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[ecrea] Cfp: Digital Tools for Collaborative Teaching, Learning and Research: A Small School’s Perspective
Thu Sep 01 19:41:19 GMT 2011
Mobility Shifts: An International Future of Learning Summit (The New
School, New York, Oct 10-16, 2011) will host the workshop
Digital Tools for Collaborative Teaching, Learning and Research: A Small
School’s Perspective
http://mobilityshifts.org/index.php?cID=480
*Wednesday, October 12, 3:00-5:30 pm
3:00-5:30 pm
/Orozco Room, Alvin Johnson/J.M. Kaplan Hall, 66 West 12th St., 7th floor/*
*Geoff Gilbert *(The American University of Paris, France)
*Mark Hayward
<http://mobilityshifts.org/conference/participants/keynotes/mark-hayward/>
*(The American University of Paris)
*Claudia Roda
<http://mobilityshifts.org/conference/participants/keynotes/claudia-roda/>
*(The American University of Paris)
This workshop will examine how the integration of digital and mobile
media into teaching and research has been experienced at smaller
colleges and universities globally. While the horizontal and distributed
nature of digital networks is often seen as making questions of distance
and scale irrelevant, this workshop aims to provide a framework for
discussion which recognizes that, while these technologies have changed
our experience of the world around us, the institutions in which we work
continue to condition the way in which we do or don’t make use of the
tools available.
A smaller number of staff as well as limited financial resources for the
purchasing and maintenance of information infrastructure on campus
produces a very particular set of constraints when it comes to the
adoption of digital media. At the same time, smaller institutions are
often defined by pedagogical practice that gives space for more
personalized relationships between students and faculty as well as
providing the opportunity of greater collaboration across departments
and disciplines. What, then, possibilities are there for digital
scholarship and education at smaller institutions?
*Questions addressed*
The questions that the workshop aims to address include, but are not
limited to:
* What are the ways in which digital and mobile technologies have
been incorporated into curricula and research at small
institutions? Participants are welcome to share their experiments,
successes, and failures with the group.
* How have different projects translated these technologies into the
specific pedagogical and institutional cultures of their
institutions? How do they contribute to the educational processes?
How is this contribution measured?
* What is the impact of these technologies on small classrooms
environments where personal relationships, privacy, and trust, are
central to the building of a successful learning experience? How
do these relationships translate across linguistic and cultural
differences in the classroom and beyond?
* How have these technologies contributed to the building of
communities and collaborations? What are the processes necessary
to sustain culturally and locally specific knowledge? How do such
/knowledges/ relate to projects that seek to contribute to
students' global awareness?
* The high costs of these technologies and/or of the human
investment required to have often meant that smaller institutions
have been hesitant or unable to finance major investments in
digital media. How have different contexts adapted to the economic
constraints, finding low-cost alternatives to developing a
digitally-engaged curriculum? What kinds of funding agencies have
different groups worked with to receive support?
*Call for Contributions*
We invite prospective participants to submit, by September 20 2011, a
position paper addressing one or more of the above questions or
proposing a related area of inquiry to be considered by the group.
Position papers should not exceed 2000 words and should be addressed to
(digi4school /at/ aup.edu) <mailto:(digi4school /at/ aup.edu)>.
We would appreciate receiving expressions of interest with a tentative
topic / title as soon as possible and we would be happy to answer any
questions you may have.
*Workshop format*
These position papers will be circulated prior to the meeting in New
York. It is our hope to be able to facilitate the development for a
short report which might serve as a resource for other interested
individuals working at small institutions that would provide examples
for the adoption of digital technology, models for thinking about its
place in the curriculum at small teaching-oriented institutions and
organizations that might provide technical or financial support.
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