Posted on 01/13/2008 7:44:46 PM PST by Aristotelian
Google is white bread for the mind, and the internet is producing a generation of students who survive on a diet of unreliable information, a professor of media studies will claim this week.
In her inaugural lecture at the University of Brighton, Tara Brabazon will urge teachers at all levels of the education system to equip students with the skills they need to interpret and sift through information gleaned from the internet.
She believes that easy access to information has dulled students sense of curiosity and is stifling debate. She claims that many undergraduates arrive at university unable to discriminate between anecdotal and unsubstantiated material posted on the internet.
I call this type of education the University of Google.
Google offers easy answers to difficult questions. But students do not know how to tell if they come from serious, refereed work or are merely composed of shallow ideas, superficial surfing and fleeting commitments.
(Excerpt) Read more at technology.timesonline.co.uk ...
Ah, the evil telegraph. The information that comes across it is white bread for the mind.
I found this with “white bread”
{Common trappings of the whitebread lifestyle include golf, Kenny G and Enya CDs, SUVs, an irrational fixation on lawn care, Golden Retrievers,...}
Good one!
Man talk about getting bad and unreliable information. This piece is a perfect example of that.
Of course he is against it.
The University of Google has no tenure.
Get all the kids able to count and identify change / bills back to me when I shop. Then worry about google.
Not really. I'm a prof and a frequent visitor to an academic web site. Plagiarism is an oft-repeated topic and professors aren't afraid to give students an 'F' and send them to an academic review board. Professors can also use programs such as 'Turnitin' (turnitin.com) that search for plagiarized material. My university has a license for this product and students can be required to submit their papers into the program.
It seems that many students 1)were never taught proper citation in high school. They just don't know how to show the difference between their thoughts and someone else's. 2) Think that profs live in the classroom and don't know anything about the internet, searching, etc. and 3)Are so stupid that some of them have even plagiarized their own professor's work and didn't think they'd be caught!
I also think that there is an assumption that kids know how to do everything online and it really isn't true. They may be expert users, but they aren't really skilled in it, such as in determining authentic info on the web, etc.
I'm fortunate to teach on the graduate level and in a discipline where the students are well-read and write well. Though I warn about it in my syllabus (automatic 'F' and a report to the Dean), plagiarism isn't a problem for me.
They used to worry about calculators. From a technical perspective, Google and the web pages it gives instant access to are nothing short of manna from heaven. I have seen very little to fault the information I find when I get curious about some topic. A lot of the more advanced stuff is held “close to the vest” so you can’t find everything there is to know, but it’s moved accessibility to a new plateau. My grad school professor used to tell us never to accept anything we read in a paper at face value. On the internet, it is merely the illusion of authority that has been lost ... one doesn’t have to be reminded to read critically.
Just because people don't come running to their ilk to get their information they still think they are relevant.
The Internet and what we are doing right now is taking them out of the equation and they hate it.
My quote should read ....to educate and edify.....
Not: the educate. More care needed chum.
OK, so why do newspapers and daily local news list the sunrise and sunset times, if the sun does not orbit the earth? Duh!
Sacrilege!
Google purportedly has a Wikipedia killer in the works. Goggle Knol.
First two hits are Freerepublic.com. Third hit is Wiki entry. Of the rest of page 1, all but one or two are conservative sites referencing FR. Google done good.
Your comment is half right. I don’t clap when my 14 year old wipes her butt but i did when she was 3. The bottom line is if this is the first positive step for a mostly lacking generation of publicly educated young people we should encourage it. The MSM and the Democrats are proof positive young people are dullard just by their very existence. This kind of encouragement could lead to millions of new freepers.
http://www.lexrex.com/informed/otherdocuments/thelaw/thelaw.htm
All should read who haven’t.
This is who he was.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fr%C3%A9d%C3%A9ric_Bastiat
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