Skip to main content

Home/ Technology and Learning Program at CSU Chico/ Group items tagged policy

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Ann Steckel

The Power of Real-World Gender Roles in Second Life - Pixels and Policy - 0 views

  •  
    "The Power of Real-World Gender Roles in Second Life Pixels and Policy recently tackled the issue of how racial bias crept across the real-virtual divide and found a home in the virtual world. Dozens of our readers responded with their own stories of virtual prejudice as well as their critiques of our research. As we researched the role of race is Second Life, more and more female residents asked us to take a look at how female avatars reflect real-world gender expectations. The topic is too important to pass up. Over the course of three weeks, Pixels and Policy conducted interviews with over 40 residents of Second Life to see just what gender in the Metaverse meant to them."
Peter DiFalco

RSC Policy Brief on Copyright (suppressed and retracted) - full PDF - 0 views

  •  
    This is a policy brief prepared for the Republican Study Commission which takes a refreshing common sense approach to copyright reform. Unfortunately, the influence of copyright holders is strong and the brief was retracted and disavowed within hours of its release.
Marjorie Shepard

A Learner-Centered Syllabus Helps Set the Tone for Learning - 0 views

  •  
    "When it comes to a learner-centered syllabus vs. a traditional syllabus, it's not really a difference so much in content as it is in tone," said Paff. "There's a shift in emphasis from 'What are we going to cover?' to 'How can the course promote learning and intellectual development in students?' So it's going to contain roughly the same information, but the language used to convey the policies, procedures, and content is different in order to foster a more engaging and shared learning environment."
csharrio

Why Aren't More Schools Using Free, Open Tools? - 0 views

  •  
    One school in Pennsylvania is using open-source tools wherever possible to keep students close to the code behind the machines they use. This stance is opposite to the very restrictive policies of many schools, but could allow students more freedom to explore what makes devices work.
1 - 8 of 8
Showing 20 items per page