1st Edition

Work and Technology in Higher Education The Social Construction of Academic Computing

Edited By Mark A. Shields Copyright 1994
208 Pages
by Routledge

Since the early 1980s, U.S. colleges and universities have become extremely important not only as computational research and development centers, but also as field sites for examining the relationship between technological innovation and sociocultural change. In spite of this, neither academic analysts of technological change nor the broader audience of computer professionals have a full... Read more
Contents: Preface. M.A. Shields, The Social Construction of Academic Computing. P. Lyman, Is Using a Computer Like Driving a Car, Reading a Book, or Solving a Problem? The Computer as Machine, Text, and Culture. S. Turkle, Paradoxical Reactions and Powerful Ideas: Educational Computing in a Department of Physics. W. Graves, III, Ideologies of Computerization. W.O. Beeman, Stalking the Art Historian. P. McQuillan, Computers and Pedagogy: The Invisible Presence. J.M. Nyce, G. Bader, To Move Away From Meaning: Collaboration, Consensus, and Work in a Hypermedia Project. K.T. Anderson, A.P. McClard, J. Larkin, The Social Ecology of Student Life: The Integration of Technological Innovation in a Residence Hall. M.A. Shields, The Legitimation of Academic Computing in the 1980s.

Biography

Mark A. Shields

Work and Technology in Higher Education: The Social Construction of Academic Computing, will certainly become a catalyst for re-evaluating and encouraging further research on technology and its use within educational institutions. Shields concludes the text with what I believe to be the most important and provocative chapter of the book. Anyone curious about what is happening in higher education today will be attracted to the provocative ideas in this book. This book is a lucid and thoughtful compilation that should greatly assist such an understanding.
Education Technology Research and Development

One common theme that emerges is that it is not the computer itself but teachers' beliefs about the computer that most often head to pedagogical changes.
Technology and Culture