Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 14, No. 500. Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London <http://www.princeton.edu/~mccarty/humanist/> <http://www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/humanist/> [1] From: scaife@uky.edu (109) Subject: [STOA] Digital-Library Company Plans to Charge Students a Monthly Fee for Access [2] From: Arun-Kumar Tripathi <tripathi@statistik.uni- (43) dortmund.de> Subject: the Fall 2000 issue _Kairos: A Journal for Teachers of Writing in Webbed Environments_ with theme "Critical [3] From: Arun-Kumar Tripathi <tripathi@statistik.uni- (90) dortmund.de> Subject: [EdResource] How does technology change learning and teaching in formal! --[1]------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Mon, 20 Nov 2000 07:14:35 +0000 From: scaife@uky.edu Subject: [STOA] Digital-Library Company Plans to Charge Students a Monthly Fee for Access This article from The Chronicle of Higher Education (http://chronicle.com) was forwarded to you from: scaife@uky.edu Tuesday, November 14, 2000 Digital-Library Company Plans to Charge Students a Monthly Fee for Access By GOLDIE BLUMENSTYK A new digital-library company that claims it will "transform how academic research is done" hopes to entice students to pay as much as $360 a year for online access to searchable books and journals. The company, Questia Media, is relying on a classic Internet marketing strategy called "viral marketing" to create a buzz about itself among students. The strategy uses a tell-a-friend e-mail campaign to "create a hype" for its service even before it begins in January, according to Ann Brimberry, the company's manager of marketing and public relations. The e-mail messages include an offer of a free monthlong trial of the service. Questia says it will have more than 50,000 scholarly books and journals in its electronic collection by January, and five times as many by 2003. The company says its service will help "time-crunched students" write their papers more quickly. Questia will sell subscriptions to its collection for $20 to $30 a month, depending on the price the company ultimately sets. For that amount, users will be able to search for topics by keyword, copy the material into their papers electronically, and have the footnotes for those references created automatically. For papers submitted electronically, the footnotes can be hyperlinked to the source document, which would allow a reader of the paper to check them with a simple click of the mouse -- assuming, of course, that he or she is also a Questia subscriber. Troy Williams, a 1998 Harvard Law School graduate who is Questia's founder, president, and C.E.O., says the service's search-and-copy features respond to the way students really do their papers. "They're not reading the books," says Mr. Williams. The company has circulated news of the offer through e-mail messages and postings on several discussion lists used by librarians. The e-mail technique is similar to one used to promote the free Hotmail e-mail service and other Internet products, not to mention movies such as The Blair Witch Project. Several thousand people have signed up for the offer already, Ms. Brimberry says. Whether those users and paying customers will find the service helpful, however, is far from certain. Questia boasts of signing 135 publishers willing to make some of their titles available through the service. At a time when many publishers are still wary about electronic distribution, that's no mean feat. But a good deal of what the publishers are providing is out-of-print material, which may prove less useful to the liberal-arts undergraduates the company is focusing on as its prime market. Ann Okerson, associated university librarian at Yale University, says that she has had indications that the company is assembling a legitimate collection, but she adds that she hasn't seen what Questia plans to offer. "You don't yet know what's inside the black box," says Ms. Okerson, who has just agreed to serve in an unpaid position on the company's new Librarian Advisory Council. The company, based in Houston, has raised $130-million in venture capital and is expected to go public eventually. It has also attracted as members of its unpaid Advisory Council the likes of Barbara Bush; John Seely Brown, the chief scientist for Xerox; and Clifford Lynch, the director of the Coalition for Networked Information. Questia's business model, which relies on the sale of subscriptions to individuals, is one that a rival, netLibrary, had previously tried as well. But netLibrary has since abandoned the approach because it was costly and because the company found that winning business directly from libraries gave the company more credibility. Some academics, including Ms. Okerson, have also worried that the Questia service could be too expensive for some students, putting them at a disadvantage to wealthier classmates. At Yale, she says, people would say, "You don't create a set of have and have-not users." She says one reason she joined the library board was to try to persuade the company to consider selling institution-wide site licenses, so that all students could have access to the service. Questia says it has no plans to offer such licenses. As for how Questia might affect the way students research and write, Ms. Okerson says the service just creates a more robust approach to what many already do now with information they locate on the Internet. "I keep hearing this called the 'cut-and-paste generation,'" she says. "It's going to be up to teachers and librarians to keep instilling the values of teaching and research." _________________________________________________________________ Chronicle subscribers can read this article on the Web at this address: http://chronicle.com/free/2000/11/2000111401t.htm [material deleted] --[2]------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Mon, 20 Nov 2000 07:21:15 +0000 From: Arun-Kumar Tripathi <tripathi@statistik.uni-dortmund.de> Subject: the Fall 2000 issue _Kairos: A Journal for Teachers of Writing in Webbed Environments_ with theme "Critical Dear Humanists, ((Hello, I thought, this might interest you..thanks..