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- Computer underground Digest Sun Oct 19, 1997 Volume 9 : Issue 75
- ISSN 1004-042X
-
- Editor: Jim Thomas (cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu)
- News Editor: Gordon Meyer (gmeyer@sun.soci.niu.edu)
- Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
- Shadow Master: Stanton McCandlish
- Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
- Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
- Ian Dickinson
- Field Agent Extraordinaire: David Smith
- Cu Digest Homepage: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest
-
- CONTENTS, #9.75 (Sun, Oct 19, 1997)
-
- File 1--Second Special Issue on Net-based Teaching
- File 2--"Analysis of Technology in Adult Education" (Excerpt)
- File 3--The Vacuity of Information
- File 4--Euro Commission / protection of minors in AV/Info services
- File 5--Education and the Net -- Read and Weep
- File 6--Internet Research and Information for Social Scientists
- File 7--Learning Technologies Postdocs wanted!
- File 8--Review of "Net Lessons: Net-based Projects for your Classroom"
- File 9--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 May, 1997)
-
- CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION APPEARS IN
- THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 19 Oct 97 23:27 CDT
- From: Cu Digest <TK0JUT2@MVS.CSO.NIU.EDU>
- Subject: File 1--Second Special Issue on Net-based Teaching
-
- This is the second special issue on Net-related technology
- and education, a topic periodically requested by CuD readers.
- We will try to do an issue like this every six months or so.
-
- Readers pursuing Net-based pedagogy/curriculum might be
- interested in NET-TEACH, an academic-oriented discussion
- group addressing the subject primarily for post-secondary
- education.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 13 Oct 1997 16:40:41 -0500
- From: ISABAU <isabau@niu.edu>
- Subject: File 2--"Analysis of Technology in Adult Education" (Excerpt)
-
- ((MODERATORS' NOTE: The following is a brief dissertation
- extract on computer mediated learning by Isabelle Sabau.
- The complete manuscript, A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF SELECTED PROBLEMS
- IN USES OF TECHNOLOGY IN ADULT EDUCATION is available at:
-
-
- Introduction
-
- The brink of the 21st century is permeated with giant
- technological advances in the relationship between education and
- communication systems. The dizzying pace of the advances in the
- digital world has resulted in rapid metamorphoses in the
- understanding of such concepts as information, knowledge and
- learning, on one hand, and the methods employed for conveying
- these concepts on the other. The explosion of high tech has
- resulted in the necessity to redefine many of these previously
- familiar ideas. Reliance on technology demands more specialized
- qualifications for working with the increasingly more intricate
- equipment. At the same time, this amplified demand for technical
- knowledge appears to overshadow other areas of both practical
- and philosophical significance. Rapid exchanges of information
- leave little room for analysis and contemplation, thereby
- blurring the distinction between mere data and the further
- reaches of knowledge. This a priori conceptual analysis provides
- a means for a philosophical investigation of knowledge as it
- applies to culture and technology and as these aspects relate to
- distance education. This investigation opens the discussion of
- issues concerning the introduction of technology into the
- educational process. At the same time, the discussion is
- presented as a cautionary tale to raise awareness of the issues
- and suggest further studies.
-
- Since the accumulation of information has been expanding at
- an exponential rate of growth, its processing and significance
- have become increasingly more difficult for the average person
- to understand. These accelerated developments contribute to the
- ever-widening gap between the mass of information and
- possibilities, on the one hand, and an individual's personal
- opportunity to achieve mastery over the elusive yet increasing
- body of knowledge, on the other. Commercial advertising entices
- the consumer to purchase various computer programs under the
- promise of one's newly acquired ability to download "knowledge
- into their hard-drives." Such advertising promises further
- confuse the issue of facts and their meaning.
-
- In order to make sense of all this progress, knowledge must
- be distinguished from information in kind as well as in degree.
- This investigation will attempt to unravel the distinction
- between information and knowledge in the hope of discovering the
- limitations of technological means of educational delivery. As
- will be shown, knowledge refers to a wider process of
- manipulation of information along with synthesis and analysis.
