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Tools of Engagement or Disengagement

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Title: Tools of Engagement or Disengagement


1
Tools of Engagement or Disengagement?
  • J. Wesley Baker, Ph.D.
  • Cedarville University

2006 CCCU Conference on Technology Cedarville
University June 2, 2006
2
Hope in Technology?
  • Technologies typically carry contradictory
    tendencies

Uniformity
Individuality
3
Technology Values
  • Technologies are amoral
  • Difference between moral neutrality and value
    neutrality
  • Technologies carry inherent values that shape
    culture
  • Technologies have consequences

4
Understanding Values
  • By examining the technologies our students
    consider essential to their lifestyle, we can see
    how the values promoted by those technologies are
    reflected in our students.

5
Which Technologies?
  • What technologies have the most influence on our
    students?

6
The Web for Information
  • . . . the Internet, more than any other medium,
    allows readers to self-select (Mindich, 2005, p.
    33).
  • Mindich (2005) notes how personal the news has
    become. . . . E-mail, Instant Messenger, and
    countless Web sites give us a daily me,
    tailored to our particular tastes (p. 77).

7
The Web for Information
  • egocasting the thoroughly personalized and
    extremely narrow pursuit of ones personal taste
    (Rosen, 2004-2005, p. 52).
  • The world of egocasting is a world where we . .
    . can consciously avoid ideas, sounds, and images
    that we dont agree with or dont enjoy (Rosen,
    2004-2005, p. 67).

8
The Web for Information
  • Sustein, Republic.com (2001) People should be
    exposed to materials that they have not chosen in
    advance. Unplanned, unanticipated encounters are
    central to democracy itself (quoted by Rosen,
    2004/2005, p. 68).
  • One of the most important functions of the
    press may be to bring people in contact with
    ideas that they do not agree with (Mindich,
    2005, p. 104).

9
Google
  • These personalized technologies foster an
    impatience for what research demands. The more
    convenient our method of research, the weaker our
    resolve to meet the challenges posed by difficult
    and inconvenient methods of research. Aura now
    resides in the technological devices with which
    we access information (adapted from Rosen,
    2004/2005, p. 70).

10
Social Networking
  • Real communities require a level of work,
    sacrifice, and accommodation that virtual ones do
    not always share (Mindich, 2005, p. 90).
  • On the Internet, we are more likely to drop our
    virtual neighbors completely to get someone else
    who will agree with us (Mindich, 2005, p. 91).

11
Social Networking
  • For William A. Galston, the ultimate problem
    with the Internet in terms of its civic and
    political ramifications is that its communities
    are so easy to exit (Mindich, 2005, p. 91).
  • Sunstein (Republic.com) argues that our
    technologiesespecially the Internetare
    encouraging group polarization As the
    customization of our communications universe
    increases, society is in danger of fragmenting,
    shared communities in danger of dissolving
    (quoted by Rosen, 2004/2005, p. 68).

12
iPods
  • Technologies like TiVo and iPod enable
    unprecedented degrees of selective avoidance.
    The more control we can exercise over what we see
    and hear, the less prepared we are to be
    surprised (Rosen, 2004/2005 p.67).
  • Rosen (2004/2005) refers to such technologies as
    the remote control, TiVo and iPods as
    ultra-personalized technologies (p. 64).

13
iPods
  • Because the iPod is a portable technology,
    just like the cell phone, it has an impact on
    social space . . . . Those people with white
    wires dangling from their ears might be enjoying
    their unique life soundtrack, but they are also
    practicing absent presence in public spaces,
    paying little or not attention to the world
    immediately around them (Rosen, 2004/2005, p.
    66).

14
iPods
  • Devices such as iPods and cell phones have an
    increasing potential for immersing people in
    private as opposed to collective worlds (Gergen,
    2002, p. 230).

15
Cell Phones
  • Rosen (2004) raises the question, How has the
    wireless telephone encouraged us to connect
    individually but disconnect socially, ceding, in
    the process, much that was civil and civilized
    about public space (p. 26)?
  • Today . . . being accessible means answering
    your cell phone, which brings you in contact with
    your caller, but out of contact in the physical
    social situation (Rosen, 2004, p. 39).

16
Cell Phones
  • Kenneth J. Gergen . . . has argued that one
    reason cell phones allow a peculiar form of
    diversion in public spaces is that they encourage
    absent presence, a state where one is
    physically present but is absorbed by a
    technologically mediated world of elsewhere
    (Rosen, 2004, p. 41).

17
Cell Phones
  • The result, according to Kenneth Gergen, is the
    erosion of face-to-face community, a coherent and
    centered sense of self, moral bearings, depth of
    relationship, and the uprooting of meaning from
    material context such are the dangers of absent
    presence (Gergen, 2002, p. 236).

