Hi David and everyone, I teach several graduate classes on rhetoric and composition theory and on teaching english (more concretely focused) and in both classes we discuss the impact of technology generally and how best to teach with it, about it, or not. I think one of the most important things to teach is something that underlies all of our work--that we should not take technology for granted, or treat it as neutral, or assume that we should use it just because it's there. We should think critically about it and so in my classes we use a variety of ICTs and other kinds of tech and discuss what they help and what they hinder. I'm a heavy tech-user in my professional and personal life, but I don't assume it's the best tool for everything and for some kinds of thinking or learning or communicating, low or non- tech is better. Let's also remember that looms, pens, and even language itself are technologies, so when we say logging off, what exactly do we mean? not sitting at a desk? Not using ICT? --I know this may seem nit-picky, but I just want to be sure I'm thinking f the same thing as others in the discussion when we talk about logging off, or about technology. Cheers, Kim ps, let's please not have any flames; it's almost the end of term here and I am totally stressed already! :-) On Sun, Apr 27, 2008 at 12:07 PM, David M Silver <dmsilver@usfca.edu> wrote:
an invitation for folks to post and share more about teaching internet studies in general and introducing logging off activities in particular.
thanks,
david silver http://silverinsf.blogspot.com
-- Kim De Vries http://else-if-then.blogspot.com