- Understanding basic principles that govern the underlying
- reality requires more than transmission of data. If this
- definition is correct, then technology may enhance the learning
- and education process, yet it can not relay knowledge.
-
- The risks inherent in overconfidence in technology may conflate
- the transfer of information and knowledge. The distinction
- between these two concepts refers to information being the
- precept while knowledge provides the concepts and means of
- integrating the data. Technological advances offer a solution
- for dealing with the increasing amount of data and information
- by extending the natural qualities and capacities of the human
- mind. Technology may aid the processing and storage of
- information in a fast and accurate manner, but the sentient
- being manipulating the information is the one that has
- knowledge. Reducing knowledge to just information transfer
- weakens and overly simplifies the idea of education and thereby
- confuses the need for understanding the concepts for the
- manipulation of the information. Thus, on the one hand, new
- information and data grow exponentially, but on the other hand,
- computers and other related tools provide wider and faster
- access and usage of the available data. The power of the
- computer -- especially in the areas of communication and social
- change -- was made acutely poignant by the implementation of
- electronic mail in the White House, and its subsequent press
- release:
-
- Today we are pleased to announce that for the first time in
- history, the White House will be connected to you via
- electronic mail. Electronic mail will bring the Presidency
- and this Administration closer and make it more accessible
- to the people. (letter from the President and
- Vice-President in announcement of White House electronic
- mail access, June 1, 1993).[1]1
-
- It would appear that without these high tech advances and
- equipment, human progress in knowledge and understanding of the
- world would be very slow and difficult. The opportunities that
- new technology produces allow for large databases with fast
- cross-references which have hailed the era of global information
- highways and the integration of more diverse ideas. The same
- forces that propel humans to constant adjustment and change --
- that is, the technology -- also provide the tools for
- re-evaluation and thereby enrich the intellectual relationship
- between individuals and their environments. All these features
- offer the promise of more free flow of information and thereby
- greater interaction among diverse populations and geographical
- spans.
-
- Distance learning and education
-
- Fast-paced modern societies and demands for specialization
- increasingly require more precise skills and abilities on the
- part of individuals. Along with this, there is an increasing
- need for life-long education, since adults must continually
- upgrade their knowledge to meet technologic advances. In other
- words, it appears that on the whole, society itself is becoming
- a complex school, forcing the necessary participation of its
- citizens in the continual up-grading of skills in order for
- these citizens to be able to cope with the ever-changing world.
- The technological changes in turn affect the available body of
- knowledge and its component data bases. Philosophical questions
- arise about the implications of technology in particular dealing
- with education and learning. It is necessary to address the role
- of information and its transference in the learning process and
- the methods whereby information can ultimately become knowledge.
-
- The processes of education and learning promise the
- delivery of knowledge to students, and technology is seen as a
- possible alternative means of teaching. The question becomes
- whether technology would ultimately enhance education, and how
- best it may be employed in the process. Together, technology and
- its effects on individuals and their understanding of the world,
- produce new ways of formulating knowledge and also new means to
- enable individuals to find meanings amidst the data. Knowledge
- is to be viewed as the ability to synthesize facts, evidence,
- principles, laws, and logical reasoning. In order for this
- concept of knowledge to be achieved, alternative teaching and
- learning methods must be sought. Is education to be to reduced
- to the manipulation of information, or is the learning process
- more complex relying on discussion and dialogue and thus
- necessitating real time personal contact between the teacher and
- the student?
-
- Traditional schooling appears inadequate to meet these new
- pressures. This deficiency opens the door for new considerations
- of ways to teach, learn and understand. Time constraints, in
- conjunction with the many roles and expectations that plague
- modern adults, place special demands and strains on traditional
- schooling. This forces learners and educators alike to search
- for alternative teaching and learning methods. Of primary
- importance in formulating such methods is the continuous
- incorporation of the latest studies in neurobiological research,
- psychological testing, memory and intelligence developments. All
- these areas significantly contribute to our understanding of the
- thinking processes of human beings along with sociological and
- cultural studies. Formulating teaching and learning methods
- that follow the pattern-forming processes of the brain can
- greatly enhance education by emphasizing the understanding and
- synthesis of ideas and their relation to the more complex body
- of knowledge the individual already possesses.
