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Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Inside Higher Ed: Online Courseware's Existential Moment
February 3, 2011
Historically, universities such as Columbia, Oxford, Yale, Princeton and Stanford and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have defined their value by exclusivity as much as by excellence. The institutions positioned themselves as purveyors of an important public good — a corps of graduates fit to run a nation — but the classrooms and curriculums that ostensibly transform talented high-schoolers into cardholding members of the adult elite have been walled off from the general public.
In the Internet age, walls are everywhere falling in academe. Online education, all but cleansed of its original stigma, has become commonplace. This is especially true among big public universities, which have clamored to capitalize on new markets by enrolling far-flung students. The University of Massachusetts and Penn State University rake in tens of millions of dollars each year from their online programs. The University of California is considering using online education to help recoup the revenue lost to massive cuts in state funding.
But at elite private universities, the online revolution has unfolded differently. At first, several top institutions tried selling their course materials online through websites such as Fathom and AllLearn, but stopped upon discovering that not many people were willing to pay for online courses that did not lead to a diploma. Faced with the choice of either offering degrees online at a price or giving away courses for free, the elites took the road less traveled: they would publish the raw materials — and in some cases videotaped lectures — for certain courses on the Web, but would not offer online pathways for their coveted degrees.
Has it made a difference? And where does that unmarked road lead, anyway? Those questions lie at the heart of Unlocking the Gates: How and Why Leading Universities Are Opening Up Access to Their Courses (Princeton University Press), a new book by Taylor Walsh.
On the one hand, hundreds of millions of non-enrolled visitors, from nearly every country, have availed themselves of free online courseware from top American universities, explains Walsh, a research analyst at Ithaka S+R. Some are professors at foreign universities looking to model their own curriculums on the best of the West. In this light, free online courseware might be seen as a game-changing effort to level the playing field of international higher education.
On the other hand, absent the measures inherent to actual, degree-granting programs, there is no way to tell how much actual learning these expensive projects are creating. “If you take away OCW completely,” said Ira Fuchs, former vice president at the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, of MIT’s celebrated OpenCourseWare project, “I’m not sure that higher education would be noticeably different.” In that light, free online courseware might seem little more than noblesse oblige of a sort that is, not coincidentally, a boon to elite universities’ overseas branding and recruiting efforts.
In Unlocking the Gates, Walsh profiles current online courseware projects at MIT, Yale, Carnegie Mellon, the University of California at Berkeley, and India’s National Programme on Technology Enhanced Learning. She also reviews the cautionary tales of Fathom and AllLearn, the profit-seeking harbingers of the Open Educational Resources (OER) movement, and thus lays out the conundrum facing their nominally successful offspring: As pressure mounts on online courseware projects to demonstrate their value and/or become self-supporting, will the world's premier universities be able to stay above the fray of online degree programs and pay-to-play course materials? Can they afford to stay pure, righteous, and unaccountable?
Inside Higher Ed recently caught up with Walsh to explore these questions and others. The interview was conducted asynchronously and online; Walsh received no money, and Inside Higher Ed received no academic credit.
Q: Elite universities like to bill their free online courseware as a gift to the world. But one of your themes in Unlocking the Gates is the incredible strategic benefits of such projects in crucial overseas markets. Among top U.S. institutions, are open educational resources as much about international branding as altruism?
A: You’re right that raising their global profiles has certainly been one strategic benefit that some participating institutions have garnered from their open courseware efforts. Yale in particular comes to mind as a university that is unabashedly invested in expanding its global reach, and the Open Yale Courses (OYC) project can be understood as a tool to aid in that effort. But international branding is only one internal benefit that parent universities have derived from the development of open courseware. Though often designed primarily for external audiences, these projects have also made an impact closer to home, aiding efforts to improve alumni relations, recruit prospective students, and provide a welcome study aid (and a kind of enhanced course catalog) for the university’s enrolled student population.
