[Air-L] digital literacy takes a field trip to a farm
Nicole B Ellison
nellison at msu.edu
Mon Apr 28 07:06:42 PDT 2008
Hi,
I'd love to see more discussion of teaching on the list! I haven't done any
logging-off activities to date, although it's a great idea especially with a
population like undergrads in SF. The closest I've done:
1. Last spring I had my MA students keep a diary of their media use (which
medium, who communicated with, what about, etc.) and then write a short
paper analyzing the patterns that emerged. This was done as part of a
research project Caroline Haythornthwaite and Lori Kendall were (are?) doing
and they did a virtual "guest lecture" as well. Students enjoyed it although
complained it was too time-consuming.
2. In my large undergraduate class on the social impacts of new media, on
the first day I put the students into small groups and have them discuss
what media (including f2f) they would use to accomplish various tasks and
why. The tasks are things like: Lie to a professor about reason for missing
an exam, give bad news to a family member, apply to a job you found listed
on the net, etc. Then we debrief as a group: each group tells the class what
they would do and why, and I link it to research and theory (CMC and
otherwise) as a preview of the kinds of things we'll be learning about. (For
instance, with the deception case, they will probably bring up non-verbals
which of course lends itself to discussions of emoticons, SIP, deception and
technology, gender-bending etc etc.) This has worked very well for me -
students really get into it and it's a nice way to set the stage for the
class in terms of student participation and academic content.
Nicole
David M Silver writes:
> aoir folk,
>
> late last week, i posted a message to air-l (msg title: "digital
> literacy takes a field trip to a farm") in which i suggested that barry
> wellman may have a "hissy fit" about the contents of the message. as
> barry notes in his reply to the list ("msg title: "hissy fit?") my tone
> was uncalled for and for that i apologize.
>
> i've been subscribed to air-l from the start, back in 2001, and for the
> most part the list has been interesting and engaging and useful. from
> time to time, flamewars develop, which are usually a drag, and i hope my
> post doesn't contribute to such an outcome.
>
> for the record, in his reply, barry mentions one of my blog posts (msg
> title: "barry wellman, that ain't right";
> http://silverinsf.blogspot.com/2007/10/barry-wellman-that-aint-right.html
> ), in which i question barry's attempt to stop a conversation on air-l
> about race. i strongly believe this field - as well as all academic
> fields, but *especially* this field since it is so new and young and
> can, conceivably, develop in directions we decide to take it - benefits
> greatly from conversations about cultural difference (race, gender,
> sexuality, age, disability, and class) and thought it was wrong of barry
> to thwart such a conversation. i not apologize for the blog post - and
> encourage all of us to work hard to make our list and conferences
> exciting, vital places for discussion, research, and teaching about
> cultural difference and digital media.
>
> my real mistake, however, was to direct attention towards barry wellman
> and away from what my post was about - about teaching internet studies
> and digital literacy, about encouraging students (and ourselves) to log
> off for extended periods of time, about sharing some learning
> experiences my students and i had while on a magical organic farm, and
> about asking others to share their teaching/learning experiences.
>
> so, with that in mind, i express my apologies to barry and to the list
> and extend an invitation for folks to post and share more about teaching
> internet studies in general and introducing logging off activities in
> particular.
>
> thanks,
>
> david silver
> http://silverinsf.blogspot.com
>
> ----- Original Message -----
>
>> Date: Sat, 26 Apr 2008 07:38:00 -0400
>> From: Barry Wellman <wellman at chass.utoronto.ca>
>> Subject: [Air-L] hissy fit?
>> To: aoir list <air-l at aoir.org>, David Silver <dsilver at u.washington.edu>
>> Message-ID:
>>
>>
>> 1. Despite David Silver's astonishing assertion, I have no
>> recollection of
>> objecting to teaching-oriented posts to this list. I, too, teach (and
>> Internet-Society to boot, and I welcome learning more about
>> teaching the
>> subject.
>>
>> 2. I do object to gratuitous personal attacks on the AoIR list,
>> such as
>> David Silver saying I will have a "hissy fit". I don't know where
>> it has
>> come from, as David Silver and I have not had any contact for many
>> months.And the last time was when David launched another gratuitous
>> personalattack on me -- on his blog.
>>
>> 3. I don't know where Dr Silver's animus stems from. For the
>> record, I
>> have not had anything do with any administrative or scholarly matter
>> involving him.
>>
>> 4. I wouldn't have thought it was necessary, but I ask AoIR leaders to
>> remind list members to avoid personal attacks on each other.
>>
>> Barry Wellman
>>
>> _______________________________________________________________________
>> S.D. Clark Professor of Sociology, FRSC NetLab Director
>> Department of Sociology University of Toronto
>> 725 Spadina Avenue, Room 388 Toronto Canada M5S 2J4
>> http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman fax:+1-416-978-3963
>> Updating history: http://chass.utoronto.ca/oldnew/cybertimes.php
>> Elvis wouldn't be singing "Return to Sender" these days
>> **** PLEASE NOTE NEW ADDRESS AND FAX NUMBER ****
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