Wednesday, October 10, 2007
IL as a liberal art
One of the readings argues that IL is a liberal art. . .Until reading that piece I had never thought of IL as a liberal art. . .I agree with the premise of Shapiro and Hughes that IL ". . .extends beyond technical skills and is conceived as one's critical reflection on the nature of information, itself. . .". . .We fail to critically examine the technology that we use in our daily work to the point that all too often the technology uses us as much or more than we use the technology. . .For example, "Power Point" has imposed its will on presentations throughout the planet by virtue of the limitations of the software to the point where PP has begun to alter the way our species approaches a problem--it limits rather than expands the horizons of each user. . .That is to say, it's a Power Point world; we just live in it. . .p.s. read "I, Robot" by Isaac Asimov before it's too late. . .
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It is too bad that PP has become the industry standard for presentations. But a good PP can be a good thing. the main point is that anything we can do to broaden imaginations will attain the results desired: students who will think more.
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