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Saved by 20 people (0 private), first by anonymouse user on 2009-06-04


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Highlighted by mireillej

on 2009-06-05 by mireillej

There's quite some research indicating that Tapscott is wrong. I've bookmarked some interesting articles at Diigo, 'generations'-tag. My impression is that the generation fad has been invented by marketeers and consultants, who hope to make some good money out of it.

on 2009-06-09 by fededouble

Thank you Mireille, i red the articles you suggested. i'm really intersted on the topic of education, at least because i'm still a student. Even if 'net generation' literacy gap is not such a tremendous force -as researches you suggested says- it is undubitable that digital era changed the way we all research information and the way we all learn day-by-day moment-by-moment (more younger than older). That's the point: tenure and the way universities teach is less efficient and less "fascinating" then it was in the past. Today they should reshape themself to stay as acctractive as they were.

Highlighted by powelstock

on 2009-06-05 by powelstock

Marvin Bressler, with a 'B'! Jeez.

today

Highlighted by fededouble

University attendance is at an all time high. The percentage of young people enrolling in degree granting institutions rose over 115% from 1969-1970 to 2005-2007

Highlighted by fededouble

the percentage of 25- to 29-year-old Americans with a college degree doubled

Highlighted by fededouble

Yet there are troubling indicators

Highlighted by fededouble

Universities are finally losing their monopoly on higher learning, as the web inexorably becomes the dominant infrastructure for knowledge

Highlighted by fededouble

Meanwhile on campus, there is fundamental challenge to the foundational modus operandi of the University — the model of pedagogy

Highlighted by fededouble

gap between the model of learning offered by many big universities and the natural way that young people who have grown up digital best learn

Highlighted by fededouble

Universities are finally losing their monopoly on higher learning, as the web inexorably becomes the dominant infrastructure for knowledge sweeney both as a container and as a global platform for knowledge exchange between people.

Meanwhile on campus, there is fundamental challenge to the foundational modus operandi of the University — the model of pedagogy. Specifically, there is a widening gap between the model of learning offered by many big universities and the natural way that young people who have grown up digital best learn.

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

I really hate blanket statements like this though I think it is true for some schools.

The old-style lecture

Highlighted by fededouble

It's a model that is teacher-focused, one-way, one-size-fits-all and the student is isolated in the learning process

Highlighted by fededouble

Yet the students

Highlighted by fededouble

Yet the students, who have grown up in an interactive digital world, learn differently. Schooled on Google and Wikipedia, they want to inquire, not rely on the professor for a detailed roadmap. They want an animated conversation, not a lecture. They want an interactive education, not a broadcast one that might have been perfectly fine for the Industrial Age, or even for boomers. These students are making new demands of universities, and if the universities try to ignore them, they will do so at their peril.

Highlighted by eugenios

want to inquire, not rely on the professor

Highlighted by fededouble

want an interactive education, not a broadcast one that might have been perfectly fine for the Industrial Age, or even for boomers

Highlighted by fededouble

The old-style lecture, with the professor standing at the podium in front of a large group of students, is still a fixture of university life on many campuses. It's a model that is teacher-focused, one-way, one-size-fits-all and the student is isolated in the learning process. Yet the students, who have grown up in an interactive digital world, learn differently. Schooled on Google and Wikipedia, they want to inquire, not rely on the professor for a detailed roadmap. They want an animated conversation, not a lecture. They want an interactive education, not a broadcast one that might have been perfectly fine for the Industrial Age, or even for boomers. These students are making new demands of universities, and if the universities try to ignore them, they will do so at their peril.

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

Nothing really new here, is there?

on 2009-06-04 by powelstock

Nothing new, and nothing true. This is so far from describing what goes on in today's university as to be ludicrous. Students and faculty interract in a wide variety of modes, including digital ones. The difference between the university and Don Tapscott sitting in his office with an internet connection is that students have guides to help them explore the world of information and ideas and help them learn the critical skill necessary to evaluate info sources. A lot has changed at the ol' university since Don's salad days.

The universities are not primarily institutes of higher learning, but institutes for science and research

Highlighted by fededouble

Most graduate programs in American universities produce a product for which there is no market

Highlighted by fededouble

and develop skills for which there is diminishing demand

Highlighted by fededouble

all at a rapidly rising cost

Highlighted by fededouble

Taylor argued that graduate education must be restructured at a fundamental level to move away from the ultra-narrow scholarship

Highlighted by fededouble

he called for more cross-disciplinary inquiry, the creation of problem-focused programs, with a sunset clause, as well as more collaboration between all educational institutions, and the abolition of tenure

Highlighted by fededouble

Another academic accused Taylor of "poisoning the waters of higher education.