18
Cell Phones
  • Cell phones, etc., are used as a means to refuse
    to be in the social space they are
    technological cold shoulders that are worse than
    older forms of subordinate activity in that they
    impose visually and auditorialy on others. . . .
    We have allowed what should be subordinate
    activities in social space to become dominant
    (Rosen, 2004, p. 38).

19
Cell Phones
  • Our constant accessibility and frequent exchange
    of information is undeniably useful. But it
    would be a terrible irony if being connected
    required or encouraged a disconnection from
    community lifean erosion of the spontaneous
    encounters and everyday decencies that make
    society both civilized and tolerable (Rosen,
    2004, p. 45).

20
Disengaging Effects
  • ultra-personalization (Rosens egocasting)
  • Emersion in ones private world (Negropontes
    Daily Me)
  • Selective reinforcement/selective avoidance
  • Loss of unanticipated encounters and exposure to
    different ideas (Sustein, Republic.com)

21
Disengaging Effects
  • Impatience for messy processes
  • Reliance on the easy technological solution,
    rather than difficult personal effort

22
Disengaging Effects
  • Loose connection to virtual communities (Galston)
  • Refusal to be in social space absorbed in the
    technologically mediated world
  • Loss of connection to real, face-to-face
    communities (Gergens absent presence)

23
Emerging Technologies
  • Concept Maps Brain-based learning
  • Wiki -- Creating a shared body of knowledge

24
Concept Maps
  • Concept maps were developed by Joseph D. Novak in
    1972 at Cornell University
  • They are based on the learning psychology of
    David Ausubel (Novak Cañas, 2006, p. 2).

25
Concept Maps
  • Concept maps were developed by JosephD. Novak in
    1972 at Cornell University
  • They are based on the learning psychology of
    David Ausubel (Novak Cañas, 2006, p. 2).

26
Concept Maps
  • Learning takes place by assimilation of new
    concepts into learners existing cognitive
    structure.
  • In constructing a concept map, the learner or
    team of learners is very actively engaged in the
    meaningful building process, an essential
    requirement for meaningful learning to occur
    (Novak Cañas, 2006, p. 20).

27
Wiki
  • Students are treated as incipient scholars
  • Expected to make contributions to the shared body
    of knowledge
  • Promotes teamwork in a real social setting
  • Have to negotiate product

28
Resources
  • Baker, J. W. (1995, August). Christians in a
    technological culture. Paper presented to the
    Faith-Learning Institute, Cedarville University,
    Cedarville, OH. Retrieved May 29, 2006, from
    http//people.cedarville.edu/employee/bakerw/integ
    rat/techcltr.htm
  • Concept maps become educational tools. 2005,
    July 10. Springfield News-Sun, Associated Press
    wire service article, p. 8D.
  • Gergen, K. J. (2002). Cell phone technology and
    the realm of absent presence. In D. Katz M.
    Aakhus (Eds.), Perpetual contact Mobile
    communication, private talk, public performance
    (pp. 227-241). New York Cambridge University
    Press.

29
Resources
  • Levy, S. Stone, B. (2006, April 3). The new
    wisdom of the Web. Newsweek, 147 (14), 47-50,
    52, 53.
  • Lum, C. M. K. (2006). Notes toward an
    intellectual history of media ecology. In C. M.
    K. Lum (Ed.), Perspectives on culture, technology
    and communication The media ecology tradition
    (pp. 1-60). Cresskill, NJ Hampton Press, Inc.
  • Mindich, D. T. Z. (2005). Tuned out Why
    Americans under 40 dont follow the news. New
    York Oxford University Press, 2005.
  • Negroponte, N. (1995). Being Digital. New York
    Alfred A. Knopf.

30
Resources
  • Novak, J. D. Cañas, A. J. (2006). The theory
    underlying concept maps and how to construct
    them. Technical Report IHMC CmapTools 2006-01.
    Pensacola, FL Florida Institute for Human and
    Machine Cognition. Retrieved May 12, 2006 from
    http// www.cmap.ihmc.us/Publications/RsearchPaper
    s/TheoryUnderlyingConceptMaps.pdf
  • Rosen, C. (2004, Summer). Our cell phones,
    ourselves. The New Atlantis, No. 6, pp. 26-45.
    Retrieved May 29, 2006, from http//www.thenewatla
    ntis.com/archive/6/TNA06-CRosen.pdf

31
Resources
  • Rosen, C. (2004, Fall/2005, Winter). The age of
    egocasting. The New Atlantis, No. 7, pp. 51-72.
    Retrieved May 29, 2006, from http//www.thenewatla
    ntis.com/archive/7/TNA07-Rosen.pdf
  • Weaver, R. M. (1948). Ideas have consequences.
    Chicago University of Chicago Press.
  • Whiteley, S. (2005). Memletics concept mapping
    course. Grayslake, IL Advanogy.com.
    Available from http//www.memletics.com/mind-conce
    pt-map-course/default.asp

32
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