-
- Among the alternative methods are correspondence and
- evening courses which have a long history, but which are also
- being replaced by newer methods that incorporate audio/visual
- and interactive techniques made possible by the latest
- technological advances.[2]2 One may ask if the introduction and
- emphasis on technology encourages a commercialization of
- knowledge and what the reprecussions of such a view would be.
- There are a number of companies sprouting which, enabled by
- access to the Internet, promise individuals a variety of
- educational activities that claim to produce knowledge. One very
- important point to consider is the role that academic
- institutions play in this process of commecializing education,
- and what can happen to such ideas as standards, quality and
- curricula.
-
- As electronic and informational technologies proliferate
- and become more readily available, their philosophical
- implications and their subtle influences on the individual need
- to be discussed and evaluated. At present the gap between those
- who have access to technology and those who don't is widening,
- especially the disparities between various countries. The
- analysis of current methodologies for the implementation of
- technologically based alternative methods, employing the
- ever-growing array of technological possibilities should provide
- prescriptions for their improvement as well as uncover their
- inherent limitations. The increasing dependence that modern
- humans exhibit toward the electronic and technological world
- creates different paradigms for defining knowledge and its
- reliance on accumulation of information and data bases. Does
- increased access to the proliferation of information improve
- knowledge accumulation, and who should be in charge of
- controlling the quality and standards of learning? In other wor
- ds, if education is to be viewed as a business enterprise, can
- anyone become an educational entrepreneur? Does the business
- paradigm threaten the quality of education by placing it at the
- whim of a free market which is based on supply and demand?
-
- To remain economically viable and progressive and to
- continue to grow in personal terms, individuals today need to
- understand the ubiquitous role technology plays in their lives,
- and especially in their education. This understanding should
- provide a window to the metaphysical world inhabited by modern
- persons and render vague and ambiguous the distinction between
- "reality" and "possibility." Technology has enabled the creation
- of new worlds -- virtual reality and cyberworlds -- in which
- individuals meet, communicate and interact. These new virtual
- spaces provide different dimensions for dialogue and may become
- increasingly useful in the learning process. Dialogue provides
- the opportunity for exchange of ideas, but it also emphasizes
- the personal, co-learning dimension that is necessary for a
- deeper understanding of the educational process. Currently,
- video games and other computerized techniques are employed to
- enable individuals more stimulating as well as remedial learning
- environments, especially providing alternatives to cope with
- learning disabilities.[3]3
-
- In order to maximize the potential of the information
- technology, the ideas concerning learning require a discussion
- that will synthesize philosophical with educational practice and
- theory. Various philosophical questions arise, for example:
- what is knowledge? What is its relationship to data and
- information? Other important questions are: is all knowledge and
- communication to be understood in terms of the transmission of
- digital information? Are there any inherent dangers in such
- overwhelming dependence on electronic media and technology?
- Education has long been understood in terms of providing
- knowledge, but this aspect relies on viewing "knowledge" as a
- process that includes ideas about truth and reality. The
- educational enterprise is deemed responsible for producing
- knowledgeable individuals who are sanctioned by institutions of
- learning with various degrees designed to reflect a standard
- curriculum that aims at integrating the individual into the
- larger society. The curriculum emphasizes skills and knowledge
- about the self and the world at large. The degrees conveyed by
- various institutions relfect the standards society deems
- necessary in order to recognize an individual's accumulated
- knowledge. What is the process by which persons begin to
- integrate relevant information into the complexity that becomes
- an "educated" citizen? The metamorphosis of information, data
- and understanding into knowledge needs to be analyzed to reveal
- the role of technologically based processes of learning in the
- educational enterprise. To this extent, this investigation is a
- conceptual exploration of these ideas.
