<p><i>"<b>Electronic Literacies</b> is a timely book filled with important ethnographic data on technology and language education, including interviews with students and teachers, observation of classrooms, and transcripts of students' online interactions. It is one of the few attempts to explore the role of the Internet in the development of the language literacy of minority students, who have typically been overlooked in Internet-based education....This text is an excellent resource for teachers and administrators interested in understanding the effects of new technologies on language teaching and learning....the book is a valuable new addition to the field of technology and language teaching and learning."</i><br />—<b><i>TESL-EJ</i></b></p><p><i>"Thankfully, Mark Warschauer's warts-and-all account of four very different university-level language learning classrooms in Hawai'i is not a one-eyed celebration of computers-in-classrooms but, rather, is a detailed and important account of four teachers' struggles with using new technologies to enhance their students' language learning....A real strength of Warchauer's book is the way in which he has drawn on theories of literacy and digital literacy from outside the domain of second language acquisition theory and conventional pedagogical approaches to computers and learning in second language classrooms. Indeed, Warschauer's breadth of sources is to be admired as he draws on work from educators and theorists in Australia, Canada, England, Hawai'i, and other U.S. states. <b>Electronic Literacies</b> will prove a rewarding launching pad for educators to think differently about literacy, language learning, and new technologies in the classroom. Warschauer deliberately and effectively locates his book as a complex intersection of the new literacy studies, digital technologies, and language education. Warschauer's book engages with current global themes in education--literacy, technology, equity--reminding educators that second-language teaching and learning is far from a neutral endeavor."</i><br />—<b><i>Contemporary Psychology</i></b></p><p><i>"...a study like Mark Warschauer's <b>Electronic Literacies</b> is both timely and much needed....<b>Electronic Literacies</b> is a valuable contribution to research on teaching and learning with technology, in large part because Wauschauer resists either utopian or dystopian extremes; instead he patiently reveals the contradictions inherent in the combination of traditional academic approaches with new media. The book will be of special interest to graduate students and faculty interested in the design and presentation of qualitative research, who will find in Warschauer's data collection and analysis methods much that is worthy of imitation....a worthy addition to any collection of works on ESL, writing instruction, or the use of the Internet in higher education."</i><br />—<b><i>The Journal of Highter Education</i></b></p><p><i>"I recommend the book to everyone interested in how new technologies are contributing to changes in the way literacy is viewed, as well as the those interested in researching teaching approaches using ICTs."</i><br />—<b><i>Computers & Education</i></b></p><p><i>"Warschauer studies groups of students that have traditionally been excluded from computer-mediated education. This is vital if we are to truly understand the effects of new technologies....I believe this work will have a significant impact on the introduction and use of computer-mediated learning in higher education."</i><br />—<b>Denise Murray</b><br /><i>San Jose State University</i></p><p><i>"Warschauer's analysis is clear, informative, and insightful....A very useful and important book."</i><br />—<b>Jim Cummins</b><br /><i>Ontario Institute for Studies in Education</i></p>