(First off I'm sorry this is so late, my roommates are getting married on the 18th and I'm in the wedding party so this weekend we were dealing with a lot of prep stuff plus we have two people who flew in for the wedding staying with us right now so its been crazy.)
Current technology and future developments are changing (and I believe will continue to change) how universities and schools in general will work. Will the digital classroom replace the traditional classroom? I feel this debate has a lot in common with the question will digital libraries replace physical libraries? I believe the answer to both is no. The Internet and all its capabilities will supplement both schools and libraries and broaden the services that can be made available but ultimately we are social creatures and need face to face human interaction. Social software imitates this but ultimately chatting with a friend online is not as satisfying as seeing them in person.
Will some guy in Hungry be able to get a degree from Rutgers without ever leaving his country (or desk chair for that matter)? Will a professor be able to teach a class while pursuing research deep in the rain forest? Yes. The services universities provide, the audience they reach and the range of facility they draw from have already and will continue to expand.
However I have seen in libraries, while people want more information available from home at all times, people still come into the library for more social reasons. In my own library I have seen parents and siblings sit and read to younger children and parents and their older children sitting side by side on a couch each reading. They could just as easily do this at home, they don't need to spend more then five minutes in the library if they didn't want to. They can order books ahead, pick them up and then leave. Yet despite the busy world we live in some people still linger in the library. Last year, at the patrons request, we started a knitting circle in the library. It is still going strong and the patrons really appreciate the social aspect of it as well as how easy it is to share what each knows. Those with greater experience help those with are still learning.
One of the best classes I had at Rutgers incorporated both an online component and the traditional classroom setting. We would have class discussions in a face to face setting, then use the class wiki to work on our assignments collaboratively. This is how I see colleges changing, not a total reorganization but a melding of the traditional classroom and digital technology into one seamless whole.
1 comment:
I agree that digital won't supplant analog. I don't think technology is always the solution to problems...a belief that seems to be espoused throughout school, work, the world, etc.
I guess my question is what will be the drawbacks of online learning? That doesn't seem to be considered. Further, what about the digital divide. It can't all be roses and I think some of this stuff needs to be answered.
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