13.0379 CIT Infobits 1/2000

From: Humanist Discussion Group (willard@lists.village.virginia.edu)
Date: Sun Feb 06 2000 - 09:47:55 CUT

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                   Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 13, No. 379.
           Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
                   <http://www.princeton.edu/~mccarty/humanist/>
                  <http://www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/humanist/>

             Date: Sun, 06 Feb 2000 09:42:27 +0000
             From: Arun-Kumar Tripathi <tripathi@statistik.uni-dortmund.de>
             Subject: CIT INFOBITS -- January 2000 Newsletter

    Greetings,

    =============================================================================
    Following CIT INFOBITS is published by the Center for Instructional Technology.
    The CIT supports the interests of faculty members at UNC-CH who are exploring
    the use of Internet and video projects. Subscription to the CIT INFOBITS
    (formerly known as IAT INFOBITS) are given at the end of the newsletter. The
    newsletter goes to 5,164 subscribers as of January 29, 2000! In following
    newsletter, WAOE readers and observers would be receiving the news
    regarding "The Future of Peer-Reviewed Journals", "Humanities and Computing
    Articles", "ERIC/HE Critical Issues Bibliographies", articles related to
    "Avoiding the Pitfalls of Electronic Publishing" and "Books that Shaped
    Science", "Directory of U.S. Educational Resources", "The Internet and
    Higher Education Journal", an essay regarding "The Decade in Computing"
    and under "Recommended Reading" title members would like to see my
    recommendations of two books, "THE ROBOT IN THE GARDEN: TELEROBOTICS AND
    TELEPISTEMOLOGY ON THE INTERNET', edited by Ken Goldberg and 'THE SOCIAL
    WORLDS OF HIGHER EDUCATION: HANDBOOK FOR TEACHING IN A NEW CENTURY',
    edited by Bernice A. Pescosolido and Ronald Aminzade! Enjoy this piece
    of Newsletter! Many thanks to Caroly Kotlas. --Arun Tripathi

    =============================================================================

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Date: Mon, 31 Jan 2000 17:54:40 -0500
    From: Carolyn Kotlas <kotlas@email.unc.edu>
    Reply-To: The infobits mailing list <infobits@listserv.unc.edu>
    To: The infobits mailing list <infobits@listserv.unc.edu>

    CIT INFOBITS January 2000 No. 19 ISSN 1521-9275

    About INFOBITS

    INFOBITS is an electronic service of the University of North Carolina
    at Chapel Hill's Center for Instructional Technology. Each month the
    CIT's Information Resources Consultant monitors and selects from a
    number of information technology and instructional technology sources
    that come to her attention and provides brief notes for electronic
    dissemination to educators.
    ........................................................................
    The Future of Peer-Reviewed Journals
    Humanities and Computing Articles
    ERIC/HE Critical Issues Bibliographies
    Avoiding the Pitfalls of Electronic Publishing
    Books that Shaped Science
    Directory of U.S. Educational Resources
    The Internet and Higher Education Journal
    The Decade in Computing
    Recommended Reading
    Infobits Subscribers -- Where Are We in 2000?
    ........................................................................

    THE FUTURE OF PEER-REVIEWED JOURNALS

    In "Free at Last: The Future of Peer-Reviewed Journals" [D-LIB
    MAGAZINE, vol. 5, no. 12, December 1999], Stevan Harnad (Professor of
    Cognitive Science, Department of Electronics and Computer Science,
    University of Southampton) argues for the electronic archiving of
    scholarly writing as a means to wider-spread dissemination. He explains
    how, with the support of universities (primarily through librarians and
    networks) and the use of interoperability standards (such as the Open
    Archives Initiative), scholars could "self-archive" their work, and
    users could locate papers regardless of where it is stored. You can
    read Harnad's article on the Web at
    <http://www.dlib.org/dlib/december99/12harnad.html>

    D-Lib Magazine [ISSN: 1082-9873] covers innovation and research in
    digital libraries. The magazine is available, free of charge, only in
    electronic format, either on the Web or via email. Subscription
    information is available at <http://www.dlib.org/dlib/subscribe.html>
    Back issues are available at <http://www.dlib.org/back.html>

    D-Lib Magazine is published eleven times a year by the D-Lib Forum,
    which is based at the Corporation For National Research Initiatives
    (CNRI) and is sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects
    Agency (DARPA). For more information about D-Lib Forum see their
    Website at <http://www.dlib.org/dlib.html>

    ........................................................................

