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Innovative Practices in Teaching Information Sciences and Technology: Experience Reports and Reflections

✍ Scribed by John M. Carroll (auth.), John M. Carroll (eds.)


Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Year
2014
Tongue
English
Leaves
233
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


University teaching and learning has never been more innovative than it is now.

This has been enabled by a better contemporary understanding of teaching and learning. Instructors now present situated projects and practices to their students, not just foundational principles. Lectures and structured practice are now often replaced by engaging and constructivist learning activities that leverage what students know about, think about and care about.

Teaching innovation has also been enabled by online learning in the classroom, beyond the classroom and beyond the campus. Learning online is perhaps not the panacea sometimes asserted but it is a disruptively rich and expanding set of tools and techniques that can facilitate engaging and constructivist learning activities. It is becoming the new normal in university teaching and learning.

The opportunity and the need for innovation in teaching and learning are together keenest in information technology itself: Computer and Information Science faculty and students are immersed in innovation. The subject matter of these disciplines changes from one year to the next; courses and curricula are in constant flux. And indeed each wave of disciplinary innovation is assimilated into technology tools and infrastructures for teaching new and emerging concepts and techniques.

Innovative Practices in Teaching Information Sciences and Technology: Experience Reports and Reflections describes a set of innovative teaching practices from the faculty of Information Sciences and Technology at Pennsylvania State University. Each chapter is a personal essay describing practices, implemented by one or two faculty that challenge assumptions and push beyond standard practice at the individual faculty and classroom level. These are innovations that instructors elsewhere may find directly accessible and adaptable.

Taken as a set, this book is a case study of teaching innovation as a part of faculty culture. Innovation is not optional in information technology; it inheres in both the disciplinary subject matter and in teaching. But it is an option for instructors to collectively embrace innovation as a faculty. The chapters in this book taken together, embody this option and provide a partial model to faculties for reflecting on and refining their own collective culture of teaching innovation.

✦ Table of Contents


Front Matter....Pages I-VIII
Introduction....Pages 1-7
The Karate Kid Method of Problem Based Learning....Pages 9-17
Hungry Wolves, Creepy Sheepies: The Gamification of the Programmer’s Classroom....Pages 19-29
Teaching and Learning in Technical IT Courses....Pages 31-42
Towards an Egalitarian Pedagogy for the Millennial Generation: A Reflection....Pages 43-51
Higher Education Classroom Community Game....Pages 53-62
The Tinker Toy Challenge—Peeking Under the Cloak of Invisibility in Information System Design....Pages 63-73
Learning by Design....Pages 75-83
Teaching Structured Analytical Thinking with Data Using Visual–Analytic Tools....Pages 85-95
The Analytic Decision Game....Pages 97-115
The Cyber Forensic War Room: An Immersion into IT Aspects of Public Policy....Pages 117-132
Semester Projects on Human–Computer Interaction as Service and Outreach....Pages 133-141
Enterprise Integration: An Experiential Learning Model....Pages 143-155
Immersive Learning....Pages 157-166
Leveraging Mobile Technology to Enhance Both Competition and Cooperation in an Undergraduate STEM Course....Pages 167-177
Teaching Information Security with Virtual Laboratories....Pages 179-192
Using Video to Establish Immediacy with Students in Distance Education Courses....Pages 193-205
Reflections on Blended Learning....Pages 207-219
Chronicles of the Partially Distributed Team Project....Pages 221-238

✦ Subjects


Computers and Education; Teaching and Teacher Education; Science Education


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