It is also important to note that not all participating universities have leveraged their online courseware projects to the same degree. The impact an initiative has on public perceptions of its parent university can be linked to the extent of institutional branding on the site. The OYC site makes extensive use of the Yale name, logo, and even colors, rendering the site’s institutional affiliation unambiguous — so good press for OYC is good press for Yale. In contrast, Carnegie Mellon has consciously elected not to use the university’s name in that of its open courseware effort (called simply the “Open Learning Initiative”), perhaps missing an opportunity to indelibly align the host university with the positive attention that its courseware program has received.
Q: How important to the future of OER projects is the development of measures for finding out how much students are learning from free online course materials?
A: Your question raises the issue of assessment here, which poses a critical challenge to the open courseware community. For free and open resources that consist exclusively of published lecture materials, web analytics data can indicate how much traffic a site receives and from where -- but anecdotal feedback or voluntary survey participation have so far been the only means of gauging whether users find this material meaningful.
But if the goal of an open courseware effort is to truly encourage student learning at a distance, assessment is crucial. That’s what makes the Open Learning Initiative so compelling: this Carnegie Mellon-led effort embeds assessment mechanisms within the online course environment itself, such that the system is always collecting data on student learning to feed back to the course developers. Yet the OLI’s approach to courseware design is incredibly costly, and has required that courses are totally redesigned for web-based delivery — a process that not all universities will be able or willing to undertake.
Q: You write about how anxieties over profitability helped sink early attempts by elite universities to publish their course content online. You also show how the current projects owe their success largely to their willful avoidance of moneymaking business models. But the sustainability issue is now very real for each of the projects you profile. Which do you think is the most vulnerable to dwindling financial support from its original bankrollers, and which is the least vulnerable?
A: I think it’s not a question of choosing a winner or loser, but rather of understanding how each of these programs will adapt to changing circumstances. Many of the initiatives profiled in Unlocking the Gates were launched using outside foundation money (MIT OpenCourseWare, Open Yale Courses, and Carnegie Mellon’s Open Learning Initiative), and project leaders were always aware of the temporary nature of that funding — it was for start-up purposes only, not continuing operations. Now that those initial grants have been spent, these initiatives have already begun to adapt in a variety of ways. Some projects have redoubled their efforts to secure internal support from their host institutions; for instance, MIT’s general Institute budget has been supporting half of OCW’s annual operating costs for years, based in part on the conviction that the program is sufficiently embedded in the life of the university as to merit ongoing support. The OLI, on the other hand, has continued to seek and receive outside grants from a range of foundations, shifting the focus of its course development away from core Carnegie Mellon courses and toward courses aimed at a community college population, aligning itself with the new direction of funders’ priorities.
Q: Projects such as the MIT OpenCourseWare are often credited with providing curricular building blocks for foreign universities. But the president of Saint Michael’s College last year told me that he has considered encouraging his faculty to adopt online courseware from places like MIT and Yale. How likely is it that we’ll see faculty at mid-tier U.S. liberal arts colleges adopting online courseware from top institutions?
A: That’s a great question. One significant strength of liberal arts colleges has traditionally been their focused attention on high-quality undergraduate education, and it will be fascinating to see whether there are ways to incorporate new technologies into this kind of highly personalized instruction. It is certainly possible to imagine the use of courseware resources to supplement — or even supplant — the role of the textbook in certain introductory courses. But it remains to be seen whether large numbers of liberal arts colleges will choose to structure some of their teaching around a core lecture series developed elsewhere. This kind of cross-institutional sharing would require that the users overcome any “not invented here” bias that might dissuade them from adopting another professor’s courseware.
Q: Webcast.berkeley offers an interesting example of a high-profile OER project that grew up without huge angel investments or any particular model in mind. With technology such as lecture capture and iTunes U. becoming more popular, are we going to see a boom in “grassroots” OER projects?
A: I think that boom has already happened. Over 350 colleges and universities from around the world are now participating in iTunes U, over 75 maintain their own dedicated channels on YouTube EDU — and these figures are only continuing to climb.
