Title: The Greatest, Boomers, GenXers, and Millennials:
1- The Greatest, Boomers, Gen-Xers, and Millennials
- Creating Intergenerational Understanding
Terri A. Tarr, Ph.D. Megan M. Palmer,
Ph.D. Indiana University Purdue University
Indianapolis January 2007
2Howe, N., Strauss, W. (2000). Millennials
rising The next great generation. New York
Random House.
3Overview of Session
- Introduction
- Generational Perspectives
- Understanding and Motivating Millennial Students
4Introduction What is a Generation?
- In addition to coincidence of birth, a
generation is also defined by common tastes,
attitudes, and experience.Those times encompass
a myriad of circumstances economic, social,
sociological, and, of course, demographic.
Zemke, R. Raines, C., Filipczak, B. (2000).
Generations at work Managing the clash of
Veterans, Boomers, Xers, and Nexters in your
workplace. New York Amacon.
5IntroductionCautions
- Generations overlap
- Based on mainstream America
- Danger of stereotyping
6IntroductionWhy is this topic important?
They cant problem solve! Theyre just a bunch
of spoiled brats.
My professor told me to email her. I wondered,
Dont you know about IM?
I need to get information on my research paper. I
better Google it.
If I hear We already tried that and it didnt
work one more time, I think Ill scream.
7Generational Perspectives
8(No Transcript)
9Generational PerspectivesBreakdown of Current
Population
Greatest
Millennial
Boomer
Gen X
Source 2000 US Census Data
10Generational PerspectivesThe Greatest
Generation, Born 1922 to 1943
11Generational PerspectivesBaby Boomers, Born
1943 to 1960
12Generational PerspectivesGeneration X, Born
1960-1980
13Generational PerspectivesMillennials, Born
1980-2000
14Generational Perspectives
Howe, N., Strauss, W. (2000). Millennials
rising The next great generation. New York
Random House.
15Generational Perspectives
- With others at your site, complete the worksheet
about characteristics of the Millennial
generation.
16Generational PerspectivesMillennials
- Events and Trends
- Heroes
- Technology
- Core Values
17GenerationsThe Way They See the World
Millennials
Generation X
Baby Boomers
Greatest Generation
Skeptical
Driven
Respectful
Pulling together
Expected
Do with help
Chambers, D.W. (2005). Generations. Journal of
the American College of Dentists, 72(3),
27-36. Zemke, R. Raines, C., Filipczak, B.
(2000). Generations at work Managing the clash
of Veterans, Boomers, Xers, and Nexters in your
workplace. New York Amacon.
18Understanding and Motivating Millennial Students
19Understanding and Motivating Millennial Students
Howe, N., Strauss, W. (2000). Millennals
rising The next great generation. New York
Random House.
20Millennial StudentsCharacteristics
Pressured
Sheltered
Special
Achieving
Team Oriented
Confident
Conventional
Howe, N., Strauss, W. (2000). Millennials
rising The next great generation. New York
Random House.
21Millennial StudentsCharacteristics
- At this time, complete the poll on Millennial
characteristics
22Millennial StudentsCharacteristics of the
Millennial Learner
- Digital Literacy
- Experiential and Engaging
- Interactivity and Collaboration
- Immediacy, Connectivity, and Communications
Skiba, D.J., Barton, A.J. (2006). Adapting your
teaching to accommodate the net generation of
learners. Online Journal of Issues in Nursing,
11(2).
23Digital Literacy
- Image-Rich vs. Text
- Post course notes with relevant web links
- Direct students to discipline specific databases
- Course site could include notes, slides,
webliography, and pertinent multimedia - Hybrid courses
- Podcasting
- Image-rich text books and readings (CDs, DVDs)
Skiba, D.J., Barton, A.J. (2006). Adapting your
teaching to accommodate the net generation of
learners. Online Journal of Issues in Nursing,
11(2).
24Experiential and Engaging
- Construction of Knowledge
- Simulations (online, field experience, in-class)
- Visualizations
- Case Analysis
- Fieldwork
- Blogging
- Interactive Web Environments
Skiba, D.J., Barton, A.J. (2006). Adapting your
teaching to accommodate the net generation of
learners. Online Journal of Issues in Nursing,
11(2).
25Interactivity and Collaboration
- Learning is a social activity
- Collaborative Learning Online (Oncourse CL)
- Wikis
- Discussion Forums
- Chat
- Email
- Group Space
- Audio and Video Conferencing
- Classroom Response Devices (clickers)
- Group work (small teams, pairs, presentations)
- Class Discussion
- Role Playing
Skiba, D.J., Barton, A.J. (2006). Adapting your
teaching to accommodate the net generation of
learners. Online Journal of Issues in Nursing,
11(2).
26Immediacy, Connectivity, and Communications
- 24 x 7 x 365 World
- Set expectations early about feedback and
communication - Consider ways to use all three forms of
communication - One-on-One
- One-to-Many
- Many-to-Many
- Online services (gradebook, clinical scheduling,
advising)
Skiba, D.J., Barton, A.J. (2006). Adapting your
teaching to accommodate the net generation of
learners. Online Journal of Issues in Nursing,
11(2).
27Balance
Action
Reflection
Text
Visual
Social
Individual
Process
Content
Speed
Deliberation
Peer-to-peer
Peer review
Oblinger, D. (2005, September/October). Learners,
learning, and technology. Educause Review, 67-75.
28Questions to Consider
- Do you know your students and their preferences?
- Once you know their preferences how (and to what
degree) will you adapt or accommodate? - What balance between the physical and virtual
worlds of learning is appropriate for your
students, faculty, and setting? - How do you engage your learners?
- What are the best methods for incorporating
technology in your teaching and learning
environments?
Skiba, D.J., Barton, A.J. (2006). Adapting your
teaching to accommodate the net generation of
learners. Online Journal of Issues in Nursing,
11(2).
29- Terri A. Tarr, Ph.D.
- tatarr_at_iupui.edu
- (317) 278-6321
- Megan M. Palmer
- mmpalmer_at_iupui.edu
- (317) 274-1300