Highlighted by fededouble

In the industrial model of student mass production, the teacher is the broadcaster

Highlighted by fededouble

I'm a professor and I have knowledge. You're a student you're an empty vassal and you don't. Get ready, here it comes. Your goal is to take this data into your short-term memory and through practice and repetition build deeper cognitive structures so you can recall it to me when I test you.

Highlighted by fededouble

a deep debate on how universities function in a networked society.

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

We all need to be more open to this debate or conversation, even in K-12.

"Broadcast learning" as I've called it is no longer appropriate for the digital age and for a new generation of students who represent the future of learning.  

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

Again, nothing new here.

They play a limited role of interesting an audience, changing their view or possibly motivating them to do something different. But I dare say that 90 percent of what I've said is lost

Highlighted by fededouble

If someone frozen 300 years ago miraculously came alive today and looked at the professions — a physician in an operating theater, a pilot in a jumbo cockpit, a engineer designing an automobile in a CAD system — they would surely marvel at how technologies had transformed the knowledge work.  But if they walked into a university lecture hall, they would no doubt be comforted that some things have not changed.

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

Ugh. You're kidding me right? We can't come up with something original?

on 2009-06-05 by ransomtech

Perhaps, but those surgeons, pilots, engineers, and the like who are so innovative and progressive also came from those very same lecture halls.

young people who have grown up digital are abandoning one-way TV for the higher stimulus of interactive communication they find on the Internet

Highlighted by fededouble

Some writers, of course, think that Google makes you stupid

Highlighted by fededouble

My research suggests these critics are wrong. Growing up digital has changed the way their minds work in a manner that will help them handle the challenges of the digital age

Highlighted by fededouble

They're used to multi-tasking, and have learned to handle the information overload.

Highlighted by cmduke

two-way conversation

Highlighted by fededouble

handle the information overload

Highlighted by fededouble

f universities want to adapt the teaching techniques to their current audience, they should, as I've been saying for years, make significant changes to the pedagogy. And the new model of learning is not only appropriate for youth — but increasingly for all of us. In this generation's culture is the new culture of learning.

Highlighted by ransomtech

the new model of learning is not only appropriate for youth — but increasingly for all of us. In this generation's culture is the new culture of learning.

Highlighted by fededouble

My research suggests these critics are wrong. Growing up digital has changed the way their minds work in a manner that will help them handle the challenges of the digital age. They're used to multi-tasking, and have learned to handle the information overload. They expect a two-way conversation. What's more, growing up digital has encouraged this generation to be active and demanding enquirers. Rather than waiting for a trusted professor to tell them what's going on, they find out on their own on everything from Google to Wikipedia.

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

This is where he really riles me. Most of this is fiction. And I wish he would use the correct adverb. Sheesh.

on 2009-06-05 by mireillej

There's quite some research showing Tapscott is wrong. I have bookmarked some interesting articles at Diigo, 'generations' -tag. My impression is that the generation fad has been invented by marketeers and consultants, who hope to earn good money with it...

on 2009-06-09 by cmduke

The notion that learners are inherently different riles me as well... At the very least: I'm certainly NOT a millenial; the first six years of my teaching career were spent teaching pre-millenials (or prior to 2000, at least). So, how can MY most valued learning experiences have exhibited characteristics of what's supposed to be unique and new with millenials just now coming to secondary and early college classrooms? Easy. Millenials are NOT different learners than those of us not-so-millenials trying to teach them. When given the opportunity, I reacted positively to engaging, social, experiential, visual, connected learning experiences, and I'm pretty confident most learners would have if they encountered those unique teachers - no matter how long ago they were sitting in a student seat.

they should encourage students to discover for themselves, and learn a process of discovery and critical thinking instead of just memorizing the professor's store of information

Highlighted by fededouble

The professors who remain relevant will have to abandon the traditional lecture, and start listening and conversing with the students — shifting from a broadcast style and adopting an interactive one. Second, they should encourage students to discover for themselves, and learn a process of discovery and critical thinking instead of just memorizing the professor's store of information. Third, they need to encourage students to collaborate among themselves and with others outside the university. Finally, they need to tailor the style of education to their students' individual learning styles.

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

Again, anything new here?

and the individual professor. The great liberal arts colleges are doing a wonderful job of stimulating young minds because with big endowments and small class sizes students can have more of a customized collaborative experience. My son Alex graduated fro

Highlighted by mewcomm

universities are vulnerable, especially at a time when students can watch lectures online for free by some of the world's leading professors

Highlighted by fededouble

There are shining examples of interactive education

Highlighted by fededouble

Warm-up questions, written by the students, are typically due a few hours before class, giving the teacher an opportunity to adjust the lesson "just in time," so that classroom time can be focused on the parts of the assignments that students struggled with

Highlighted by fededouble

Smart but impatient, they like to collaborate and they reject one-way lectures, he notes.