With so much open content being created and shared through a variety of outlets, this is a very exciting time for online learning. But one of the challenges raised by this growing corpus of available lecture materials is that of demonstrating the value or impact of each new offering. In this next phase of development, the open courseware community — whose ranks are growing nearly every day — may have to grapple with difficult questions like: Do we really need yet another recording of Economics 101? And if so, how do we distinguish our version from all the others?
For the latest technology news and opinion, follow @IHEtech on Twitter.
— Steve Kolowich
Historically, universities such as Columbia, Oxford, Yale, Princeton and Stanford and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have defined their value by exclusivity as much as by excellence. The institutions positioned themselves as purveyors of an important public good — a corps of graduates fit to run a nation — but the classrooms and curriculums that ostensibly transform talented high-schoolers into cardholding members of the adult elite have been walled off from the general public.
In the Internet age, walls are everywhere falling in academe. Online education, all but cleansed of its original stigma, has become commonplace. This is especially true among big public universities, which have clamored to capitalize on new markets by enrolling far-flung students. The University of Massachusetts and Penn State University rake in tens of millions of dollars each year from their online programs. The University of California is considering using online education to help recoup the revenue lost to massive cuts in state funding.
But at elite private universities, the online revolution has unfolded differently. At first, several top institutions tried selling their course materials online through websites such as Fathom and AllLearn, but stopped upon discovering that not many people were willing to pay for online courses that did not lead to a diploma. Faced with the choice of either offering degrees online at a price or giving away courses for free, the elites took the road less traveled: they would publish the raw materials — and in some cases videotaped lectures — for certain courses on the Web, but would not offer online pathways for their coveted degrees.
Has it made a difference? And where does that unmarked road lead, anyway? Those questions lie at the heart of Unlocking the Gates: How and Why Leading Universities Are Opening Up Access to Their Courses (Princeton University Press), a new book by Taylor Walsh.
On the one hand, hundreds of millions of non-enrolled visitors, from nearly every country, have availed themselves of free online courseware from top American universities, explains Walsh, a research analyst at Ithaka S+R. Some are professors at foreign universities looking to model their own curriculums on the best of the West. In this light, free online courseware might be seen as a game-changing effort to level the playing field of international higher education.
On the other hand, absent the measures inherent to actual, degree-granting programs, there is no way to tell how much actual learning these expensive projects are creating. “If you take away OCW completely,” said Ira Fuchs, former vice president at the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, of MIT’s celebrated OpenCourseWare project, “I’m not sure that higher education would be noticeably different.” In that light, free online courseware might seem little more than noblesse oblige of a sort that is, not coincidentally, a boon to elite universities’ overseas branding and recruiting efforts.
In Unlocking the Gates, Walsh profiles current online courseware projects at MIT, Yale, Carnegie Mellon, the University of California at Berkeley, and India’s National Programme on Technology Enhanced Learning. She also reviews the cautionary tales of Fathom and AllLearn, the profit-seeking harbingers of the Open Educational Resources (OER) movement, and thus lays out the conundrum facing their nominally successful offspring: As pressure mounts on online courseware projects to demonstrate their value and/or become self-supporting, will the world's premier universities be able to stay above the fray of online degree programs and pay-to-play course materials? Can they afford to stay pure, righteous, and unaccountable?
Inside Higher Ed recently caught up with Walsh to explore these questions and others. The interview was conducted asynchronously and online; Walsh received no money, and Inside Higher Ed received no academic credit.
Q: Elite universities like to bill their free online courseware as a gift to the world. But one of your themes in Unlocking the Gates is the incredible strategic benefits of such projects in crucial overseas markets. Among top U.S. institutions, are open educational resources as much about international branding as altruism?
A: You’re right that raising their global profiles has certainly been one strategic benefit that some participating institutions have garnered from their open courseware efforts. Yale in particular comes to mind as a university that is unabashedly invested in expanding its global reach, and the Open Yale Courses (OYC) project can be understood as a tool to aid in that effort. But international branding is only one internal benefit that parent universities have derived from the development of open courseware. Though often designed primarily for external audiences, these projects have also made an impact closer to home, aiding efforts to improve alumni relations, recruit prospective students, and provide a welcome study aid (and a kind of enhanced course catalog) for the university’s enrolled student population.
