{"id":8051,"date":"2011-11-08t08:50:20","date_gmt":"2011-11-08t14:50:20","guid":{"rendered":"\/\/www.imrbdigital.com\/?p=8051"},"modified":"2011-11-29t12:04:54","modified_gmt":"2011-11-29t18:04:54","slug":"academic-technology-expectations-%e2%80%93-highlights-from-a-conversation","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.imrbdigital.com\/2011\/11\/academic-technology-expectations-%e2%80%93-highlights-from-a-conversation\/","title":{"rendered":"academic technology expectations \u2013 highlights from a conversation"},"content":{"rendered":"

by rhett mcdaniel
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on october 27th<\/sup>, the cft hosted a conversation on teaching titled “student expectations: academic technology.” <\/strong>the group investigated some of the assumptions and beliefs we might hold regarding student expectations around academic technology. we also discussed various potential conflicts and consequences around the issue. the conversation was exploratory in nature, designed to surface various perspectives on the different expectations students and faculty can have about their respective responsibilities but not necessarily to leave participants with concrete solutions for negotiating these expectations. <\/strong><\/p>\n

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\"\"technology is often promoted as an empowering tool that can help faculty work more efficiently and students understand more deeply.\u00a0 in a response to a belief that faculty and students both want and need to use these technologies, many classrooms have been fortified with cutting-edge equipment. in addition, technology units, like its, are meeting the demand for consumption by continually increasing network bandwidth and offering access to upgraded cloud-computing services like virtual file storage and application hosting.<\/p>\n

meanwhile, we see pockets of faculty who are successfully using a variety of technologies, including course management systems like oak, to meet a student expectation for a level of technology use they can only assume to be true, as much of the research has not been able to accurately document them.<\/p>\n

the conversation included faculty, students, and technology staff members, allowing for a variety of viewpoints to be voiced in the discussion. some of the themes we surfaced during the exchange are outlined below.<\/p>\n

communicating with the instructor<\/h3>\n