    HUMANITIES AND COMPUTING ARTICLES

    The theme for the latest issue of SURFACES [vol. XII, December 1999] is
    "Humanities and Computing: Who's Driving?" Articles include:

    "Adapting Web Electronic Libraries to English Studies"
    by Christopher Douglas, Dennis G. Jerz, and Ian Lancashire, Department
    of English, University of Toronto
            The authors argue that "academia needs to build local academic
    content into electronic libraries by supplying faculty essays, notes,
    lecture materials, and dedicated databases . . . [which] requires a
    long-term institutional infrastructure with peer review, and coherent
    goals -- a model not found in individual or commercial Web collections,
    in purely administrative departmental sites, or on the World Wide Web
    itself."

    "Legitimizing Electronic Scholarly Publications: A Discursive Proposal"
    by Rod Heimpel, Department of French, University of Toronto
            Heimpel asserts that "electronic publication of scholarly work
    is not merely a paper publication in disguise. Legitimizing electronic
    scholarly publications calls for a new understanding of institutional
    underpinnings of the scholar's world."

    "La Toile fait-elle autorite?"
    by Sylvain Rheault, Department of French, University of Regina
            Rheault compares the work of putting humanities information on
    the Web to that of an encyclopedist. "Can modular accumulation, which
    is encouraged by the Web change our writing practices, and eventually
    our modes of thought? As for organization, even more crucial, it calls
    for a reengineering of the refereeing process."

    The entire issue of Surfaces is available at
    <http://pum12.pum.umontreal.ca/revues/surfaces/vol8/vol8TdM.html>

    The articles are in Adobe Acrobat's PDF format. You can download the
    Acrobat reader from http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep.html

    Surfaces [ISSN : 1188-2492] is an annual, refereed electronic

    publication of Les Presses de l'Universite de Montreal, Universite de
    Montreal, C.P. 6128, succ. Centre-ville, Montreal (Quebec) Canada H3C
    3J7; tel: 514-343-5683; fax: 514-343-5684;
    email: surfaces@ere.umontreal.ca;
    Web: <http://www.pum.umontreal.ca/revues/surfaces/>

    ........................................................................

    ERIC/HE CRITICAL ISSUES BIBLIOGRAPHIES

    The ERIC Clearinghouse on Higher Education (ERIC/HE) recently completed
    the quarterly update of all its Critical Issues Bibliographies (CrIB)
    Sheets. Each CrIB Sheet is a brief ERIC bibliography on a topic of
    interest in the field of higher education. Topics of particular
    interest to Infobits readers include assessment, distance education,
    collaborative learning, technology in higher education, and technology
    in the classroom. All the CrIB Sheets are available on the Web at
    <http://www.eriche.org/Library/index.html#cribs>

    ........................................................................

    AVOIDING THE PITFALLS OF ELECTRONIC PUBLISHING

    In "Looking Good" [THE JOURNAL OF ELECTRONIC PUBLISHING, vol. 5, no. 2,
    December 1999], Thom Lieb briefly examines the "sad plight of
    electronic publishers caught up in the struggle to produce uniform
    pages in spite of browsers' variations in supporting Java and
    Javascript, frames, style sheets, dynamic HTML (DHTML) and tables."
    Lieb believes that the "best content is far more important than having
    the latest technology," but he offers some practical advice on getting
    the technology to show your electronic publication at its best. The
    article is available on the Web at
    <http://www.press.umich.edu/jep/05-02/lieb0502.html>

    The Journal of Electronic Publishing [ISSN 1080-2711] is published free
    of charge on the Web by the University of Michigan Press, 839 Greene
    Street, P.O. Box 1104, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106-1104 USA. For more
    information contact JEP: email: jep@umich.press.edu; Web:
    <http://www.press.umich.edu/jep/>

    ........................................................................