It is also important to note that not all participating universities have leveraged their online courseware projects to the same degree. The impact an initiative has on public perceptions of its parent university can be linked to the extent of institutional branding on the site. The OYC site makes extensive use of the Yale name, logo, and even colors, rendering the site’s institutional affiliation unambiguous — so good press for OYC is good press for Yale. In contrast, Carnegie Mellon has consciously elected not to use the university’s name in that of its open courseware effort (called simply the “Open Learning Initiative”), perhaps missing an opportunity to indelibly align the host university with the positive attention that its courseware program has received.
Q: How important to the future of OER projects is the development of measures for finding out how much students are learning from free online course materials?
A: Your question raises the issue of assessment here, which poses a critical challenge to the open courseware community. For free and open resources that consist exclusively of published lecture materials, web analytics data can indicate how much traffic a site receives and from where -- but anecdotal feedback or voluntary survey participation have so far been the only means of gauging whether users find this material meaningful.
But if the goal of an open courseware effort is to truly encourage student learning at a distance, assessment is crucial. That’s what makes the Open Learning Initiative so compelling: this Carnegie Mellon-led effort embeds assessment mechanisms within the online course environment itself, such that the system is always collecting data on student learning to feed back to the course developers. Yet the OLI’s approach to courseware design is incredibly costly, and has required that courses are totally redesigned for web-based delivery — a process that not all universities will be able or willing to undertake.
Q: You write about how anxieties over profitability helped sink early attempts by elite universities to publish their course content online. You also show how the current projects owe their success largely to their willful avoidance of moneymaking business models. But the sustainability issue is now very real for each of the projects you profile. Which do you think is the most vulnerable to dwindling financial support from its original bankrollers, and which is the least vulnerable?
A: I think it’s not a question of choosing a winner or loser, but rather of understanding how each of these programs will adapt to changing circumstances. Many of the initiatives profiled in Unlocking the Gates were launched using outside foundation money (MIT OpenCourseWare, Open Yale Courses, and Carnegie Mellon’s Open Learning Initiative), and project leaders were always aware of the temporary nature of that funding — it was for start-up purposes only, not continuing operations. Now that those initial grants have been spent, these initiatives have already begun to adapt in a variety of ways. Some projects have redoubled their efforts to secure internal support from their host institutions; for instance, MIT’s general Institute budget has been supporting half of OCW’s annual operating costs for years, based in part on the conviction that the program is sufficiently embedded in the life of the university as to merit ongoing support. The OLI, on the other hand, has continued to seek and receive outside grants from a range of foundations, shifting the focus of its course development away from core Carnegie Mellon courses and toward courses aimed at a community college population, aligning itself with the new direction of funders’ priorities.
Q: Projects such as the MIT OpenCourseWare are often credited with providing curricular building blocks for foreign universities. But the president of Saint Michael’s College last year told me that he has considered encouraging his faculty to adopt online courseware from places like MIT and Yale. How likely is it that we’ll see faculty at mid-tier U.S. liberal arts colleges adopting online courseware from top institutions?
A: That’s a great question. One significant strength of liberal arts colleges has traditionally been their focused attention on high-quality undergraduate education, and it will be fascinating to see whether there are ways to incorporate new technologies into this kind of highly personalized instruction. It is certainly possible to imagine the use of courseware resources to supplement — or even supplant — the role of the textbook in certain introductory courses. But it remains to be seen whether large numbers of liberal arts colleges will choose to structure some of their teaching around a core lecture series developed elsewhere. This kind of cross-institutional sharing would require that the users overcome any “not invented here” bias that might dissuade them from adopting another professor’s courseware.
Q: Webcast.berkeley offers an interesting example of a high-profile OER project that grew up without huge angel investments or any particular model in mind. With technology such as lecture capture and iTunes U. becoming more popular, are we going to see a boom in “grassroots” OER projects?
A: I think that boom has already happened. Over 350 colleges and universities from around the world are now participating in iTunes U, over 75 maintain their own dedicated channels on YouTube EDU — and these figures are only continuing to climb.
