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Teaching in a Digital Age

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Uploaded by on Feb 15, 2008

Teaching in a Digital Age: How Should Technologies Shape Our Learning Space and Pedagogical Practices?

According to a recent YouTube video, a student today will read 2,300 Web pages and 1,281 Facebook profiles this year, and 8 books. He or she will write 42 pages for class assignments this semester, and more than 500 pages of e-mail.

Having grown up immersed in technologies such as the Internet, iPods, PDAs and cell phones, most of today's undergraduates are "digital natives" and so enter our classrooms with different experiences, expectations and learning styles than previous generations of students.

This workshop will explore some of the challenges and opportunities provided by technology and the students who use it. Many of today's Web technologies can be powerful tools for creating effective, engaging learning environments, yet some argue that the use of such technologies in the classroom is problematic in various ways.

For example, handling different levels of technological expertise or different access to technological devices on the part of different students may be challenging, as may a faculty member's own skill and comfort level with various technologies. To what extent are faculty responsible for learning about and using these new technologies, and to what extent should they (or should they not) coax students away from technology for certain purposes, such as increasing their attention spans, introducing different modes of learning, or just simply reading pages from a book? Join us for a lively discussion of these and other issues around the use of digital technologies in the classroom.

Panelists: Patricia Armstrong, Assistant Director, Center for Teaching; Jay Clayton, William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of English; Matt Hall, Assistant Vice Chancellor for ITS

Co-sponsored by the Center for Ethics.

To learn more about this event or to register, please visit our Web site at http://www.vanderbilt.edu/cft

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  • thanks for posting. a summary version might be nice.

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  • The technology will survive and come to fruition, with or without any further illegal participation, eventually. Best regards and good luck to you all.

  • I sincerely hope that the information technology you are discussing is more kind to you than it has been to me. For example, wrongfully changed grades or grades for money, sex, drugs or anything other than study and testing is absolutely atrocious, especially if it is going on directly under our noses and we feel too threatened to respond, allowing crime to continue as the status quo.

  • I sincerely hope that the information technology you are discussing is more kind to you than it has been to me. For example, wrongfully changed grades or grades for money, sex, drugs or anything other than study and testing is absolutely atrocious, especially if it is going on directly under our noses and we feel too threatened to respond, allowing crime to continue as the status quo.

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