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100 YEARS OF NEW MEDIA PEDAGOGY

Ben McCorkle / Jason Palmeri

Conversing With Computers

Act 4: Reading and Writing the Web, 1995–2004


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HELLO WORLD!!!!

We are so excited you decided to drop by our Web-Site, *Reading and Writing the World Wide Web, 1995–2004.* We’ve been writing about computer pedagogy for some time, but all we had was boring old text. Now, we can tell this history in FULL TECHNICOLOR with GIFs, photos, backgrounds, fun fonts and more! (Unless, that is, you’re reading this in Lynx, in which case it’s back to boring old--we mean, clear and unadulterated--text.) And, through hyperlinks, we are able to bring the wide world of digital English teaching quickly to your fingertips. We invite you to wander this hypertext, follow the links, and discover all the myriad ways that English teachers and students learned to surf and weave the Web in the 1990s and early 2000s.

If you are new to reading hypertext, you might get disoriented. So, on every page, we’ve included a big button called HOME that you use to get right back to this welcome page. And, at the end of each page, you’ll see a NEXT button that will move you right along on your journey. Finally, if you click on a link that takes you to the wider World Wide Web, that link will open in a new window. If you don’t like where that link led you, just “X” out of that window and this site will be waiting for you right underneath it.

Whenever you are exploring a new place like the World Wide Web, it helps to have a map so you can figure out where you want to go. To make sure you don’t get lost, here is a map of the “pages” of our “web-site”:

What’s so great about the World Wide Web is that digital text can always be altered almost instantaneously. This text is not fixed or static like a book . . . It is under construction!

If you have ideas for material we should add, please EMAIL US.

Select NEXT to go to learn about Surfing the Web. Select HOME to go home!


Home  Surfing  Weaving  FAQ  Web-ring  Next


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