With so much open content being created and shared through a variety of outlets, this is a very exciting time for online learning. But one of the challenges raised by this growing corpus of available lecture materials is that of demonstrating the value or impact of each new offering. In this next phase of development, the open courseware community — whose ranks are growing nearly every day — may have to grapple with difficult questions like: Do we really need yet another recording of Economics 101? And if so, how do we distinguish our version from all the others?
For the latest technology news and opinion, follow @IHEtech on Twitter.
— Steve Kolowich
Inside Higher Ed: 'The Heart of Higher Education'
February 8, 2011
While many college faculty members and administrators are focused on budget cuts or research agendas, Parker J. Palmer and Arthur Zajonc have issued a call to return to what they think matters the most: teaching, and teaching in an "integrative" way that moves past individual disciplines. Their appeal comes in a new book, The Heart of Higher Education: A Call to Renewal (Jossey-Bass). Palmer is best known for his book The Courage to Teach. Zajonc is professor of physics at Amherst College and director of the academic program of the Center for Contemplative Mind in Society. Zajonc and Palmer responded to questions about their new book:
Q: What are the major problems in higher education that you hope your approach will alleviate?
A: While every college or university has its own unique set of problems, if we step back and ask what are the larger, fundamental shortcomings of higher education, we see a small but potent set of issues that reflect neglect or a failure of courage. Derek Bok describes, for example, our long "neglect of purposes." We fail to ask, what are the true aims of higher education? Harry Lewis and Anthony Kronman lament the "soulless university" that today neglects its important task of engaging students concerning the purpose and meaning of their lives, or in Kronman’s words, "what life is for." Helen and Alexander Astin document the hopes and expectations of students, over two-thirds of whom hope that their undergraduate education will offer them the occasion to develop personal values, self-understanding, and "to find purpose in my life." We neglect these educational tasks -- which form the heart of higher education -- because of an impoverished and outdated view of reality (including ourselves), a truncated notion of knowing and learning, and a cost-benefit approach to ethics. In our book we seek to redress these failures in higher education not by prescribing a universal curriculum or set of pedagogical techniques; rather we offer a philosophical infrastructure for a coherent, integrative college education. With this as the larger context, professors, administrators, trustees, and students can convene spirited conversations concerning the particular local issues of their educational community. In this way we hope to marry the unique set of problems an institution faces with the larger principles and aims of a comprehensive, integrative education that does not shy away from the heart of the enterprise.
Q: Many in higher education today feel overwhelmed by dealing with the impact of budget cuts. Why should they focus on this agenda?
A: The change strategy that we advocate is drawn from community organizing. It requires little or no extra funding because the profession from which it comes almost always works in settings where there is little financial capital to fuel change — so community organizers learn to fuel change with human and social capital. The strategy we spell out in the book harnesses the enthusiasm, creativity, and common concerns that faculty and administrators have for the students they serve. In a time of budget cuts, our academic communities can still gather for collegial conversation and pedagogical innovation. In fact, times of crisis and austerity also offer opportunities when we are willing to ask hard questions and to set priorities concerning what is of true importance. Our book offers an overarching framework within which such conversations can take place, one that supports a coherent, integrative development of higher education. We also give guidance for how collegial conversations can be initiated and sustained on campus. In this way, we offer both a method and a philosophical infrastructure for holding meaningful dialogue about the central educational questions we face today in our colleges and universities.
Q: What is "integrative education" and how can it be promoted?