-
- One important cornerstone of American democracy is public
- education, which was designed to ensure the thoughtful exercise
- of civic duty within the community and the voting booth. In the
- words of George Washington, the First President of the United
- States: "Religion, morality, and knowledge being necessary to
- good government and the happiness of mankind, schools and the
- means of education shall forever be encouraged."[4]4 Yet, our
- rapidly changing world demands scrutiny and continuous
- re-evaluation of the concept and processes of education, of the
- assumption of the purposes of education and the end products
- education is thought to produce. This discussion will juxtapose
- theory and application in an attempt to synthesize them. The
- philosophical framework of semiotics will inform this work for
- conceptual as well as practical analysis.
-
- REFERENCES
-
- 1. Steven G. Jones Cybersociety: Computer-mediated communication
- and community (CA: Sage Publ. Inc., 1995), p.2
-
- 2. Borje Holmberg, Distance Education: a Survey and Bibliography
- (London: Kogan Page, 1977), p.9
-
- 3. Mary Peterson Kauffold, "Changing Perception", Chicago
- Tribune, Sunday Feb 18, 1996, section 17, p.3
-
- ++++++++++
-
- {The full dissertation can be obtained from:
- http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest/isadiss.txt
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 30 Jul 1997 15:33:17 EDT
- From: Steve Talbott <stevet@ora.com>
- Subject: File 3--The Vacuity of Information
-
- Issue #54 Copyright 1997 Bridge Communications July 30, 1997
- ------------------------------------------------------
- Editor: Stephen L. Talbott (stevet@oreilly.com)
-
- On the Web: http://www.oreilly.com/people/staff/stevet/netfuture/
- You may redistribute this newsletter for noncommercial purposes.
-
- The Vacuity of Information
- -------------------------
-
- According to David Shenk, author of *Data Smog: Surviving the Information
- Glut*,
-
- For many businesses, the irony is that the cheaper information becomes,
- the more expensive it is to deal with.
-
- Yes, although I'm not so sure about the irony. If "information" is
- precisely articulable, if it is measurable as so many bits stored in a
- database, if it is easily transmissible -- in other words, if it fits the
- criteria for information according to the prevalent rhetoric -- then it
- follows in a straightforward way that any preoccupation with information
- will penalize our pursuit of whatever is important.
-
- Why? Because the precision, the measurability, and the transmissibility
- all stand in a kind of opposition to depth of meaning and significance.
- This trade-off is clearly demonstrable through an examination of the basic
- act of communication (see, for example, my discussion in
- http://www.oreilly.com/people/staff/stevet/fdnc/ch23.html), yet it remains
- the great, ignored truth at the heart of the Information Age. We have, of
- course, almost made a cliche of the slogan, "information is not wisdom."
- But until we vividly recognize the actual *opposition* between the two
- terms -- and learn to live creatively within this opposition -- the effort
- to reconceive society in terms of information and its flows will prove
- extremely corrosive of everything that matters.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 05 Sep 1997 09:00:03 -0400
- From: Paul Kneisel <tallpaul@nyct.net>
- Subject: File 4--Euro Commission / protection of minors in AV/Info services
-
- (fwd)
-
- [EDITORIAL NOTE: Introduction from moderator: for those who
- haven't read the documents released by the European Parliament and
- other European authorities on these subjects, let me translate:
- "Protection of Minors" refers to blocking pornography, while
- "Human Dignity" means blocking racist/Nazi propaganda. -- Andy
- Oram, Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility]
-
- The Forum:
- http://europa.eu.int/en/comm/dg10/avpolicy/forum/index.html
-
- General information on the European Commission's Audiovisual Policy:
- http://europa.eu.int/en/comm/dg10/avpolicy/avpolicy.html
-
- Contact: Nathalie LABOURDETTE, tel.32-2/296 67 72
- avpolicy@dg10.cec.be fax.32-2/296 69 92
-
- *** New Discussion Forum on the Internet
- to debate specific issues of the European Commission_s=20
- Green Paper on the Protection of Minors and Human Dignity
- in Audiovisual and Information Services ***
-
- Following its Green Paper on the Protection of Minors and Human
- Dignity in Audiovisual and Information services and the first
- conclusions presented in a European Commission staff working paper,
- the Commission services are currently drafting a Communication and
- draft project for a Council Recommendation on this subject.
