Title: Its Not About Technology
1Its Not About Technology
- Its about Relationships, Communications
Knowledge
2Some Stories
- Commercial Graphics Designer
- Webmaster
- Password Interceptor
- The Principals Own Web Page
- The Printer Repairman
- More Email Than You Ever Wanted
- I Can Fix That Problem
- Whats Wrong With My Son?
3fast fact
- Barnes Noble
- Biggest Physical Bookseller
- date founded
- 1873
- square feet of retail space
- 11 million
- market cap
- 2.4 billion
- Amazon.com
- Biggest Virtual Bookseller
- date founded
- 1995
- square feet of retail space
- 0
- market cap
- 4 billion
Fast Facts From FAST COMPANY
4fast fact
- General Motors
- Worlds 1 Auto Company
- number of employees
- 608,000
- number of assembly factories
- 24
- market value
- 57 billion
- Microsoft
- Worlds 1 Software Company
- number of employees
- 22,200
- number of assembly factories
- 2
- market value
- 270 billion
Fast Facts From FAST COMPANY
5The Internet The worlds largest network
- The Internet is doubling in size every year.
- The Web is doubling in size every 90 days.
- In 1996, US Postal Service delivered 185 billion
pieces of mail. - In 1996, the Internet handled about 1 trillion
e-mail messages
Electronic School, Reading the Future, David
Thornburg, June,1998
6Collapse of the information float.
- The time lag between discovery and application is
shrinking. - It took hundreds of years to bring the steam
engine into commercial production. - Virtual overnight products.
Electronic School, Reading the Future, David
Thornburg, June,1998
7Home Computers by Income
Electronic School, Reading the Future, David
Thornburg, June,1998
8Growing Up Wired
9.8 million (14) children under the age of 18
use the Internet
CIO Web Business, March 1, 1998
9Whos There
- 28 percent of Internet users purchase products
online. - 21 percent of American households representing 43
million users have in-home access to the Web. - 24 percent of households with Internet access
have been on the Web for 6 months or less. - 20 percent of the households with Web access run
home-based businesses. - 51 percent of households with Internet access
have incomes greater than 50,000.
CIO Web Business, March 1, 1998
10Why Do Parents Want Their Children to Use the
Internet?
Homework help
78
Entertainment to replace TV
37
Increase their job prospects
36
11Decline of TV
- AOL homes spend approximately 15 less time
watching TV. - 40 of KidsCom and Company stated that they
watched less TV because of the Internet. - When given a choice, 92 chose the Internet over
TV. - In a survey by Odyssey, 30 were taking time from
TV for the Internet.
12WHY??The Net - The Antithesis of TVTV is
controlled by adults. Kids are passive observers.
In contrast, children control much of their world
on the Net. They do not just observe, they
participate.
13Not one student K-12 has known a time without
computers.
14The N-Generation
15What makes this generation different from its
predecessors is not just its demographic muscle,
but it is the first to grow up surrounded by
digital media.
16The Generation Lap
- When it comes to understanding and using the new
media and technology, many parents are falling
woefully behind their children. We've shifted
from a generation gap to a generation lap - kids
"lapping" adults on the technology track.
17Technology Is Like the Air...
- Kids
- Assimilate Technology
- .
- Adults
- Accommodate Technology
18Children are authoritieslive with itLEARN
with them
19kids think their parents are pretty cool
- "Nearly half of all children think their parents
are 'up to date' on the music they like," - their parents' opinions also matter most to them
when it comes to drinking, spending money and
questions about sex and AIDS." - Further, there are a lot of organizations who
care about young people and are working hard to
transform the educational system to reflect the
changing society.
20The Ten Themes of N-Gen Culture
- Strong Independence The typical N-Gener has a
strong sense of independence autonomy. N-Gen's
unprecedented access to information also gives
them the power to acquire the knowledge necessary
to confront information they feel may not be
correct.
21The Ten Themes of N-Gen Culture
- Emotional and Intellectual Openness When N-Geners
go online they expose themselves. They will
maintain online journals and post their innermost
thoughts on a Web page or in a chat room. A
strong online example of N-Geners' openness is
The Diary Project.
22The Ten Themes of N-Gen Culture
- Inclusion N-Geners are moving toward greater
social inclusion with technology, not exclusion.
Their creative processes show a move toward
global orientation in all of their activities.
Check out a virtual community of about 30,000
N-Geners at Freezone.
23The Ten Themes of N-Gen Culture
- Free Expression and Strong Views Being exposed to
a lot of information on the Internet is to their
benefit, insists N-Gen, and is a key element of
the Internet's appeal and usefulness.
24The Ten Themes of N-Gen Culture
- Innovation N-Geners live and breathe innovation,
constantly looking for ways to do things better.
These expectations of constant change and the
ability to build or construct experiences have
implications in the education of N-Gen.
25The Ten Themes of N-Gen Culture
- Preoccupation with Maturity The changing nature
of childhood makes itself most obvious when
N-Geners are contrasted with the baby boomers
who, as a generation, have spent their lives
obsessed with being youthful. N-Geners insist
that they are more mature than adults expect.
26The Ten Themes of N-Gen Culture
- Investigations When it comes to technology,
N-Gen's initial focus is not how it works but how
to work it. It is important for children to
understand the assumptions inherent in software
and to feel empowered to change those
assumptions.
27The Ten Themes of N-Gen Culture
- Immediacy Interactivity and the speed of the Net
have greatly increased the process of
communicating. What used to take days or weeks,
now takes seconds.
28The Ten Themes of N-Gen Culture
- Sensitivity to Corporate Interest N-Geners feel
that much of the broadcasting material they see
on television is there to satisfy corporate
agendas. However, on the Internet there has been
such a flurry of creation involving so many
people working in home-grown cottage industries,
that there is even more intense sensitivity to
corporate interest.
29The Ten Themes of N-Gen Culture
- Authentication and Trust Because of the
anonymity, accessibility, diversity, and ubiquity
of the Net, children must continually
authenticate what they see or hear.
30N-Gen Values
- Young people are navigators. They have set their
ship out onto the Net and have returned home
safely, carrying riches. They also know that
their future cannot be trusted to anyone else, no
government or corporation will ensure their
future. - Their future is also uncertain. While the
N-Geners have a great deal of confidence and high
self-esteem, they also have worries about the
future. They mistrust the government and the
elites. They value highly individual freedoms and
rights. The right to be left alone. The right to
privacy The right to have and express their own
views. - This "self-navigation", however, does not mean a
rise in individualism. N-Geners are globally
oriented and open minded. They have a great
desire to be connected with their family, close
friends, in school, in neighborhoods, interest
groups, and the online virtual communities. - N-Geners are also big on equal rights. Social
consciousness is therefore a great concern to the
youths of today. N-Geners value their culture
with a ferocity which should make a boomer proud.
They love their music, movies, magazines, some TV
shows, video games, computers, software, and the
Net.
31Purchasing Power of the N-Generation
- 1.N-Geners Want Options
- 2.N-Gen Customization
- 3.They want to Change Their Minds
- 4.Try Before They Buy
- 5.The Ethics of Advertising to N-Gen
32- Linear, sequential/serial Hypermedia learning
- Instruction Construction/discovery
- Teacher-centered Learner-centered
- Absorbing materials Learning how to learn
- School Lifelong
- One-size-fits-all Customized
- School as torture School as fun
- Teacher as transmitter Teacher as facilitator
Interactive learning
Broadcast learning