A: Our world is multidimensional; so is higher education. Every disciplinary area is like an axis or road through the landscape of life. But each captures only a fragment of the whole, offers only a partial picture of the full reality and so lacks breadth. At the first level, integrative education combines mastery of a single discipline with a vibrant engagement with other disciplines, near and far. Too often we seek to redress lack of breadth by the simple juxtaposition of courses through a distribution requirement. No real integration arises in this way. Other pedagogical means are required that bring the richness of learning into the hearts and minds of students and faculty. But this level of integration redresses only the breadth dimension of education, and fails to treat the heights and depths. Integrative education cannot shy away from questions of meaning, purpose and values. One method of addressing these is through the wide range of contemplative methods of learning that are being developed by faculty across the disciplines and in co-curricular contexts as well. Finally, all learning is situated, we live our lives within community and we should not neglect our responsibilities it. To this end, we cannot neglect the cultivation of the fundamental human capacities for compassion and altruistic action. These too need to be part of an integrative education. In this way we achieve a meaningful integration of the breadth of learning, with a serious and intimate exploration of our highest aspirations, never forgetting the suffering around us that calls for deepening our human relationships and good work within our diverse communities.
Q: In several places in the book, you criticize various kinds of boundaries that are well guarded in the academy. Why has higher education embraced so many divisions and how can they be eliminated?
A: We can perhaps point to Francis Bacon’s bold 17th century efforts at the reclassification of knowledge as the dawn of its modern fragmentation. This way of dividing our world was further refined and codified by the Enlightenment figures Diderot and D’Alembert in their encyclopedia project. Each of the departments of knowledge they defined became the fiefdom of a community of scholars who competed for limited resources and prestige. In our view, while we acknowledge the power of specialization, the deconstruction of the world and of ourselves has gone too far. For every step we make toward specialization and fragmentation, we need simultaneously to take steps toward integration and synthesis. One model for overcoming fragmentation is that of Einstein’s tiny Olympia Academy. It was a diverse, three-person, learning community that read widely, argued vigorously, hiked and speculated together for the three years prior to 1905, Einstein’s annus mirabilis, when he published four landmark papers. In order to redress the fragmentation of knowledge we need social forms and practices that bring us together across disciplines, that encourage lively engagement, and that support our personal integration of the disciplines, their methods as well as content. The world is an interconnected whole; our learning and praxis should reflect the reality of that interconnectedness.
Q: What are some current efforts at colleges that you particularly admire for their commitment to the ideas you discuss?
A: Throughout the book, and especially in the book’s appendix, we give many examples of significant attempts to make higher education more integrative in one way or another. One mentioned in the book is the fast growing appreciation of what has come to be called "contemplative pedagogy." It makes extensive use of secular contemplative exercises both for general capacity building (such as strengthening attention or emotional balance), as well as subject-oriented practices designed for a particular class. For example, the contemplative art of "beholding" in art history or compassion practices that shift game theoretical outcomes in an economics class are both being taught at Amherst College. Contemplation offers a wonderful method for deep engagement with class material, as well as a means of taking up questions of meaning, purpose, and values. (For detail see the Association for Contemplative Mind in Higher Education.) A second example, not in the book, is the University of Michigan’s Center for Research on Learning and Teaching (CRLT). Like similar teaching and learning centers across the country, the CRLT has provided both resources and encouragement for integrative education. Its presence on campus since 1962 has yielded many valuable programs. The CRLT Players Theatre Program is one example. This program "develops and performs sketches that engage faculty and graduate students in discussions of multicultural teaching and learning and institutional climate. Sketches are based on research concerning the experiences of under-represented students and faculty, such as women faculty and students in science and engineering, students of color, and students with disabilities." This program simultaneously employs and encourages the use of multiple modes of knowing, and has been very effective in advancing the integrative education agenda at a large research-oriented university.
— Scott Jaschik
Inside Higher Ed: 'The Heart of Higher Education'
Faculty Focus Special Report: Teaching with Technology
The Dillard University Center for Teaching, Learning, and Academic Technology Presents: The DU First Year Student: The Real Deal, Some Real Solutions
What we know based on the College Student Inventory (CSI) and The National First Year Survey
Coordinators:
Dr. Henrietta Harris
Dr. Dorothy Smith
Dr. Ramona Jean-Perkins
Where: Kearny West
When: February 10, 2011
Time: 11:30 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
Lunch will be provided through the line
Coordinators:
Dr. Henrietta Harris
Dr. Dorothy Smith
Dr. Ramona Jean-Perkins
Where: Kearny West
When: February 10, 2011
Time: 11:30 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
Lunch will be provided through the line
The Dillard University Center for Teaching, Learning, and Academic Technology Presents: The DU First Year Student: The Real Deal, Some Real Solutions
TOMORROW'S PROFESSOR: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains
Serious thought gives way to skimming and multitasking.
