Table of contents
US higher education in transition
James L. MorrisonAmerican higher education is undergoing substantial change in terms of the way colleges and universities are organized and function. This change is being driven by the combined…
A new knowledge of reality
Janet C. MoorePreparing for the Revolution: Information Technology and the Future of the Research University is a report released in October 2002, produced by the US National Academies…
New educational technologies: do they improve learning?
Carolyn DowlingIs the incorporation of new educational technologies into the teaching/learning process the key to an effective and appropriate education in the twenty‐first century, or is it a…
In their dreams: Paradigm alternatives and the marketing of responsive educational services
Arthur HarkinsThis article identifies three education service paradigms and explores how each contributes to applied learning. Scenarios constructed by over 700 US teachers are summarized and…
Disastrous consequences of scientific and technological illiteracy
Joseph F. CoatesThe essayist contends that American academia is rife with a "dog‐eat‐dog" version of Social Darwinism, or survival of the fittest through brutal competition. Offered as evidence…
E‐commerce forecasts: a return of the dot.com boom?
William E. HalalA forecast of 20 e‐commerce applications shows that the Internet is likely to mature into a more sophisticated, conversational form of communication in about 2010, thereby…
e‐Nough! “e‐Learning” is a misnomer – it’s mostly just “e‐Teaching.” For any teaching to reliably and consistently produce the results we want, we still have a lot to learn about learning
Marc PrenskyThe author suggests we know a lot less about learning than we normally admit – in fact there is no generally accepted definition of what it is. He suggests that this is a big…
ISSN:
1074-8121e-ISSN:
2054-1708ISSN-L:
1074-8121Online date, start – end:
2000Copyright Holder:
Emerald Publishing LimitedOpen Access:
hybridEditor:
- John Moravec