-
- In order to enrich and update the Commission services' information on
- the relevant topics and to encourage the networking of organisations
- and individuals actively working on measures to ensure the protection
- of minors and human dignity in audiovisual and information services,
- the European Commission has opened a Discussion Forum which discusses
- four specific issues:
-
- - Labelling, rating and filtering systems on the Internet;
- - Raising awareness and education of Internet users;
- - Promoting quality content for children on the Internet;
- - Monitoring and evaluation of relevant policies and initiatives.
-
- The Commission would appreciate very much if you could contribute with
- your expertise to one or more of these topics. Please feel also free
- to forward this message to persons and/or organisations which you
- think could be interested in contributing to the debate.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 30 Jul 1997 15:33:17 EDT
- From: Steve Talbott <stevet@ora.com>
- Subject: File 5--Education and the Net -- Read and Weep
-
- Issue #54 Copyright 1997 Bridge Communications July 30, 1997
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Editor: Stephen L. Talbott (stevet@oreilly.com)
-
- On the Web: http://www.oreilly.com/people/staff/stevet/netfuture/
- You may redistribute this newsletter for noncommercial purposes.
-
-
- Education and the Net -- Read and Weep
- --------------------------------------
-
- Writing in *Business Week* (July 28), a fourth-grade teacher describes her
- truly heroic efforts to get her students on the Net in the interest of
- bringing science alive for them. Her selfless energy and devotion is
- matched only by the pitiful insignificance of the treasure the educational
- establishment has inspired her to seek. Here is one of her anecdotes:
-
- Fourth-graders solicited questions from students and submitted them to
- researchers at Georgia Tech. My students retrieved the answers and
- aired them over the school's closed-circuit TV system.
-
- And a second one:
-
- At a planetarium, Megan, one of my girls, interrupted the talk on
- downloading images to ask: "Is that ProComm Plus you are using?" When
- the surprised speaker answered "yes," Megan said, "I use that at
- school." He invited her to demonstrate, and Megan easily downloaded an
- image from a remote observatory. I was so proud.
-
- Almost makes you forget that there's a real world out there for
- healthy young children to explore.
-
- Actually, the teacher does mention in passing a couple of direct
- learning activities her students engaged in. But these turn out
- to have nothing to do with the computer.
-
- *Business Week* subtitled the article, "A Georgia teacher tells
- how she got her students on the Web -- and wild about science."
- Nothing in the article verifies the "wild about science" part,
- but presumably the children had as much fun playing with their
- new toys as many grown-ups do.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Jdierick@aol.com
- To: JThomas@sun.soci.niu.edu
- Subject: File 6--Internet Research and Information for Social Scientists
-
- This seemed like something that might be of interest to you.
-
- -jennifer
- ---------------------
- From--John.Kirriemuir@bristol.ac.uk (John Kirriemuir)
- To--IVSA@PDOMAIN.UWINDSOR.CA (Multiple recipients of list IVSA)
- Date: 97-10-19 14:59:13 EDT
-
- ======== (apologies for cross posting) ========
-
- 1st call for delegates for IRISS and
- 2nd call for abstracts for IRISS
-
- IRISS'98 Internet Research and Information for Social
- Scientists
- 25-27 March 1998
- University of Bristol, UK
- http://www.sosig.ac.uk/iriss/
- email: iriss-info@bris.ac.uk
-
- A three day conference hosted by the Institute for Learning
- and Research Technology at the University of Bristol.
-
- The first international IRISS conference aims to bring
- together social scentists who are interested in the
- Internet, either as a means of supporting and
- enhancing their work, or as a focus for their research.
-
- ***CONFERENCE THEMES***
-
- The themes of this year's conference are Internet skills, sites and
- social effects. The conference aims to reflect the practical and
- theoretical questions raised by the increasing role of networked
- information in the social sciences and society. Topics for debate
- include:
-
- * how can social scientists make effective use of the
- Internet in their work?
