Jenae Cohn writes and speaks about teaching and learning in digital spaces. She works as an academic technology specialist in the program in writing and rhetoric at Stanford University.
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Description
Acknowledgments Introduction: Why Teach Digital Reading? Part 1. Skim Understanding Historical, Affective, and Neurological Perspectives on Reading Technologies 1.?The Chained Book: A Historical Overview of Reading Technology in Higher Education 2.?The Held Book: How Our Feelings for Books Impact How We Teach Reading 3.?The Brain on Books: What the Neuroscience of Reading Can Tell Us about Reading on Screens Part 2. Dive Exploring the Digital Reading Framework to Promote Deep Reading Practices An Introduction to the Digital Reading Framework: Curation, Connection, Creativity, Contextualization, Contemplation 4.?Curation 5.?Connection 6.?Creativity 7.?Contextualization 8.?Contemplation Part 3. Surface Critically Approaching the Adoption and Use of Digital Reading Technologies 9.?The Ethical Implications of Digital Reading: Grappling with Digital Archiving, Readerly Privacy, and Evidence of Our Reading Conclusion: Principles, Practices, and Futures for Digital Reading Appendix: Tools for Digital Reading References Index

