pedagogy and Net Generation Learner

Recent resources tagged with pedagogy and Net Generation Learner.

Tune In October 2: Web 2.0 for the 21st-Century Learner

Created by Peggy Kurkowski (EDUCAUSE) on September 25, 2008

ELive LogoAre Web 2.0 technologies growing in popularity among your students and faculty members? Are you wondering how to integrate them into teaching and learning in a meaningful way, while supporting them across your institution?

In this free October 2 EDUCAUSE Live! Web Seminar, Web 2.0 for the 21st-Century Learner, presenters Veronica Diaz, PhD, and Rochelle (Shelley) Rodrigo will explore four critical issues about incorporating Web 2.0 into higher education: Web 2.0 and the 21st-century learner, pedagogy and support tools, faculty development possibilities, and institutional support.

ELI Annual Video: Connectivism

Created by Gerry Bayne (EDUCAUSE) on January 29, 2008

Video and slides for this presentation can be found here. The speech is by George Siemens, Associate Director of the Learning Technologies Centre at the University of Manitoba. This plenary session is entitled, "Connectivism".

Rethinking Educational Dynamics in the Digital Age: Engaging with Todd Richmond

Created by Catherine Howell (University of Cambridge) on November 22, 2006
Via Axel Bruns, via Howard Rheingold, comes this post from DIY Media Weblog, which reports on a recent attempt by Todd Richmond to model the changing roles of producer-consumer and teacher-student in the digital economy.

Richmond is Adjunct Professor in the Interactive Media Division of the USC School of Cinema-Television, and a Fellow at USC's Annenberg Center and its Center for Creative Technologies. The DIY Media post highlighted a recent presentation of his on October 19, at an Annenberg seminar.

Richmond's presentation highlighted the phenomenon of convergence, and its implications for the future of education, comparing "the future technology-triggered transformation of educational institutions" to "the 'perfect storm' that hit the music industry when several different factors intersected to disrupt the existing institutions for making, distributing, and monetizing music". It's a familiar argument -- and, to a degree, a self-interested one. After all, we're all in the business these days of promoting our own "disruptiveness".