-Arun)) =============================================================== Date: Fri, 17 Nov 2000 12:18:59 -0500 From: j0stim01 <j0stim01@louisville.edu> [--] Dear _Kairos_ reviewers: We're excited about working with you on the Spring 2001 issue. In the meantime, the Fall 2000 issue has been released. Please help us publicize _Kairos_ by forwarding the announcement below to your colleagues. Jennifer and Rich ************************************ _Kairos: A Journal for Teachers of Writing in Webbed Environments_ is delighted to announce the publication of its newest issue, 5.2, with theme "Critical Issues in Computers and Writing." <http://english.ttu.edu/kairos> The issue, a selected and edited proceedings of Computers and Writing 2000, includes the following content: CoverWeb: "Critical Issues in Computers and Writing: Strands from C & W 2000" with contributions from Dene Grigar, John Barber, Hugh Burns, Lisa Gerrard, Karen D. Jobe, Lynne Spigelmire Viti, Jennifer L. Bowie, Angela Crow, Walt Turner, Carole Clark Papper, Susan K. Reynolds, Rich Rice, and Joanne Buckley. Features: "Computers and Writing Town Hall One" with contributions from Bill Condon, Dene Grigar, Gail E. Hawisher, James A. Inman, Susan Lang, Rich Rice, Rebecca Rickly, Mike Salvo, and Cynthia L. Selfe. Site design by Anne Wysocki. "Computers and Writing Town Hall Two" with contributions from Sally Henschel, Corinna McLeod, Nancy Patterson, Eric Crump, and Kathy A. Fitch. Site design by Kathy A. Fitch. NewsWired: Conference Reviews, CFPs, Announcements Reviews: Book and web site reviews by Anthony Atkins, Lisa Bruna, Christopher Carter, Tracy Clark, Christopher Dean, Patrice Fleck, Jane Lasarenko, Tim McCormack, Jeff Rice, Rich Rice, Dawn Rodrigues, Chris Sauer, Ellen Strenski, and Carl Whithaus. Kairos Interactive: Graduate Research Network, A Formal Debate, and Kairos Meet the Authors (KMTA) Discussions For more information about any aspect of this issue or about _Kairos_ in general, please contact Co-Editors Douglas Eyman and James A. Inman at kairosed@cfcc.net. ---------------------- --[3]------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Mon, 20 Nov 2000 07:22:03 +0000 From: Arun-Kumar Tripathi <tripathi@statistik.uni-dortmund.de> Subject: [EdResource] How does technology change learning and teaching in formal! Dear Humanist scholars, **With thanks to Prof. Frank Withrow. It is an exquisite honour for me to forward an e-mail from Millennium EdTech Project Site, which can be found at <http://millennium.aed.org> There is no question that a child growing up in a digitally rich knowledge and information society matures and grows in a world we have never known before. What influence to these factors have and how is learning and teaching different? As we approach the year 2000 an interesting question to ask is how much time an average eighteen-year-old in 1900 and in 2000 would have spent in their lives doing different things. What are their options? They will have lived for 160,000 hours. Assume that they average 7 hours of sleep each day they will have slept for 46,000 hours giving them 114,000 hours of waking life. At best they will have spent 14,000 hours in formal schools. By the time they have started to school they will have watched about 10,000 hours of television. They will have talked on the telephone, listened to recorded music, played video games, and traveled thousands of miles on modern transportation systems. In 1900 the average 18-year-old had not been more than fifty miles from his or her place of birth. In 1900 the world had just reached its first billionth living person. In 2000 the world population will be plus six billion people. One and one/third billion of those people live on less than $1.50 per month. On the other had at the affluent extreme the children of developed nations have the world and its goods at their fingertips. In this vastly complex world learning and teaching are different because of the digital age? The perplexing issue is just how is it different? That is what we will focus on in this discussion. With the current Colorado tragedy we have many self proclaimed experts detail just how youth are going to the devil. However, I would remind you that if you read Socrates he too felt the youth of his day were going to the dogs. Perhaps as we get older we have some comfort in damning youth because we know that we are leaving this life and if the world were getting better we would like to stay a little longer. Research has shown that all communications and information technologies influence child growth and development. It can as it did in Colorado result in disasters. The challenge is to manage such resources for good rather than evil uses. Since knowledge has expanded is learning and school just too hard for children to master high academic standards? NO, we have always had more knowledge than a single person could master. So the extent of knowledge is not the problem with learners and teachers. It is however more difficult to agree on what the CORE curriculum should be. If learning and teaching are different from the past what are the characteristics of that difference? For the past decade or so American educators have been asking to define the National Standards for content areas. Some would like to return to a classical education suitable for the 1890s and others echo the progressive education movement started in the 1870s. There are conditions today that enter into the general society that our decisions must consider. 1. Information is accessible in many more places today. Radio, television, cable television, recorded materials, Internet, and the common telephone are available for learners of all ages. 2. Special Interest groups from hobbies to choral singing groups to Star Trek group meetings and clubs are available. 3. The society is more inclusive of diverse people including disabled people. 4. Age differences are merged and a 14 year old can dialogue with a Nobel scientist if their skills, knowledge and are interest are the same. 5. More learning takes place outside the school, in the home, church, library, museum and little league parks. The digital world has blurred the walls of the schools and places of learning. Individual learners can learn anywhere anytime and at their own pace. We have always had some children that use broad community resources, but the ease of doing it today is greater than ever. I would like to welcome your thoughts on these issues. Sincerely Arun Tripathi ============================================================================= "I cannot teach anybody anything, I can only make them think." -SOCRATES ============================================================================= [material deleted]
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