- * where and how are social scientists using the Internet
- to enhance their work and what effect is it having on
- traditional roles and working methods?
- * what high quality information can the Internet supply to
- social scientists?
- * what impact does the Internet have on individuals and
- society and what visions do we have for the future?
-
- ***ATTENDING IRISS AS A DELEGATE***
-
- This is the first call for delegates for IRISS. Confirmed, to date,
- for the conference are:
-
- * several high-profile keynote speakers
- * a large variety of papers and presentations, covering all of the
- conference themes, and presented by speakers from a combination of
- academic, commercial, public and social/voluntary organisations
- * pre and during conference hands-on workshops, in fully networked
- rooms and conducted by experienced Internet for Social Scientist
- trainers
- * the main conference dinner, held in the prestigious Harveys
- Restaurant and Museum - see:
- http://www.sosig.ac.uk/iriss/harveys.html
-
- Bristol is a city in the west of England; it is served by an
- international airport, located 11 miles south of the city. The city has
- two major train stations, with frequent train services to London (in
- under 2 hours) and other cities. South Wales is a few minutes away by
- train or car, and the scenic areas of the Cotswolds, Cornwall and Devon
- are all easily accessible, as are attractions such as the city of Bath,
- Stonehenge and Avebury.
-
- Bristol itself is a thriving cosmopolitan city, with a very lively
- social and cultural scene. The city has many famous sites of
- interest, such as the Clifton suspension bridge and the S.S. Great
- Britain, which are within a short distance of the conference location
- and accomodation. Various on-line guides to Bristol include:
-
- http://www.epost.co.uk/standards/bestofbris.html
- http://www.bristol.digitalcity.org/org/council/about-bristol.html
-
- A reduction is available to all delegates registering before 19
- December 1997. Further details on booking can be found on the IRISS Web
- site.
-
- ***CALL FOR PAPERS***
-
- We invite papers and participation from:
-
- * practitioners in the field who use the Internet to
- support their day to day work
- * researchers using Internet information and communication
- in their research
- * librarians developing their Internet knowledge and skills
- to serve a social science user group
- * educators interested in using the Internet for teaching
- and learning
- * information providers who publish on the Internet and
- wish to reach the social science community
-
- In addition to concurrent paper and workshop sessions the
- conference will feature an ongoing poster session and a
- dedicated Internet Gallery in a fully networked environment
- enabling contributors to display high quality Internet
- resources.
-
- ***HOW TO CONTRIBUTE***
-
- If you are interested in submitting a paper, joining the
- Internet Gallery or ongoing poster session, visit our Web
- site at:
-
- http://www.sosig.ac.uk/iriss/
-
- for conference information together with online booking and
- submission forms. The Web site will be updated frequently
- as information becomes available and will include full
- programme details and abstracts. The deadline for the
- submission of abstracts is 7 November 1997.
-
- ***CONFERENCE FEE***
-
- Delegates presenting papers will pay a reduced conference
- fee. A reduction will also be available to all delegates
- registering before 19 December 1997. Full details are
- available from the Web site.
-
- ***HOST A MEETING AT IRISS***
-
- Would your organisation or professional association like to
- host a meeting at IRISS? We can provide free meeting
- rooms and refreshments for groups booking to attend the
- conference. Special discounts are available to groups of
- 10 or more. For further information contact the Conference
- Secretary at:
-
- iriss-info@bris.ac.uk
-
- General conference enquiries should be directed to:
-
- IRISS Conference Secretariat
- Institute for Learning and Research Technology
- University of Bristol
- 8 Woodland Road
- BRISTOL
- BS8 1TN, UK
- Tel: +44 (0)117 928 8474
- Fax: +44 (0)117 928 8473
- Email: iriss-info@bris.ac.uk
-
- IRISS Web site: http://www.sosig.ac.uk/iriss/
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 16 Oct 1997 16:57:47 -0800
- From: Roy Pea <roypea@unix.SRI.COM>
- Subject: File 7--Learning Technologies Postdocs wanted!
