I was going to call this post "A Negative View of the Web by Academia", but then I read on and around my subject and this is what I found. This is how an article from Mashable starts:
University Of Brighton Professor Places Ban On Google And Wikipedia
January 13, 2008 — 08:06 AM PST — by Share This
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So I read on and find out that a university professor at the University of Brighton has banned her students from using these tools for their research because " professor Tara Brabazon claims that students have grown too accustomed to taking
“the easy option when asked to do research.” "
And that is it with regard to direct quotes from the original source of the article. This Mashable piece goes on to decry academics, particularly in the fields of history, literature, science etc as almost Luddite in their fear of new technology. Apparently these educators fear the Chaos and will revert back to the "officially approved" doctrine.
Now, because this article interested me it almost prompted me to write a rant, but I thought ,"No, I'd better get more info," so I clicked the hyperlink shown in the picture below.
This took me to this headline from The Argus: Lecturer bans students from using Google and Wikipedia.
This article starts off in a similar vein until we get to the quotes from Professor Tara Brabazon:
"Too many students don't use their own brains enough. We need to bring back the important values of research and analysis."
She said young people were finishing education with shallow ideas and
needed to learn interpretative skills before starting to use technology.
The article goes on to explain that Professor Brabazon is giving a lecture locally entitled, Google is White Bread for the Masses.
Now it is obvious that Prof. Brabazon does not particularly like her students using these tools for their research but I feel that her main bugbear is that students are using them, and them alone as their research. To my mind she trying to encourage a sense of academic rigour into her students, who seem to believe the first Google find or Wikipedia page they see. She is trying to get her students to go beyond those original sources.
I then went on to (ironically) google Prof Brabazon. Very interesting to say the least what she lectures on:
Tara Brabazon is Professor of Media at the University of Brighton, United Kingdom.
Not only is she no Luddite she lectures on subjects such as "Thinking Pop and Creative Industries". She also holds a Graduate Diploma in Internet Studies and has written 10 books, including The University of Google: Education in a (post) information age.
Google is a
Interesting eh? Obviously this professor knows a heck of a lot more about this than you would have believed from the first article.
brand name that has transformed into a verb for web searching. The
word has also entered popular culture. But an absence in this
narrative of commercial success is the impact of Google on education.
Googling signals simple and intuitive surfing, rather than planned
researching, and quick answers to difficult questions. The costs and
consequences of students entering this digital shopping mall for
research, scholarship and interpretation require attention.
This is what I had to do to write this post. And this is what Prof Brabazon is trying to get her students to do(ish). If I'd have simply written a commentary on the mashable article I would only have seen half the story, whereas by finding the original article and looking up the person concerned I got the whole story.
And I'm rather pleased with myself about that.
Did you like the title???
Technorati Tags: tarabrabazon, adamsutcliffe, google, mashable, wikipedia, research, universityofbrighton
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Thanks micheal, interesting listening. Sounds like you enjoyed the lecture.
Posted by: Adam Sutcliffe | Wednesday, 23 January 2008 at 11:42
I was at Tara recent inaugural lecture at the University of Brighton and taped the lecture (6.5 MB WMA file). You can find the link at http://nomadx.org/content/view/1810/63/
Regards
Michael
Posted by: Michael | Tuesday, 22 January 2008 at 11:51
@Nick, @JW, thanks for the comments nice to hear your stories.
Posted by: Adam Sutcliffe | Monday, 14 January 2008 at 15:03
Good points. Re comment#1 I stopped buying the Scotsman for that very reason: read the headline and first paragraph and be horrified, read the rest of the article and think - "What was all the fuss about".
I enjoy reading the in-laws Daily Mail on our Saturday visits to see what nonsense they're spouting this week.
Posted by: JW | Monday, 14 January 2008 at 13:43
This reminds me of how, once my Mum had finished her 15-minute outraged rant based upon the newspaper headline she had read across the breakfast table, my stepfather would quietly say, "Interesting. Now read the article". I learned (as did my red-faced Mum) that having fuller information means you are able to articulate a better, more educated opinion (i.e. not make an arse of yourself).
I'm laughing at this, of course: ahead of me is a day in which my challenges include getting my "students" to open a book or get a pencil for themselves, let alone think for themselves.
Posted by: Nick Hood | Monday, 14 January 2008 at 07:21