eli07netsavvysessionRecent resources tagged with eli07netsavvysession.
ELI 2007 Fall Focus Session, Being Net Savvy: Developing Skills for a Rapidly Changing World Video
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Meg and Joan Lippincott Net Savvy VideoCreated by Jarret S. Cummings (EDUCAUSE) on September 24, 2007
Joan Lippincott, associate executive director of the Coalition for Networked Information, contributed a video interview to the ELI 2007 Fall Focus Session, Being Net Savvy: Developing Skills for A Rapidly Changing World. Here's her description of it: "My daughter, Meg Lippincott, a sophomore at Vassar College, has been working at her college library reference desk and occasionally sharing some observations with me about how students seek information for their academic work. I interviewed her for a brief video for the ELI Focus Session on net savvy students. Her friend Jan Zhan, a student at University of Maryland, did the camera work. Meg discusses some aspects of information literacy, the way she learned to use some math software, and her definition of a 'net savvy student.'" --Joan Lippincott Podcast: Information Literacy, IT Fluency, and Media Literacy - An Interview with Craig GibsonCreated by Gerry Bayne (EDUCAUSE) on August 29, 2007
In this podcast, we feature 15 minute interview with Craig Gibson, Associate University Librarian at George Mason University. This interview was recorded at the ELI 2007 Fall Focus Session in Boulder, Colorado, where Mr. Gibson presented a speech entitled, "Prisms Around Student Learning: Information Literacy, IT Fluency, and Media Literacy". A podcast of that speech can be found here. Podcast: Net Generation: A Student Affairs Perspective - An Interview with Leslie DareCreated by Gerry Bayne (EDUCAUSE) on August 29, 2007
In this 12 minute podcast, we feature an interview with Leslie Dare, Director of Distance Education & Tech Services for Student Affairs at North Carolina State University. She presented a plenary session at the 2007 ELI Fall Focus Session entitled, "Keeping Pace with the Net Generation: A Student Affairs Perspective" The student affairs division can be a valuable partner in developing a campus response to Net Generation issues. In addition to improving the “Net IQ” of staff on campus, student affairs can and should play a significant role in assessing the impact of technology on student development and behavior, crafting policies and procedures, and educating students about technology rights and responsibilities. Student Affairs Perspective on Net Savvy: PodcastCreated by Leslie Dare (North Carolina State University) on August 29, 2007
I was interviewed at the ELI 2007 Fall Focus Session, which is an EDUCAUSE initiative. Here is the podcast of that interview, which is a summary of the presentation I made at this event. Materials from my presentation (and all the other presentations as well) are now available. There are a number of other podcasts from this event available as well; look for the ELI07netsavvy tag. Video for ELI: Net Gen Students at University of MinnesotaCreated by Bradley A. Cohen (University of Minnesota) on August 29, 2007
Here is a video we produced just for the recent ELI focus session on being net savvy. We interviewed a number of students on campus and pulled together a video that echoes our findings from our ongoing study of UMN student experiences with, perceptions of, and attitudes towards educational technology. http://xserve.uvs.umn.edu/umnstream/elivideo.movDetails about our faculty and student surveys are available on our web site at: Podcast: Faculty Development and the Net Savvy Student - An Interview with Brad CohenCreated by Gerry Bayne (EDUCAUSE) on August 23, 2007
In this podcast, we feature an eight minute interview with Bradley A. Cohen, Assistant Director and Coordinator for Curriculum Development at the University of Minnesota. This interview was recorded at the 2007 ELI Fall Focus Session in Boulder, Colorado where Mr. Cohen presented a session entitled, "Faculty Development and the Net Savvy Student". Brad Cohen discusses the digital divide and shares guiding principles the University of Minnesota uses to deliver an integrated suite of faculty development programs designed to help faculty meet the needs of net savvy students. The University of Minnesota's approach is informed by the data routinely collected from their students and faculty, the literature, and their practice. Intergenerational Collaboration Through Digital Storytelling - Concurrent Session
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Intergenerational Collaboration Through Digital Storytelling - Project Parlor
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Keeping Pace with the Net Generation: A Student Affairs Perspective
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