-
- POST DOCTORAL SCHOLARS
- Center for Innovative Learning Technologies
-
- We expect to select 4 Post-doctoral Scholars to participate in the
- National Science Foundation funded Center for Innovative Learning
- Technologies. The center is directed by Roy Pea, SRI International, and Co-
- directed by John Bransford, Vanderbilt, Marcia C. Linn, University of
- California, Berkeley, Barbara Means, SRI, and Bob Tinker, Concord
- Consortium. Successful applicants will be located at one or more of
- the following institutions: University of California, Berkeley, SRI,
- Vanderbilt, Concord Consortium.
-
- Post-doctoral Scholars will join a multidisciplinary team of
- researchers aimed at improving the effectiveness of technology in
- education. Participants will work with leaders in education,
- technology, and the science disciplines.
-
- Each Post-doctoral Scholar will conduct a research program in a
- supportive, exciting environment with input from leaders in the
- field. Post-doctoral Scholars will learn about advances on all fronts of
- technology and education. They will jointly contribute to standards,
- guidelines, and a theory of design for innovations.
-
- We have an immediate opening for someone with background and
- interest in Visualization and Modeling.
-
- QUALIFICATIONS
- Candidates should have a background in mathematics, the natural
- sciences, engineering, or computer science and a Ph. D. in
- mathematics, the natural sciences, engineering, computer science,
- education, or related disciplines. Applicants should demonstrate
- ability to work on a team, interest in using collaborative technologies,
- and interest in developing a multidisciplinary research program.
-
- Applicants should be available to start between November 1997 and
- September 1998. Positions are for two years with possible renewal for
- a third year. Affirmative action, equal opportunity employer.
-
- CENTER DESCRIPTION
- Center for Innovative Learning Technologies
-
- The Center for Innovative Learning Technologies (CILT) stimulates
- the development and implementation of important, technology-
- enabled solutions to critical problems in K-14 science, mathematics,
- engineering, and technology learning. Four founding institutions-
- SRI International; the University of California at Berkeley;
- Vanderbilt University; and the Concord Consortium provide Center
- leadership and infrastructure.
-
- "Theme teams" will conduct the Center's research, development, and
- implementation activities. Participants drawn from both from the
- founding organizations and elsewhere will represent the best
- possible mix of expertise. The Center's initial themes are: Virtual
- Learning Communities; Visualization and Modeling; Low-Cost,
- Ubiquitous Computing; and Assessment. Theme teams will include
- experts in technology from natural science, computer science, and
- engineering; experts in science, mathematics, and engineering
- instruction, policy, and research; and industry leaders.
-
- Participants will work together in national workshops and on-line
- discussions to review their research results, identify critical
- challenges and potential breakthroughs in their theme area, and
- select prototype collaborative projects for CILT sponsorship. These
- prototype projects will serve as "seed" efforts that, with external
- funding, can transform the use of learning technologies in education.
-
- CILT provides the infrastructure for:
- *synthesizing learning technology R&D and implementation lessons
- across projects,
- *stimulating multidisciplinary collaboration and rapid innovation,
- and
- *fostering communication between technology developers,
- educational and cognitive researchers, and schools to increase the
- impacts of research-based technology supports on mathematics and
- science learning.
-
- CILT will train Postdoctoral scholars from multiple disciplines to
- leadthe field of learning technologies in the future.
-
- FOR MORE INFORMATION: www.cilt.ltc.vanderbilt.edu
-
- TO APPLY
- Send CV, statement of purpose, one or more academic papers, and a
- list of people we might contact for letters of recommendation to:
-
- Marcia C. Linn
- University of California at Berkeley
- Graduate School of Education,
- 4611 Tolman Hall
- Berkeley, California 94720-1670
- mclinn@socrates.berkeley.edu
-
-
- Roy Pea
- SRI International
- Director, Center for Technology in Learning (CTL) and
- Director, NSF Center for Innovative Learning Technologies (CILT)
- 333 Ravenswood Avenue, BS 124
- Menlo Park, CA 94025
-
- 415-859-5866 Office
- 415-859-2861 Fax
-
- Visit our CTL Web site at http://www.sri.com/policy/teched/welcome.shtml
- Visit our CILT Web site at http://www.cilt.ltc.Vanderbilt.edu
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 19 Oct 1997 23:20:49 -0500 (CDT)
- From: Jim Thomas <jthomas@SUN.SOCI.NIU.EDU>
- Subject: File 8--Review of "Net Lessons: Net-based Projects for your Classroom"
-
- Review of: NET LESSONS: WEB-BASED PROJECTS FOR YOUR CLASSROOM.
