Showing posts with label teaching trends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teaching trends. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 01, 2009

Latest PIL report released


Lessons Learned: How College Students Find Information in the Digital Age was released today, Dec. 1.

As many of you know, Harvard has been involved in phase 1 (focus group) and phase 2 (online survey). We're also on board for phase 3 (content analysis of research assignments); Alison Head, the PI, is currently collecting this data from faculty in the College.

More info about the project, including past reports, videos, and supplementary information, is available at the PIL site.

Friday, November 20, 2009

New finding: "Search engines are sources of learning"

The summary of work by Penn State researcher Bernard J. Jannsen, et al. is here.

The article, "Using the Taxonomy of Cognitive Learning to Model Online Searching," appears in Information Processing and Management, 45 (2009): 643-663. You can view it via Citation Linker.

Monday, January 19, 2009

2009 Horizon Report

. . . is on the horizon. Read it here.

Friday, November 14, 2008

ECAR Survey 2008

The Educause Center for Applied Research (ECAR) has released its 2008 Study of Undergraduate Students and Technology.

In distilled form, these results and implications of the study are presented here.

Friday, October 03, 2008

Reading on Collaboration and Collaboration Tools

An August 2008 Educause Learning Initiative (ELI) paper.

Firefox Video Add-Ons

While we are learning the fine art of video-making and what it can do for us, and until we have Camtasia or Captivate on our machines to facilitate experimentation, you might want to take a look at CaptureFox. This is a Firefox add-on that you can install (much like Harvard LibX) on your computer here. CaptureFox is very recently launched but is generating enthusiasm.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

A reading that puts our changes in context?

The Academic Library in a 2.0 World, Susan V. Wawrzaszek and David G. Wedaman, ECAR Bulletin, issue 19 (September 16, 2008).

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Interesting Reading

According to an April 17, 2008 Wired Campus story (in the Chronicle of Higher Education), "Harvard Survey Shows Undergraduates -- but Not Graduate Students -- Like Video Lectures"

The actual technology report is linked from the story. Comments on the Chronicle site are also worth a look for some of the issues surrounding these technologies.

The Harvard report, in turn, links back to a Berkman initiative on Digital Natives.

Monday, January 28, 2008

2008 Horizon Report

The 36 page report is linked from here.

Because it forecasts trends in teaching, learning, and technologies, it makes interesting reading as we all think about a Lamont of the future.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Worth a look

JISC (the UK Joint Information Systems Committee) and the British Library have just published a report on "The Information Behaviour of the Google Generation."  It looks very critically at some of "myths" of the Google generation -- at long last!

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Friday, September 28, 2007

Education at a Glance 2007 released

From the Scout Report:

The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has published the Education at a Glance report since 2001, and it presents a wealth of information about the comparative state of education across its member countries. As the introduction to the report notes, "The indicators look at who participates in education, what is spent on it, and how education systems operate and at the results achieved." This site provides users access to the entire 451-page report from 2007, complete with numerous tables and charts. If this "glance" is a bit too much for casual visitors,there is also an executive summary available here. Visitors will also find "Briefing Notes" for each OECD country covered in the report, along with a host of PowerPoint presentations, podcasts, and report summaries twenty different languages.

The site has been added to our del.icio.us links, too.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

New Educause Report

ECAR [Educause Center for Applied Research] has just released its Study of Undergraduate Students and Information Technology, 2007.

"This 2007 ECAR research study is a longitudinal extension of the 2004, 2005, and 2006 ECAR studies of students and information technology. The study, which reports noticeable changes from previous years, is based on quantitative data from a spring 2007 survey and interviews with 27,846 freshman, senior, and community college students at 103 higher education institutions. It focuses on what kinds of information technologies these students use, own, and experience; their technology behaviors, preferences, and skills; how IT impacts their experiences in their courses; and their perceptions of the role of IT in the academic experience."

If the entire 122 page report is too long to pore over (especially these days), there's a 15 page key findings that you can peruse. A 4 page "roadmap" for action is also provided.

Saturday, September 08, 2007

Interesting Reading on the Next Big Thing(s)

Richard MacManus, who authors the Read/Write Web blog, provides a summary of the Top 10 Future Web Trends here. The experts suggest these developments will unfold over a ten year period.

Saturday, June 30, 2007

ALA Preconference on Reinvented Reference

This is the first in what I hope will be a series of take-backs from my DC learning experience.

On Friday, June 22, I participated in a day-long session that explored the impact of emerging technologies on reference services.

Here's the program description, list of presenters, and their topics:

How can social networking, blogging, and podcasting be applied to reference and information services? How can you best use instant messaging and other available technologies to provide Everywhere Reference? Speakers from academic and public libraries will highlight selection, implementation and evaluation of new technologies for cutting edge reference services.

Keynote speaker:
Michael Stephens, “The Hyperlinked Library: Reference Services in the 2.0 Age.”

Speakers:
David Ward, “R U There? Implementing, training, and marketing for IM services in new user spaces.”
David Free, “The Wide World of Podcasting: Implications for Libraries.”
David King, “Videocasting for Public Outreach.”
Karen Coombs, “Blogs for Reference Services, Outreach and Marketing.”


Slides from the keynote will give you a sense of the overarching themes of the day.

In addition, one attendee very usefully (and extensively) blogged each presentation and audience questions. Her summaries are here.

From my perspective, David Ward's discussion of IM services offered at the UIUC undergraduate library was especially interesting. He notes that the average IM session at his institution lasts about 12 minutes (and the exchange is non-continuous, of course). When we have patrons who prefer to use library services this way and when we know that a single IM exchange may be our only point of contact in the entire span of the research and writing project, that knowledge has to change our sense of how the session should proceed.

12 minutes of face-to-face time at the desk is obviously not the same as 12 minutes of IM. I suspect we need different ways to measure success with these technologies. Best practices are probably already emerging at places like UIUC as well.

Let me know your thoughts (or questions) about the preconference summary materials above, especially as they might relate to undergraduate reference in the Lamont of the (near) future.

Recommended reading: "The New Metrics of Scholarly Authority"

This excellent article appeared in the June 15, 2007 Chronicle of Higher Education's Review section. Author Michael Jensen describes the changing nature of scholarly authority in our current web 2.0 environment and envisions what authority might mean in 10 or 15 years, when we are all immersed in web 3.0. Worth a look.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

New Gen Ed curriculum -- distilled and complete versions

The News Office has posted a summary of the Gen Ed requirements that will replace the Core. The full report, in its final, February 2007 form, is available here.

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Harvard Compact to Enhance Teaching and Learning

This report, discussed in a New York Times article today, is probably well worth reading.