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Red de Universidades Lectoras
2021-07-01
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doaj-443cfa8fced1417a982c3f7a37306d362021-07-08T07:41:44ZengRed de Universidades LectorasÁlabe2171-96242171-96242021-07-01112411510.15645/Alabe2021.24.7The Project eMysteries – From reading to writingMaria da Natividade Carvalho Pires0Maria Margarida Morgado1Instituto Politécnico de Castelo BrancoInstituto Politécnico de Castelo BrancoDigital culture is impacting heavily on young people’s lives, be it through their own attachment to social media through mobile devices or the new Covid-19 demands on distance online education. Maryanne Wolf in Reader, Come Home (2018) argues through her cognitive neuroscientific studies on reading that the mind of readers is changing given the media they are constantly using (mobile phones, computers). One of the issues Wolf debates is the loss of deep detailed modes of reading comprehension or the willingness of today’s (young) readers to engage with complex sentences or longer texts. She claims, however, that really good reading is close reading, a form of reading that requires intellectual effort from the reader involving the intellectual skills of reasoning, thinking and understanding (Wolf, 2018). How can this be promoted in the digital age? This is the aim of a European Erasmus+ funded project the authors are involved in called e-Mysteries: Detective Stories to Engage Students in Close Reading with the Use of Mobile Devices (short name: e-Mysteries). New forms of reading, as those being developed by the e-Mysteries project, create opportunities for the participatory empathetic, critical, and analytical engagement of students with what they read as well as with individual and collaborative writing in a modern flux of consumer-producer.http://revistaalabe.com/index/alabe/article/view/646/392digital cultureclose readingcritical engagementwritingdetective stories |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Maria da Natividade Carvalho Pires Maria Margarida Morgado |
spellingShingle |
Maria da Natividade Carvalho Pires Maria Margarida Morgado The Project eMysteries – From reading to writing Álabe digital culture close reading critical engagement writing detective stories |
author_facet |
Maria da Natividade Carvalho Pires Maria Margarida Morgado |
author_sort |
Maria da Natividade Carvalho Pires |
title |
The Project eMysteries – From reading to writing |
title_short |
The Project eMysteries – From reading to writing |
title_full |
The Project eMysteries – From reading to writing |
title_fullStr |
The Project eMysteries – From reading to writing |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Project eMysteries – From reading to writing |
title_sort |
project emysteries – from reading to writing |
publisher |
Red de Universidades Lectoras |
series |
Álabe |
issn |
2171-9624 2171-9624 |
publishDate |
2021-07-01 |
description |
Digital culture is impacting heavily on young people’s lives, be it through their own attachment to social media through mobile devices or the new Covid-19 demands on distance online education. Maryanne Wolf in Reader, Come Home (2018) argues through her cognitive neuroscientific studies on reading that the mind of readers is changing given the media they are constantly using (mobile phones, computers).
One of the issues Wolf debates is the loss of deep detailed modes of reading comprehension or the willingness of today’s (young) readers to engage with complex sentences or longer texts. She claims, however, that really good reading is close reading, a form of reading that requires intellectual effort from the reader involving the intellectual skills of reasoning, thinking and understanding (Wolf, 2018).
How can this be promoted in the digital age? This is the aim of a European Erasmus+ funded project the authors are involved in called e-Mysteries: Detective Stories to Engage Students in Close Reading with the Use of Mobile Devices (short name: e-Mysteries).
New forms of reading, as those being developed by the e-Mysteries project, create opportunities for the participatory empathetic, critical, and analytical engagement of students with what they read as well as with individual and collaborative writing in a modern flux of consumer-producer. |
topic |
digital culture close reading critical engagement writing detective stories |
url |
http://revistaalabe.com/index/alabe/article/view/646/392 |
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