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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rud, Anthony G., Jr.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED391463
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author Rud, Anthony G., Jr.
author_facet Rud, Anthony G., Jr.
Rud, Anthony G., Jr.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents The Development of an On-line Community of Inquiry. Rud, Anthony G., Jr. Collegiality Community Computer Mediated Communication Electronic Mail Elementary Secondary Education Information Dissemination Listservs Online Systems Teachers Teleconferencing A number of present-day authors have noted factors that can work against or pose a threat to a sense of community, including the American propensity for individualism, industrialization, and the growth of mass communication and information technology. Some scholars have begun to suggest that schools, in particular, should get beyond mere contractual relations of barter to a relationship characterized by commitment and mutual obligations. This paper describes how a program at the North Carolina Center for the Advancement of Teaching (NCCAT) actually sought to use information technology in the form of computer conferencing to construct a community of teachers. The NCCAT program, called "Connected to the World," featured a 3-day residential seminar with attendees taking part in interactive electronic mail discussions both 2 months before and up to 1 month after. The program exemplified NCCAT's history of aiming to foster collegiality, inquiry, lifelong learning, and critical thinking among K-12 teachers. Only about half of the seminar attendees were able to participate in the online portion, but the other half were mailed printouts of comments from the listserv and had their own comments posted to the list. Three main topics emerged on the list, including how to deal with a student who tampered with a classmate's computer files and plagiarized her work, how the Internet will change how students and teachers work, and who should make decisions about age-appropriateness of information and library materials. The discussions that unfolded revealed that although computer conferencing is not a panacea for teacher development, it can foster awareness of wider issues in information technology, bring to attention multiple avenues for effectiveness in teaching many kinds of students, and aid reasoned, dialogic consideration of issues that are often given superficial treatment in the popular press. (Contains 23 references.) (BEW)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED391463
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1995
record_format eric
spellingShingle The Development of an On-line Community of Inquiry.
Rud, Anthony G., Jr.
Collegiality
Community
Computer Mediated Communication
Electronic Mail
Elementary Secondary Education
Information Dissemination
Listservs
Online Systems
Teachers
Teleconferencing
The Development of an On-line Community of Inquiry. Rud, Anthony G., Jr. Collegiality Community Computer Mediated Communication Electronic Mail Elementary Secondary Education Information Dissemination Listservs Online Systems Teachers Teleconferencing A number of present-day authors have noted factors that can work against or pose a threat to a sense of community, including the American propensity for individualism, industrialization, and the growth of mass communication and information technology. Some scholars have begun to suggest that schools, in particular, should get beyond mere contractual relations of barter to a relationship characterized by commitment and mutual obligations. This paper describes how a program at the North Carolina Center for the Advancement of Teaching (NCCAT) actually sought to use information technology in the form of computer conferencing to construct a community of teachers. The NCCAT program, called "Connected to the World," featured a 3-day residential seminar with attendees taking part in interactive electronic mail discussions both 2 months before and up to 1 month after. The program exemplified NCCAT's history of aiming to foster collegiality, inquiry, lifelong learning, and critical thinking among K-12 teachers. Only about half of the seminar attendees were able to participate in the online portion, but the other half were mailed printouts of comments from the listserv and had their own comments posted to the list. Three main topics emerged on the list, including how to deal with a student who tampered with a classmate's computer files and plagiarized her work, how the Internet will change how students and teachers work, and who should make decisions about age-appropriateness of information and library materials. The discussions that unfolded revealed that although computer conferencing is not a panacea for teacher development, it can foster awareness of wider issues in information technology, bring to attention multiple avenues for effectiveness in teaching many kinds of students, and aid reasoned, dialogic consideration of issues that are often given superficial treatment in the popular press. (Contains 23 references.) (BEW)
title The Development of an On-line Community of Inquiry.
topic Collegiality
Community
Computer Mediated Communication
Electronic Mail
Elementary Secondary Education
Information Dissemination
Listservs
Online Systems
Teachers
Teleconferencing
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED391463