    BOOKS THAT SHAPED SCIENCE

    In the "Scientists' Bookshelf" (AMERICAN SCIENTIST, vol. 87, no. 6,
    November-December 1999) Philip and Phylis Morrison have compiled their
    list of the "100 or so Books that shaped a Century of Science." The
    titles include "memorable and influential English-language books"
    supplied by readers, reviewers, and editorial staff at the American
    Scientist. The list is organized in nine sections, including:
    Biography, Field Guides, the Physical Sciences, History of Science, The
    Evolution of Life, The Nature and Rise of Our Own Species, and Novels.
    You can browse the compilation at
    <http://www.amsci.org/amsci/bookshelf/century.html>

    American Scientist [ISSN: 0003-0996] is published bimonthly by Sigma
    Xi, The Scientific Research Society, P.O. Box 13975, Research Triangle
    Park, NC 27709-3975 USA; tel: 919-549-0097; fax: 919-549-0090;
    email: subs@amsci.org; Web: <http://www.amsci.org/>

    ........................................................................

    DIRECTORY OF U.S. EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES

    The U.S. Department of Education's Education Resource Organizations
    Directory (EROD) is a free, online resource intended to help users
    identify and contact organizations that provide information and
    assistance on a broad range of education-related topics. The Directory
    includes information on more than 2,400 national, regional, and state
    education organizations. You can search EROD at
    <http://www.ed.gov/Programs/EROD/>

    For more information on other U.S. Department of Education resources,
    see their Website at <http://www.ed.gov/>

    ........................................................................

    THE INTERNET AND HIGHER EDUCATION JOURNAL

    THE INTERNET AND HIGHER EDUCATION: A QUARTERLY REVIEW OF INNOVATIONS IN
    POST-SECONDARY EDUCATION is a refereed journal "targeted at those
    faculty, administrators, and librarians charged with the responsibility
    of fostering the use of information technology and the Internet on
    their respective campuses."

    Themes for upcoming issues include:
            Designing collaborative learning environments
            Developing online learning communities and community forums
            Connecting IT strategic planning to organizational strategic
                    planning
            Devising guidelines for developing hypertext courses
            Surveying good design practices for online trainers and
                    educators
            Changing instructional models (from traditional to
                    constructivist)
            Distance learning administration in higher education
            The future of online learning environments
            Human-computer interaction considerations for online distance
                    learning

    The Internet and Higher Education (IHE) [ISSN: 1096-7516] is published
    by Elsevier Science; Web: http://www.elsevier.com/
    For more information about IHE, including subscription costs, see
    <http://www.elsevier.com/inca/publications/store/6/2/0/1/8/7/>

    ........................................................................

    THE DECADE IN COMPUTING

    The editors of CNET, a publisher of technology news and producer of
    television shows about technology, have prepared a report on the
    people, products, trends, and companies that shaped computing in the
    1990's. Sections are devoted to people whose ideas changed the face of
    technology, products that made a difference in how we compute, dominant
    high-tech trends, and the companies that made the products and spurred
    the trends. The report is available at
    <http://www.cnet.com/specialreports/0-6014-7-1494819.html>

    ........................................................................

    RECOMMENDED READING

    "Recommended Reading" lists items that have been recommended to me or
    that Infobits readers have found particularly interesting and/or
    useful. Send your recommendations to carolyn_kotlas@unc.edu

    Paper recommended by Lori Mathis, Courseware Coordinator at the UNC-CH
    Center for Instructional Technology (email: mathis@email.unc.edu):

    "Asking the Right Question: What Does Research Tell Us About Technology
    and Higher Learning?" by Stephen C. Ehrmann, Director of Flashlight,
    American Association of Higher Education
    <http://www.learner.org/edtech/rscheval/rightquestion.html>

    "It takes just as much effort to answer a useless question as a useful
    one. The quest for useful information about technology begins with an
    exacting search for the right questions. This essay discusses some
    useless questions, a few useful ones (and the findings that have
    resulted), and one type of question that ought to be asked next about
    our uses of computing, video and telecommunications for learning."