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

Didn't he just say that one way lectures online was a threat?

"Education is so much more than the mere transfer of information. The information has to be assimilated. Students have to connect the information to what they already know, develop mental models, learn how to apply the new knowledge, and how to adapt this knowledge to new and unfamiliar situations.

Highlighted by fededouble

One strategy being used in this program is called just-in-time teaching; it is a teaching and learning strategy that combines the benefits of Web-based assignments and an active-learner classroom where courses are customized to the particular needs of the class. Warm-up questions, written by the students, are typically due a few hours before class, giving the teacher an opportunity to adjust the lesson "just in time," so that classroom time can be focused on the parts of the assignments that students struggled with. Harvard professor Eric Mazur, who uses this approach in his physics class, puts it this way: "Education is so much more than the mere transfer of information. The information has to be assimilated. Students have to connect the information to what they already know, develop mental models, learn how to apply the new knowledge, and how to adapt this knowledge to new and unfamiliar situations.

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

Better, but still not original thinking here.

Compared with students enrolled in conventionally taught courses, students who use well-crafted computer-mediated instruction ... generally achieve higher scores on summary examinations, learn their lessons in less time, like their classes more, and develop more positive attitudes towards the subject matter they're learning

Highlighted by fededouble

Education was about absorbing content and being able to recall it on exams. You graduated and you were set for life — just "keeping" up in your chosen field.

Highlighted by fededouble

Today when you graduate you're set for say, 15 minutes

Highlighted by fededouble

What counts is your capacity to learn lifelong, to think, research, find information, analyze, synthesize, contextualize, critically evaluate it; to apply research to solving problems; to collaborate and communicate.

Highlighted by fededouble

It's not only what you know that really counts when you graduate; it's how you navigate in the digital world, and what you do with the information you discover. This new style of learning, I believe, will suit them.

Highlighted by fededouble

Universities should be places to learn, not to teach.

Highlighted by fededouble

"The scandal of education is that every time you teach something, you deprive a child of the pleasure and benefit of discovery."

Highlighted by fededouble

"The scandal of education is that every time you teach something, you deprive a child of the pleasure and benefit of discovery."

Highlighted by ransomtech

on 2009-06-11 by ransomtech

Great quotation...problematic from an efficiency standpoint though.

when a child first learns how to speak, she or he is totally immersed in a social context and highly motivated to engage in learning this new, amazingly complex system of language

Highlighted by fededouble

"once you start going to school, in some ways you start to learn much slower because you are being taught, rather than what happens if you're learning in order to do things that you yourself care about

Highlighted by fededouble

once you learn to honor the mysteries of the world, you're kind of always willing to probe things … you can actually be joyful about discovering something you didn't know … and you can expect always to need to keep probing. And so that sets the stage for lifelong inquiry."

Highlighted by fededouble

Universities should be places to learn, not to teach.

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

Der

Another fixture of old-style learning is the assumption that students should learn on their own

Highlighted by fededouble

Sharing notes in an exam hall, or collaborating on some of the essays and homework assignments, was strictly forbidden

Highlighted by fededouble

individual learning model is foreign territory for most Net Geners, who have grown up collaborating, sharing, and creating together online

Highlighted by fededouble

how you internalize information into something that makes sense to you. Learning starts as you leave the classroom, when you start discussing with people around you what was just said

Highlighted by fededouble

Learning starts as you leave the classroom, when you start discussing with people around you what was just said. It is in conversation that you start to internalize what some piece of information meant to you."

Highlighted by ransomtech

on 2009-06-11 by ransomtech

I wouldn't disagree with that for the most part.

Yet the individual learning model is foreign territory for most Net Geners, who have grown up collaborating, sharing, and creating together online.

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

This is what he wants us to believe, but for the vast majority of kids, they haven't been doing much of this at all.

If the curriculum is well structured and interesting, then large proportions of students at any given grade level will "tune in" and get engaged with the information. But too often, it doesn't work out that way.

Highlighted by ransomtech

on 2009-06-11 by ransomtech

Curriculum and how curriculum is learned are two very different things. Curriculum may be intrinsically interesting, but often we kill it by controlling the learning and destroying any sense of curiosity and discovery

The big thing these days is to get an "A" without ever having gone to a lecture. When the crème de la crème of an entire generation is boycotting the formal model of pedagogy in our educational institutions, the writing is on the wall.

