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Showing posts with label american. Show all posts
Showing posts with label american. Show all posts

Saturday

New media in education


One of the problems we have with the use of new media in education is the problem of teachers. It is often said that the students know more about the new media than the teachers. What is the situation in the United States, and what do you think can be done to encourage teachers to use the new media in education?



David Kolb - It is a difficult problem in the States too. I think it is true that many of the younger students do know much more than the teachers, particularly students about 12 to 13 years old, not yet in university, who seem to have grown up with computers in a way that even people three or four years earlier did not. My experience is - and I think this is pretty general - that many teachers use word processing and perhaps e-mail and perhaps they surf the Web for various purposes and they are comfortable with these things, but it is not clear to them how they would use them in the classroom because they are mostly receptive activities or versions of things that were done before in other ways. What we’ve found is that the best way to encourage the teachers to experiment is to provide examples and to show what other people perhaps in the same school or nearby or in another university are doing, so that teachers can imagine. They won’t necessarily duplicate the examples, but they’ll begin to think: Oh! Maybe I could find a way to do something like that. The difficulty of course on the university level is that teachers have different subjects and there aren’t always examples to be found in some subjects. They are more in the sciences, for instance, and fewer in literature, and very few in philosophy. So teachers can shrug and say" Well, it works over there but it won’t work here. We need to work on that by providing examples and better communication of examples from other locations. As for motivation, I think you have to deal with the question of what the teacher gets out of it. There is someone who has done a great deal of work on hypertext in the classroom and he said: Using new media in the classroom does not make the teacher’s task easier but it makes it much more fun, more spirited, and much more satisfying. I think that is the kind of motivation we have to work with. Not that you’re going to ease the burden of the teacher but rather that you’re going to inspire and encourage and give the teachers more fun and spirit in what they are doing.



Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts -


Sunday

American unreason

Some worry that contemporary Americans are too stupid to vote because they can't find the countries that we're at war with on maps, even if those maps are just of Iraq and Afghanistan.

Despite such arguments -- laid out in books such as Susan Jacoby's "The Age of American Unreason" and movies such as "Idiocracy" and "Wall-E" -- I don't think americans are intellectually lazier than their ancestors. In fact, I suspect that writers who rant about blossoming stupidity in the U.S. are actually insecure about their own intelligence.


So when I heard about Adam Winer's new book, "How Dumb Are You?: The Great American Stupidity Quiz," I asked him to devise a test for me to challenge one of them to a smart-off...


Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts-



Tuesday

Google at the top


In the space of a year, Google supplants Microsoft as No. 1 in a survey of the level of trust American consumers have in various companies, while Microsoft drops to No. 10. Another triumph for the Windows Vista operating system.
Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts -

Saturday

So clever yes we are

Thursday

Allegory to reject

Allegory has represented the orthodox vision of America as the chosen redeemer nation, the world’s last and best chance, and allegory has given a voice to those who dissent from this vision, who use allegory only to reject what it was come to stand for. MADSEN, Deborah L

Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/
See that post with different algorithms in metabole
See the journal French Metablog with today different posts

Monday

New landscapes of philosophy


Semiotics is still an obsession of literary theory, but clearly only one of many approaches to meaning, and may indeed be fading now from the American philosophy scene.


Very few of its ten thousand professional philosophers are rattling the bars of the prison cage of language. Linguistic philosophies continue, but in addition to the traditional fields — philosophy of existence (ontology), meaning (epistemology) art (aesthetics), morals (ethics) and political history — there is increased emphasis on new fields: computer issues, applied ethics, feminism, rights of parenthood, etc.
Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/
See that post with different algorithms in metabole
See the journal French Metablog with today different posts