E-learning has become a major force in adult education on any campus in any country. Since working adults cannot come to campuses for face-to-face meetings, acquiring knowledge through technology, especially Web 2.0s interactivity, can occur anywhere, at any time. The Encyclopedia of Information Com
Humanizing Technology: Computers in Community Use and Adult Education
β Scribed by Elisabeth Gerver (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1986
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 206
- Series
- Approaches to Information Technology
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
A few years ago, a book of this type and style could not or would not have been written. This is because, until a few years ago, no real in-depth knowlΒ edge of computers and computerized equipment was at the disposal of those with a nonscience, nonquantitative background. Some people from other disciplines-including business, the arts, and the social sciences-had been working with such equipment, but they had "gone over" and tended to be even more computer-conscious than those whom they served. It is only comparatively recently that people like Elisabeth Gerver with a firm arts and adult education background first of all became knowledgeable and then remained true to that background. To her eternal credit, Elisabeth Gerver, when she became involved, avoided being sucked into the world of the jargon or even that of the thinking of the computer scientists and the electronic engineers. On the contrary, she insisted that she was an educated woman dealing with other educated people, and that they would all speak in the language of everyday discourse. It worked! One consequence of her experience and her thought is this remarkably lucid and readable book. It will prove to be of immense value to many in the world of adult and community education. But the beneficiaries will run beyond those sectors of society. Other people with a nonscience, nonquantitative background will surely find it of immense value in their early, inevitably hesitant and faulty, grappling with the world of new technology.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages iii-xiii
Introduction....Pages 1-7
The Paradox of Computers....Pages 9-30
Computers and Gender....Pages 31-56
Computers and Informal Learning....Pages 57-104
Using Computers in the Community....Pages 105-127
Cooperating with Computers....Pages 129-153
Promises and Pitfalls....Pages 155-163
Back Matter....Pages 165-202
β¦ Subjects
Community and Environmental Psychology; Education (general); Social Sciences, general; Computer Science, general
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<span>This book is about the ways in which experiments can be employed in the context of research on learning technologies and childβcomputer interaction (CCI). It is directed at researchers, supporting them to employ experimental studies while increasing their quality and rigor. The book provides a
The computer-assisted tools, methodologies & structures through which those in the arts & humanities pursue their disciplines - the humanities 'mind technologies' - have come increasingly to the forefront in recent years. Arising in part from recent meetings between the Consortium for Computing in t
<p>This conference proceedings summarizes invited publications from the two IDES (Institute of Doctors Engineers and Scientists) International conferences, both held in Bangalore/ India. </p>
A Planning Guide. - UNESCO: Division of Higher Education, 2002. - 237 p.<div class="bb-sep"></div>The document proposes a framework for ICTs in teacher education,<br/>describes the essential conditions that must be met for successful technology<br/>integration and provides guidelines for the develop
<p>This book brings together theoretical and practical debates from adult literacy and language education with those of creative writing and community publishing work. Illustrated by accounts of first-hand experience, each chapter focuses on the practical business of achieving good learning and deve