Highlighted by fededouble

A Challenge of the Revenue Model

Highlighted by fededouble

If all that the big universities have to offer to students are lectures that you can get online for free — from other professors — why pay the tuition fees?

Highlighted by fededouble

Created by Michael Wesch, an assistant professor of cultural anthropology at Kansas State University, it is a stinging indictment of the education delivered by standard large-scale American university.

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

Oddly, this was the one video of Wesch's that I really didn't like.

on 2009-06-11 by ransomtech

Yes, but did the students write those statements on their own volition?

A Challenge to Credentialing

Highlighted by fededouble

One of the most important roles of the university is to screen human capital for future employers, and more broadly stratifying society

Highlighted by fededouble

Those who graduate — better still with distinction —

Highlighted by fededouble

have proven they have a degree of discipline and that they're prepared to play by the rules.

Highlighted by fededouble

credential and even the prestige of a university is rooted in its effectiveness as a learning institution

Highlighted by fededouble

Anyone in the world can watch the entire series of lectures for some 30 courses, such as Walter Lewin's ever-popular introductory physics course, which gets viewed by over 40,000 people a month on OpenCourseWear, MIT's version of intellectual philanthropy. Universities worldwide have joined the movement.

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

But why would they if they couldn't connect and collaborate and co-create etc? Or are we just expecting them to figure that out?

But if campuses are seen as places where learning is inferior to other models, or worse places where learning is restricted and stifled, the role of the campus experience will be undermined as well.

Highlighted by fededouble

But a credential and even the prestige of a university is rooted in its effectiveness as a learning institution. If these institutions are shown to be inferior learning environments to other alternatives their capacity to credential will surely diminish.

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

I do wonder about this. How will credentialing change in a transparent world?

on 2009-06-11 by ransomtech

But will those "other alternatives" provide the credentials that we are all looking for/expecting? Or, is the very notion of credentialing changing?

real value of what they offer is not the lecture per se, but rather the whole package — the content tied to the human learning experience on campus, plus the certification.

Highlighted by fededouble

Videotaping lectures can free up intellectual capital — on the part of both professors and students — to spend their on-campus time thinking and inquiring and challenging each other, rather than just absorbing information

Highlighted by ransomtech

on 2009-06-11 by ransomtech

This is what I have been working towards. But, students have to watch/listen/process the lectures. The same students who often don't do the readings and come to class unprepared for any meaningful dialogue will be the ones who skip out on the lecture.

The university campus has been "a wonderful place for young people to go for four years to get older", as Princeton sociologist Marvin Dressler told me a decade ago. "While they're there they're bound to learn something" he said.

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

Nice quote

on 2009-06-05 by powelstock

Nice quote, but it's Marvin Bressler, with a 'B.' Jeez.

universities should use the Internet to create a global centre of excellence

Highlighted by fededouble

choose the best courses you have and link them with the best at a handful of universities around the world to create an unquestionably best-in-class program for students.

Highlighted by fededouble

The video lectures allow students to absorb the course content online — whenever it's convenient — and then get together to tinker, invent new things, or discuss the material.

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

Would love to know how much this happens absent the physical space.

So why hasn't it happened yet? "It's the legacy of established human and educational infrastructure,"

Highlighted by fededouble

We're challenged by obstructive, non-market-based business models. We're also burdened by a sense that doctor knows best, or professor knows best."

Highlighted by fededouble

Why should a university student be restricted to learning from the professors at the university he or she is attending.

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

Great question, and this holds true for high schools to some extent as well.

Old Paradigms Die Hard

Highlighted by fededouble

Yet the Industrial Age model of education is hard to change. New paradigms cause dislocation, disruption, confusion, uncertainty. They are nearly always received with coolness or hostility. Vested interests fight change. And leaders of old paradigms are often the last to embrace the new.

Highlighted by fededouble

"We're more like health care. We're challenged by obstructive, non-market-based business models. We're also burdened by a sense that doctor knows best, or professor knows best."

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

That's a stretch though, too.

The digital world, which has trained young minds to inquire and collaborate,

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

I really wish he would stop saying this.

A powerful force to change the university is the students

Highlighted by fededouble

There is a huge generational clash emerging in these institutions. It turns out that the critique of the university from years ago were ideas in waiting — waiting for the new web and a new generation of digital natives who could effectively challenge the old model.

Highlighted by fededouble

And sparks are flying today. There is a huge generational clash emerging in these institutions. It turns out that the critique of the university from years ago were ideas in waiting — waiting for the new web and a new generation of digital natives who could effectively challenge the old model.

Highlighted by willrich

on 2009-06-04 by willrich

This I agree with.