Addicted To Phones - Reading Assignment
Addicted To Phones - Reading Assignment
Cell phone use becoming a major problem for some, expert says
Published: January 18 2007
By GERALD GRAFF
Published: September 5, 2009
Freshmen are often overwhelmed by the intellectual challenge of college — so many subjects to be covered, so many facts, methods
and philosophical isms to sort out, so many big words to assimilate. As if that weren’t enough, what your different instructors tell you
may be flatly contradictory.
Students understandably cope with this cognitive dissonance by giving each of their teachers in turn whatever he or she seems to want.
Students learn to be free-market capitalists in one course and socialists in the next, universalists in the morning and relativists after
lunch. This tactic has got many a student through college, but the trouble is that, even when each course is excellent in itself, jumping
through a series of hoops doesn’t add up to a real socialization into the ways of intellectual culture.
What the most successful college students do, in my experience, is cut through the clutter of jargons, methods and ideological
differences to locate the common practices of argument and analysis hidden behind it all. Contrary to the cliché that no “one size fits
all” educational recipe is possible, successful academics of all fields and intellectual persuasions make some key moves that you can
emulate:
1. Recognize that knowing a lot of stuff won’t do you much good unless you can do something with what you know by turning it into
an argument.
2. Pay close attention to what others are saying and writing and then summarize their arguments and assumptions in a recognizable
way. Work especially on summarizing the views that go most against your own.
3. As you summarize, look not only for the thesis of an argument, but for who or what provoked it — the points of controversy.
4. Use these summaries to motivate what you say and to indicate why it needs saying. Don’t be afraid to give your own opinion,
especially if you can back it up with reasons and evidence, but don’t disagree with anything without carefully summarizing it first.
It’s too often a secret that only a minority of high achievers figure out, but the better you get at entering the conversation by
summarizing it and putting in your own oar, the more you’ll get out of your college education.
Gerald Graff, the past president of the Modern Language Association and a professor of English and education at the University of
Illinois at Chicago, has been teaching since 1963.
Higher Education Trends to Watch for in 2013
By Emily Driscoll
FOXBusiness
Despite years of steady growth, college enrollment dropped by 0.2% in the fall of 2011, the first decline in 15
years, according to the U.S. Education Department's National Center for Education Statistics.
The number of undergraduates enrolled dropped to 18.62 million in 2011 from 18.65 million in 2010, but that
doesn’t necessarily mean less people are pursuing a four-year degree. The number of college students enrolled
in at least one online course increased for the ninth straight year, according to the Babson Survey Research
Group.
The 2011 study reports that the number of students taking at least one online course has now surpassed six
million and nearly one-third of all students in higher education are taking at least one online course.
The college experience is slowly shifting off campus and into the internet as students seek out multiple sources
for their educational experience, says Adam Newman, managing partner at Education Growth Advisors.
“Colleges that fail to focus on supporting, and frankly exceeding, the academic needs and expectations of
students will do so at their peril given the increasing number of plausible alternatives emerging,” he says.
Especially considering the increasing costs of a college education, students are expecting a return on investment
than ever before, says Brian Kibby, president of McGraw-Hill Higher Education. "Students want a good
experience but ultimately what they want is a great job, a great opportunity,” he says. “Everything that colleges
and universities do should be focused on what is the student’s result--if the students don’t have results, it’s just
harder for them to get that return on investment and then ultimately contribute to the global economy.”
For traditional colleges and universities evolving to meet the needs of their students, here are three trends the
experts predict will have a significant role in shaping higher education in 2013.
While many colleges and universities have increased their online learning opportunities, experts predict that
schools will continue to bolster these courses and degree programs.
“They’re looking to accelerate that, not only because of the school’s initiatives, but as for assigning a stigma to
online learning—it’s gone,” says Kibby. “There are too many good studies that exist now that show students do
better in online programs.”
The introduction of Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) means that every university now needs an online
strategy, with the more progressive institutions figuring how they can provide meaningful credentials online,
says Ryan Craig, managing director at University Ventures.
“Add to this the increased number of ‘online enablers’ or ‘service providers’ – companies that partner with
universities to help them develop online degree programs, and 2013 should see the greatest ever annual increase
(on an absolute basis) in online courses and degree programs.”
More Emphasis on ‘Self-Directed’ Learning
With a large number of adult learners over age 25 in higher education programs, there are already an increasing
number of self-paced and competency-based programs, which will become more common with traditional
college students in a trend dubbed “flipping the classroom,” predicts Craig.
“Flipping the classroom involves requiring students to view lectures online prior to class, which is then reserved
for focused learning, problem solving and group work--students in a flipped classroom environment need to be
much more self-directed,” he says.
While there will continue to be a rise of self-directed learning options, a key issue will be how institutions and
employers value these experiences, as the quality and caliber of self-directed learning programs vary widely,
says Newman.
“For those students pursing them with the context of personal enrichment, that may be fine,” he says. “As it
relates to employability and demonstrated competencies, it's an entirely different matter in which the value of
these self-directed options remains unproven.”
As schools continue to experience decreased endowments and tight budgets, fewer faculty members will be
hired on a full time basis, say the experts.
“One of the hardest jobs to get anywhere is full time, tenured faculty positions, whether they’re at a community
college or more elite colleges,” says Kibby. “Having said that, the need for passionate master teachers, whether
you’re a fourth grade teacher or at the highest level, that will never change and in fact, it will accelerate.”
In order to offer the same number of classes, maintain class size, and serve the same number of students with
fewer full-time faculty members, universities will be hiring more part-time faculty in 2013, says Jon
Lenrow, Associate Dean, Academic Operations and Faculty Support at Peirce College in Philadelphia.
“The direct cost to the institution is much lower to hire part-time faculty over full-time faculty,” he says. “Part-
time faculty members also frequently bring more practical experience to the classroom.”