    Infobits subscriber Arun-Kumar Tripathi (email:
    tripathi@statistik.uni-dortmund.de) recommends the following two books:

    THE ROBOT IN THE GARDEN: TELEROBOTICS AND TELEPISTEMOLOGY ON THE
    INTERNET, edited by Ken Goldberg, Associate Professor, Industrial
    Engineering and Operations Research, University of California at
    Berkeley
    Publisher: MIT Press, March 2000. ISBN: 0262072033
    For details about the book and a list of contributors, see
    http://queue.ieor.berkeley.edu/~goldberg/art/mitpress.html

    Book editor's note:
    "Remote control technologies permeate our daily lives: we have remote
    controls for the garage door, the car alarm, and the television (the
    latter a remote for the remote). Global networks extend these
    capabilities with cellular phones, teleconferencing, and telecommuting.
    In this book, we focus on a new technology that permits cameras and
    mechanical robots to be remotely operated over the Internet."

    THE SOCIAL WORLDS OF HIGHER EDUCATION: HANDBOOK FOR TEACHING IN A NEW
    CENTURY, edited by Bernice A. Pescosolido and Ronald Aminzade
    Publisher: Pine Forge Press, February 1999.
    ISBN: 0-7619-8613-8 hardcover; ISBN: 0-7619-9045-6 paperback
    Table of contents and sample chapters are available at
    <http://www.pineforge.com/pesco/pesco_aminz_highereducation.htm>

    Publisher's note:
    "This is the first comprehensive guide to teaching in the social
    sciences ever published. 'Two complete works in one' provides a survey
    of the larger institutional context and alternative perspectives on
    current debates in higher education, as well as a comprehensive and
    practical guide to teaching. . . . The accompanying FIELDGUIDE FOR
    TEACHING IN A NEW CENTURY includes an additional 80 articles, excerpts,
    teaching tips, exercises, checklists, and overheads covering a complete
    spectrum of teaching concerns." The Fieldguide is available online at
    <http://www.pineforge.com/pesco/pesfg00.pdf>

    ........................................................................

    INFOBITS SUBSCRIBERS -- WHERE ARE WE IN 2000?

    Each January issue of Infobits includes an annual subscriber tally
    listing the countries represented by our subscribers. As of January
    29,2000, there were 5,164 subscribers. Here are some brief statistics
    about our current subscribers:

    The majority of the subscribers are in the United States (2,825) and
    other English-speaking countries: Canada (384), Australia (210), and
    the United Kingdom (151).

    Each of the following countries has between twenty and fifty
    subscribers: Brazil, Germany, Israel, New Zealand, and Singapore.

    The following countries have nineteen or fewer subscribers: Argentina,
    Austria, Belgium, Bolivia, Brunei Darussalam, Chile, China, Colombia,
    Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Egypt,
    Estonia, Finland, France, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, India,
    Indonesia, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, Mauritius, Mexico,
    Netherlands, Norway, Pakistan, Peru, Philippines, Portugal, Romania,
    Russian Federation, Saudi Arabia, Slovenia, South Africa, South Korea,
    Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, Trinidad and Tobago,
    Turkey, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates, Uruguay, Venezuela.

    In addition to subscribers that we can positively identify by a
    geographic location, 721 subscribers are from commercial sites and 451
    subscribers are from .org or .net sites, none of which have been
    attributed to a particular country.

    Thanks to all the subscribers for your support in 1999!
    -- Carolyn Kotlas, CIT Infobits Editor

    ........................................................................

    To Subscribe

    CIT INFOBITS is published by the Center for Instructional Technology.
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    exploring the use of Internet and video projects. Services include both
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    If you have problems subscribing or want to send suggestions for future
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    Article Suggestions
    Infobits always welcomes article suggestions from our readers, although
    we cannot promise to print everything submitted. Because of our
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