Contents contributed and discussions participated by Ed Webb
Why Doesn't Anyone Pay Attention Anymore? | HASTAC - 0 views
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We also need to distinguish what scientists know about human neurophysiology from our all-too-human discomfort with cultural and social change. I've been an English professor for over twenty years and have heard how students don't pay attention, can't read a long novel anymore, and are in decline against some unspecified norm of an idealized past quite literally every year that I have been in this profession. In fact, how we educators should address this dire problem was the focus of the very first faculty meeting I ever attended.
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Whenever I hear about attentional issues in debased contemporary society, whether blamed on television, VCR's, rock music, or the desktop, I assume that the critic was probably, like me, the one student who actually read Moby Dick and who had little awareness that no one else did.
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This is not really a discussion about the biology of attention; it is about the sociology of change.
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News: Cheating and the Generational Divide - Inside Higher Ed - 0 views
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such attitudes among students can develop from the notion that all of education can be distilled into performance on a test -- which today's college students have absorbed from years of schooling under No Child Left Behind -- and not that education is a process in which one grapples with difficult material.
Images from Google Streetview - 2 views
How To Write Three Blog Posts A Day - 2 views
Students Lack Basic Research Skills, Study Finds - Wired Campus - The Chronicle of High... - 0 views
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today’s students struggle with a feeling of information overload. “They feel overwhelmed, and they’re developing a strategy for not drowning in all information out there,” she said. “They’re basically taking how they learned to research in high school with them to college, since it’s worked for them in the past.”
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college students approach research as a hunt for the right answer instead of a process of evaluating different arguments and coming up with their own interpretation.
What killed Caprica? - 0 views
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Caprica may have gone too far, tried to cover too much. It broke one of the cardinal rules of mainstream science fiction, which is that if you have a strange alternate universe you'd better populate it with recognizable, ordinary characters. But I like the kind of thought-experiment audaciousness that says, Hell yes we are going to give you complicated characters who defy stereotypes, and put them in a world whose rules you'll have to think hard to understand. It's too late to bring Caprica back. But I hope that this show is the first part of a new wave of science fiction on TV. Like The Sarah Connor Chronicles, Dollhouse, and Fringe, Caprica tackles singularity-level technology as a political and economic phenomenon - not as an escapist fantasy. And that's why it was a show worth watching, even when it stumbled.
Obama Administration Seeks Internet Privacy Protections, New Policy Office - WSJ.com - 0 views
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The central issue in writing federal privacy legislation is whether the Internet industry's efforts to police its own behavior has been effective enough. Proponents of legislation argue the industry is a Wild West where consumer data are gathered and sold without restrictions. Opponents of legislation say the industry is committed to providing tools to give consumers better insight into and control over data about themselves.
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