To be leaders, administrator must be microliterate; not to be barriers, they must be microliterate. The writers explain why and how.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
Bowman, J.; Kierstead, F.; Dede, C.; and Pulliam, J.The Far Side of the Future: Social Problems and Educational Reconstruction . Washington, D.C.: World Future Society, 1978.
2.
Leo, J. " Coping with Computers." Discover, December 1980, pp. 94-97.
3.
Mathews, W. M., ed. Monster or Messiah? The Computer's Impact on Society. Jackson, Miss.: University of Mississippi, 1980.
4.
Mathews, W.M., and Winkle, L.W. "Microliteracy, School Administrators and Survival" Compact, Fall 1981, pp.22-23.
5.
Molnar, A.R. "Computer Literacy in the Classroom." THE Journal5 (1978): 35-38.
6.
Norman, C.Worldwatch Paper 39-Microelectronics at Work: Productivity and Jobs in the World Economy. Washington, D.C.: Worldwatch Institute, 1980.
7.
Shelly, G.B., and Cashman, T.J.Introduction to Computers and Data Processing. Anaheim, Calif.: Anaheim Publishing Co., 1980.
8.
Tobias, S. MathAnxiety—What It Is and What Can Be Done About It. New York: W. W. Norton, 1978.
9.
Zanca, J. "Math Anxiety." In Multiplying Options and Subtracting Bias, edited by E. Fennema.Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, 1979.