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Einband grossThe Manifesto for Teaching Online
ISBN/GTIN
E-BookEPUBDRM AdobeE-Book
224 Seiten
Englisch
MIT Presserschienen am15.09.2020
An update to a provocative manifesto intended to serve as a platform for debate and as a resource and inspiration for those teaching in online environments.

In 2011, a group of scholars associated with the Digital Education Centre at the University of Edinburgh released "A Manifesto for Teaching Online," a series of provocative statements intended to articulate their pedagogical philosophy. In the original manifesto and a 2016 update, the authors counter both the "impoverished" vision of education being advanced by corporate and governmental edtech and higher education's traditional view of online students and teachers as second-class citizens. The two versions of the manifesto were much discussed, shared, and debated. In this book, the authors have expanded the text of the 2016 manifesto, revealing the sources and larger arguments behind the abbreviated provocations.
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Produkt

KlappentextAn update to a provocative manifesto intended to serve as a platform for debate and as a resource and inspiration for those teaching in online environments.

In 2011, a group of scholars associated with the Digital Education Centre at the University of Edinburgh released "A Manifesto for Teaching Online," a series of provocative statements intended to articulate their pedagogical philosophy. In the original manifesto and a 2016 update, the authors counter both the "impoverished" vision of education being advanced by corporate and governmental edtech and higher education's traditional view of online students and teachers as second-class citizens. The two versions of the manifesto were much discussed, shared, and debated. In this book, the authors have expanded the text of the 2016 manifesto, revealing the sources and larger arguments behind the abbreviated provocations.
Details
Weitere ISBN/GTIN9780262361071
ProduktartE-Book
EinbandartE-Book
FormatEPUB
Format HinweisDRM Adobe
FormatE101
Verlag
Erscheinungsjahr2020
Erscheinungsdatum15.09.2020
Seiten224 Seiten
SpracheEnglisch
Dateigrösse843 Kbytes
Illustrationen11 B&W ILLUS.
Artikel-Nr.5080780
Rubriken
Genre9200

Inhalt/Kritik

Inhaltsverzeichnis
Section 1: Politics and instrumental logics
1. There are many ways to get it right online. 'Best practice' neglects context.
2. We should attend to the materialities of digital education. The social isn't the whole story.
3. Online teaching need not be complicit with the instrumentalisation of education.
4. Online teaching should not be downgraded into 'facilitation'.
5. Can we stop talking about digital natives?
Section 2: Beyond Words
6. Text has been troubled: many modes matter in representing academic knowledge.
7. Aesthetics matter: interface design shapes learning.
8. Remixing digital content redefines authorship.
9. Assessment is an act of interpretation, not just measurement.
10. A digital assignment can live on. It can be iterative, public, risky, and multi-voiced.
Section 3: Re-coding education
11. Openness is neither neutral nor natural: it creates and depends on closures.
12. Massiveness is more than learning at scale: it also brings complexity and diversity.
13. Algorithms and analytics re-code education: pay attention!
14. Automation need not impoverish education: we welcome our new robot colleagues.
Section 4: Face, space and place
15. Online can be the privileged mode. Distance is a positive principle, not a deficit.
16. Contact works in multiple ways. Face-time is over-valued.
17. Place is differently, not less, important online.
18. Distance is temporal, affective, political: not simply spatial.
Section 5: Surveillance and (Dis)trust
19. Online courses are prone to cultures of surveillance. Visibility is a pedagogical and ethical issue.
20. A routine of plagiarism detection structures-in distrust.
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Autor

Siân Bayne, Peter Evans, Rory Ewins, Jeremy Knox, James Lamb, Hamish Macleod, Clara O'Shea, Jen Ross, Philippa Sheail, and Christine Sinclair are on the faculty of Moray House School of Education and Sport at University of Edinburgh.