If, while perusing the articles of this month?s Prism, you?ve paused to check your e-mail, read online news, blog, tweet, connect on Facebook, catch a YouTube video, buy on Amazon, or perform one of any number of other Web activities that now permeate our lives, then author Nicholas Carr has a message for you: It?s time to consider how our constant, often disjointed engagement with the World Wide Web is changing us ? both individually and as a society.
In a widely discussed 2008 Atlantic Monthly article, Carr asked, ?Is Google Making Us Stupid?? His answer has sometimes been interpreted as an antitech creed, yet many recognized themselves in Carr?s descriptions of faltering ability to concentrate and the suspicion that the Internet is a key contributor. ?My mind now expects to take in information the way the Net distributes it,? he wrote, ?in a swiftly moving stream of particles. Once I was a scuba diver in a sea of words. Now I zip along the surface like a guy on a Jet Ski.?
The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains elaborates upon the original thesis, placing this newest technology within the context of a long history of systems that have not only influenced but also shaped the way we think. ?In large measure, civilization has assumed its current form as a result of the technologies people have come to use,? the author writes. ?Sometimes our tools do what we tell them to. Other times we adapt ourselves to our tools? requirements.? Consider how maps and clocks have altered our relation to space and time, he says, developing in us a more abstract sense of the measurement and order of both. In even more dramatic ways have ?intellectual technologies? ? writing systems, movable type, books, typewriters, telegraphs, and computers ? affected our thinking processes. Today the Internet is producing another huge shift, in large part because of its emphasis on speed and connectivity, and its onslaught of advertisements, hyperlinks, pop-ups, si debars, and e-mail notifications. ?Whenever we turn on our computers,? he writes, quoting blogger Cory Doctorow, ?we are plunging into an ?ecosystem of interruption technologies.??
The book?s subtitle should be interpreted literally. Several chapters are devoted to recent studies of brain functions. Not surprisingly, they tend to reveal the deleterious effects of sustained online activity ? decreased comprehension and concentration and less ability to analyze or think creatively. Web use does strengthen rapid decision making, problem solving, and mental coordination, Carr admits. But he questions whether these positives outweigh the negatives. While the Internet offers far greater access to information, it also encourages superficial connection to that knowledge. A 2006 study tracking how people read online found, for example, that the majority skimmed a Web article in a manner that resembles the letter F. The first few lines of text were read fully, but readers then dropped down to read a few more lines, then skimmed the rest, concentrating primarily on the left-hand side of a page. Most spent no more than 4.4 seconds on each page.
As we become more agile at multitasking online, Carr charges, ?we train our brains to process information quickly and efficiently but without sustained attention.? The implications of that loss could be significant. Even if you are one of those increasingly rare specimens who maintain steady, measured control over your online consumption, what about your students and colleagues, who are being swept into a 24/7 Internet existence? Though the wealth of material made available by the Internet would seem to make more extensive research possible, for example, a 2008 study has revealed just the opposite. The findings, published in Science magazine, revealed that the number of citations in academic articles has plummeted, with much greater reliance being placed on more recently published articles.
This is a book you will want to read carefully, for the number of provocative issues it raises and the compelling manner in which they are presented. So, when you take up The Shallows, do it with a hard copy and sustained attention ? then see how long it takes before the digital urge comes calling.
If, while perusing the articles of this month?s Prism, you?ve paused to check your e-mail, read online news, blog, tweet, connect on Facebook, catch a YouTube video, buy on Amazon, or perform one of any number of other Web activities that now permeate our lives, then author Nicholas Carr has a message for you: It?s time to consider how our constant, often disjointed engagement with the World Wide Web is changing us ? both individually and as a society.
