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NIEonline.com: Serving Newspapers in Education

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Teachers: For more classroom resources make sure you contact your LOCAL NEWSPAPER

Sample the NIEonline.com content modules below


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Australian scientists' hopes dashed by death of Tasmanian Devil

Answer FIVE Geography questions each week based on major news events.

Archive of Geography quizzes

Hearing-loss message is clear: Dial down the volume

-- Front Page Talking Points Archive


Words in the News

Interactive vocabulary quiz based on stories found in your newspaper.

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Front Page Talking Points
FOR THE WEEK OF MAY 31, 2010

Landlines, emails and even voice calls are losers in personal communication revolution

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1.gifShow an example of how this paper and its readers communicate in a 21st century way.

2.gifLook for any news about how we communicate for fun, education or work.

3.gifDo you see an ad for a tech gadget you'd like or a new model of a tool your family has?

You may want to save an email printout or a photo of a home phone as a reminder of how people used to communicate. Both tools could fade from mainstream to memories, especially among students. And although nearly 90 percent of U.S. households have a cell phone, use of voice minutes no longer climbs significantly each year.
We're in a communication revolution that has text messages, tweets, IMs and cell photos nudging aside chatty emails or calls. The average length of a local cell conversation dropped below two minutes in 2009.

Young users aren't alone in moving away from email and calls to keep in touch. The number of text messages sent per user grew by nearly 50 percent nationwide last year, the wireless industry association says. And for the first time in the United States, the amount of data in text, e-mail messages, streaming video, music and other services on mobile devices in 2009 surpassed the amount of voice data in cell calls.
Teens have been in the lead for a while, turning cell phones into texting powerhouses. More than half of them send about 1,500 text messages monthly, according to a recent study by the Pew Research Center's Internet and American Life Project. Convenience and privacy are two big reasons. Parents sometimes screen email, but can't snoop at phone texts as easily. As students reach college with well-establish online identities, many no longer want a campus e-mail address. Boston College last year began offering an e-mail forwarding service instead of a new account.

Other generations also are migrating away from landlines and e-mail for personal communication. Twenty-three percent of U.S. adults have a cell phone but no conventional home phone, federal data showed this month. Even in business, document transfer websites compete with email as a more secure way to share sensitive files and information. Many adults use Facebook, LinkedIn, Foursquare and other networks to let colleagues, friends and relatives know what they're doing, reading or watching. Even they know a Hotmail, Gmail or Yahoo! account is so yesterday.

Executive says: "Originally, talking was the only cell phone application. But now it's less than half of the traffic on mobile networks." -- Dan Hesse, chief executive of Sprint Nextel

Trend tracker says: "Email is an increasingly outdated medium." -- Ann Mack, 'director of trend-spotting' at JWT advertising agency

Blogger says: "Email may decline, but it's still largely useful for storage and lengthy conversations." -- Christiene Louviere at christienlouviere.com

Front Page Talking Points is written by Felix Grabowski and Alan Stamm for NIEonline.com, Copyright 2010
We welcome comments or suggestions for future topics: Click here to Comment

Front Page Talking Points Archive

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Tech tools are cool for school, students and educators agree

Turning a page: E-books move from margin to mainstream

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Turning point for Arizona immigration law is watched nationwide

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Add your scenes to 'Life in a Day' documentary -- new YouTube project

Is cheerleading a sport? A court in Connecticut hears arguments

Complete archive

Contact us for more info      Phone: 248 879 2133      E-mail: info@nieonline.com      Online Publications Inc., 55 E. Long Lake Rd. #416, Troy MI 48085