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21apples | arvind s grover

learning in the 21st century
  • Wide Web of diversions gets laptops evicted from lecture halls

    09Mar
    Categories: culture, future, literacy, media, net generation, teaching Comments: 1

    Wide Web of diversions gets laptops evicted from lecture halls

    David Cole of Georgetown Law was among the first professors in the Washington region to ban laptops for most of his students. A few are selected to use them to take notes, which others may then borrow.
    via washingtonpost.com

    In an unsurprising article an old media institution which is slowly withering away (the newspaper) discusses how a law school has to ban laptops in their classrooms because students aren’t listening to the lectures.

    “This is like putting on every student’s desk, when you walk into class, five different magazines, several television shows, some shopping opportunities and a phone, and saying, ‘Look, if your mind wanders, feel free to pick any of these up and go with it,’ ” [Professor] Cole said.”

    I can’t see how this is any different than these future-lawyers desks are going to be. They’ll be in their offices, having to do work, with a computer, Internet access, cell phones, desk phones, e-mail, instant messenger, Skype, etc, all available for their perusal.

    Shouldn’t law schools being teaching future lawyers how to minimize distraction, use modern tools to be better lawyers (like writing a collaborative brief via Google Docs), and embrace what modern technology has done for the legal field? Or perhaps the bigger problem is the modern legal field isn’t moving to take advantage of the opportunities. My sense is that the field is, but the educational institutions training the new lawyers aren’t.

    I can’t believe how unwilling educators are to change their practice. You’ve got to get to where your kids are, or you’ll be irrelevant.

    My rant for the day.

    Posted via web from arvind’s posterous

  • Photos and thoughts on Creative Commons Salon NYC on opening education

    04Mar
    Categories: future, law, media, resources, teaching Comments: 0
    Last night I sat on a panel with Dave Bill and Kerri Richardson Redding talking about how we use Creative Commons licenses in our school with students and adults. The event was the Creative Commons Salon NYC, and the theme was “Opening Education.” The night started out with Eric Frank of Flat World Knowledge and Neeru Paharia of Peer 2 Peer University. Eric talked about how Flat World was publishing digital textbooks under Creative Commons licenses (non commercial) and had some interesting insight in what seems to be an awful industry in general. Neeru talked about the motivations for being part of an organization that believes that anyone should be able to take college-level classes online, for free.

    Dave, Kerri, and I seemed to focus much more on why Creative Commons was important to students in particular whether giving them methods for publishing their own work, joining into something bigger (the commons), or using material from the Internet that wasn’t entangled in potential legal folly.
    I definitely have some more reflection to do on the event before I can blog more, but thought I should fire out the photos and the summaries. I had a great time with our NYCIST colleagues who were there, too. Thanks for the support!

    Read more »

    Tags: Creative Commons, David Bill, Flat World Knowledge, Kerri Richardson, Neeru Paharia, NYCIST, P2PU, Peer 2 Peer University, Salon
  • I’m Speaking at the Creative Commons NYC Salon on “Opening Education” on March 3rd

    03Feb
    Categories: future, law, literacy, media, resources, teaching Comments: 2

    via wiki.creativecommons.org

    I, along with some of my distinguished peers, will be speaking on a panel at the Creative Commons Salon NYC on March 3, 2010. The theme is “Opening Education” and there will be folks from Flat World Knowledge, Peer 2 Peer University, and finally the educators panel (including me!). It will be in lower Manhattan, from 7-10pm. RSVP info is here.

    Hope you can join!

    Posted via web from arvind’s posterous

    Tags: Creative Commons, New York City, Salon, speaking
  • The Future of Books: Electronic?

    19Nov
    Categories: culture, future, media, net generation Comments: 2

    With devices like the Kindle (from Amazon) and the Nook (from Barnes and Noble) there is a growing trend towards electronic books. Some have been fearful of the end of beloved paper books and some are hopeful (as a father expressed to me today) of the end of heavy backpacks! You may lean towards either perspective but the reality is that e-book readers are becoming more and more prevalent, and adoption seems to be unaffected by age groups.

    We can only assume that the technology will get better, faster and cheaper – it’s a trend amongst all technologies. That being said, as schools we need publishers to find ways to utilize these new devices so that our students can benefit from them. We will stay focused on evaluating these devices to see if they have practical implications for our students.

    I thought that this video from Mobile Art in Japan presented a compelling argument for hybrid-electronic-paper books:

    Are you using e-book readers in your school? What about personally? What kind of impact do you think they can have for reading and learning?

    photo by Enrique Dans, used under Creative Commons License

    Tags: Amazon, Barnes and Noble, e-book, iPhone, Kindle, Nook
  • Long Blog Posts Overwhelm Me

    07Nov
    Categories: culture, future, literacy, media, net generation Comments: 0

    Some people are such good writers, and their blog posts are like micronovels. I love reading them, but sometimes have trouble with reading something so dense, via my screen. Or even worse, via my iPod touch screen. I like blogs that are short, to the point, and easy to digest. When I want to really sink my mind into something for an extended period of time, I pick up a book.

    Blogs turning into journal articles, and even books, scare me. What do you think?

    Blogged with the Flock Browser

    Tags: bookswriters blogs culture reading

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