In a widely discussed 2008 Atlantic Monthly article, Carr asked, ?Is Google Making Us Stupid?? His answer has sometimes been interpreted as an antitech creed, yet many recognized themselves in Carr?s descriptions of faltering ability to concentrate and the suspicion that the Internet is a key contributor. ?My mind now expects to take in information the way the Net distributes it,? he wrote, ?in a swiftly moving stream of particles. Once I was a scuba diver in a sea of words. Now I zip along the surface like a guy on a Jet Ski.?
The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains elaborates upon the original thesis, placing this newest technology within the context of a long history of systems that have not only influenced but also shaped the way we think. ?In large measure, civilization has assumed its current form as a result of the technologies people have come to use,? the author writes. ?Sometimes our tools do what we tell them to. Other times we adapt ourselves to our tools? requirements.? Consider how maps and clocks have altered our relation to space and time, he says, developing in us a more abstract sense of the measurement and order of both. In even more dramatic ways have ?intellectual technologies? ? writing systems, movable type, books, typewriters, telegraphs, and computers ? affected our thinking processes. Today the Internet is producing another huge shift, in large part because of its emphasis on speed and connectivity, and its onslaught of advertisements, hyperlinks, pop-ups, si debars, and e-mail notifications. ?Whenever we turn on our computers,? he writes, quoting blogger Cory Doctorow, ?we are plunging into an ?ecosystem of interruption technologies.??
The book?s subtitle should be interpreted literally. Several chapters are devoted to recent studies of brain functions. Not surprisingly, they tend to reveal the deleterious effects of sustained online activity ? decreased comprehension and concentration and less ability to analyze or think creatively. Web use does strengthen rapid decision making, problem solving, and mental coordination, Carr admits. But he questions whether these positives outweigh the negatives. While the Internet offers far greater access to information, it also encourages superficial connection to that knowledge. A 2006 study tracking how people read online found, for example, that the majority skimmed a Web article in a manner that resembles the letter F. The first few lines of text were read fully, but readers then dropped down to read a few more lines, then skimmed the rest, concentrating primarily on the left-hand side of a page. Most spent no more than 4.4 seconds on each page.
As we become more agile at multitasking online, Carr charges, ?we train our brains to process information quickly and efficiently but without sustained attention.? The implications of that loss could be significant. Even if you are one of those increasingly rare specimens who maintain steady, measured control over your online consumption, what about your students and colleagues, who are being swept into a 24/7 Internet existence? Though the wealth of material made available by the Internet would seem to make more extensive research possible, for example, a 2008 study has revealed just the opposite. The findings, published in Science magazine, revealed that the number of citations in academic articles has plummeted, with much greater reliance being placed on more recently published articles.
This is a book you will want to read carefully, for the number of provocative issues it raises and the compelling manner in which they are presented. So, when you take up The Shallows, do it with a hard copy and sustained attention ? then see how long it takes before the digital urge comes calling.
TOMORROW'S PROFESSOR: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains
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Academic Impressions Webcast Using Social Media for Teaching and Learning
April 25, 2011 :: 12:00 - 1:30 p.m. CDT
http://www.academicimpressions.com/events/event_listing.php?i=1100&t=Agenda&q=7486v427988xO101
Join us online as we showcase some effective uses of social media that are impactful in student learning. We'll discuss approaches that social media can help you accomplish experiential learning activities, student interactivity and engagement, and developing community and professional network.
WHAT YOU WILL LEARN
Our expert faculty will share a variety of examples of how social media can be used effectively and share tips and advice on the following:
•How to facilitate interactivity and engagement with social media tools
•Best practices in using social media including an information guide
•Consideration for integrating social media into curriculum
•Concerns about privacy in the use of social media
•Costs and implementation
•Evaluating the impact of social media on student learning
WHO SHOULD ATTEND
This webcast is ideal for faculty, instructional designers and technologists, academic computing services, and student computing services administrators who want to learn how to use social media tools effectively in the classroom.
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Register online or call 720.488.6800. Want to share this valuable information with your colleagues? Register your institution for a single site connection and an unlimited number of people can participate.
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Academic Impressions Webcast Using Social Media for Teaching and Learning
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