- By Laura Parker Roerden. 1997. Sebastopol (Calif): O'Reilly.
- 284 pp. $24.95 (paper).
-
- The question is no longer whether Web-based pedagogy will have an
- impact on education. The question is how much, how fast, and how
- far. NET LESSONS will benefit especially those teachers who are
- not yet comfortable with the Web, and who remain unsure of how to
- integrate Web and Internet exercises into their classes or
- curriculum. Although written primarily for primary and secondary
- (K-12) instructors, Roerden identifies some basic strategies for
- a Web-integrated curriculum that can be upgraded fairly easily
- for post-secondary classes.
-
- Roerden begins with the most basic question: Why should any
- instructor bother learning about the Web? Then, like a patient
- teacher, she explains the rationale and identifies the resources
- available for students and teachers.
-
- Chapter 2, "Designing your Curriculum," provides a dozen
- activities that can be developed by instructors at any level. In
- addition to the obvious tasks of using the Web as a resource and
- for communication, she lists a few narrower uses, including
- mentoring, social interaction, simulation, surveys, and Web
- publishing. The remainder of the book describes how the dozen
- activities can be integrated into substantive courses, such as
- math, social studies, language, science, and art. Each chapter
- contains a well-defined series of exercises for various grade
- levels, but the excericises can be modified to fit college
- courses as well.
-
- Although the sample activities in the chapters were submitted by
- the individual instructors who created them, they possess
- remarkable consistency in quality, format, and substance. Each
- exercise specifies a project's timeline, objectives,
- prerequisites, and procedures. Some excericises are designed for
- individual students and others for students working in groups.
- All can be modified as needed for content, work load, and grade
- level. Three appendixes include a Net lesson index, sample
- worksheets, and a list of useful URLs pointing to curriculum
- resources and teaching strategies.
-
- Although minor quibbles, there are few details that the author
- might correct in future editions. First, Roerden uses the term
- "Internet" and "Web" interchangeably. This inaccuracy is
- especially ironic in a volume attempting to introduce youth to
- Cyberspace. This faux pas should be corrected. Second, the net is
- not as race/sex/culture blind as the author claims. Differences
- in backgrounds and biographies shape facility and comfort with
- Net interaction. Given the diversity of abilities and
- personalities, a volume such as this would benefit from including
- a chapter or two on breaking down differences amongst students.
- Third, the volume should include a chapter or two on CGI scripts
- that enhance the exercises. Fourth, the omission of synchronous
- interactive exercises using discussion groups and software such
- as Engaged to communicate with others was disappointing. Fifth,
- given the emerging PC-based audio-visual technology, a future
- edition should address the potential of web-based synchronous and
- asynchronous A/V classroom activities.
-
- A final criticism focuses on O'Reilly's odd tendency to include
- supplemental CDROM disks in their works. This volume might seem
- an exception were it not that the disk O'Reilly provides is AOL
- 3.0. When the book jacket indicates CD-ROM included, I felt as
- though I were the victim of a practical joke when I found the
- same disk that AOL has sent me at least a half-dozen times in the
- past year. The blatant hucksterism of this misleading promo
- detracts from the credibility not only of the book, but also from
- O'Reilly. One expect a bit more from them.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 7 May 1997 22:51:01 CST
- From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
- Subject: File 9--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 May, 1997)
-
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- ------------------------------
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- End of Computer Underground Digest #9.75
- ************************************
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