Documents Contributed by ECAR, Instructional Technologies, and Multimedia

Recent library resources tagged with Documents Contributed by ECAR, Instructional Technologies, and Multimedia.

Multimedia Services: Strategic Assets for Institutional Success

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Multimedia Services: Strategic Assets for Institutional Success (ID: ERB0722)
Author(s):Chris D. Ferguson (Pacific Lutheran University)
Origin:Documents Contributed by ECAR, Research Bulletins (10/23/2007)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

This research bulletin surveys the chief components of contemporary multimedia services in colleges and universities and describes some emerging practices for deploying and sustaining them in an increasingly digital and user-centered world. It includes a review of recent experiences in three smaller and two larger institutions. As audio, video, and instructional technologies converge, and as faculty and student expectations for these resources escalate, multimedia services are emerging as the next major arena in which technology and other campus leaders will find their way to standard practices that leverage these strategic assets for institutional success.

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This publication is currently password protected. All faculty, staff, and students from institutions that have subscribed to ECAR at the ECAR Participating, Comprehensive Content, Corporate, and Research Bulletins Package levels are authorized to access this publication by using their EDUCAUSE personal profile.

Human Futures for Technology and Education

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Human Futures for Technology and Education (ID: ECR0704)
Author(s):Michael Wesch (Kansas State University)
Origin:Documents Contributed by ECAR, Presentations (06/12/2007)
Type:Presentations/Speeches
Abstract:

Presentation at the Sixth Annual ECAR/HP Summer Symposium for Higher Education IT Executives, June 11-13, 2007, Boulder, Colorado. In January 2007, Michael Wesch released a video on the history of the Web called "The Machine is Us/ing Us." The video quickly tracks the transformations of the Web from its beginnings as a place to retrieve information into a vibrant user-generated and user-organized platform of RSS feeds, blogs, wikis, social networks, and folksonomies that encourage, enhance, and capitalize on collaboration. At the video's end, Wesch suggests that these transformations require us to begin rethinking virtually everything, from authorship and copyright to our sense of identity and selfhood. These new technologies also have profound implications for education. What possibilities and challenges do they bring to our teaching? What should we be teaching to students who are habituated to a new media environment where Google and Wikipedia are always at their fingertips? How are these technologies changing the way students learn and assess information?

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