The CUNY IT Conference: Making Multimedia History

Chuck Dziuban did a fine job, but as theory values the abstract over the concrete, his talk provoked thought more than it suggested actual, real uses of technology in the classroom. The second panel session I attended was a group of CUNY historians who designed online teaching modules as part of the “Investigating US History” project. The modules consist of scalable research projects that employ primary sources available via the Web. Students are directed to examine a series of historical documents—say, lithographs and advertisements related to the slave trade, or audio tapes of Lyndon Johnson’s conversations in the White House– and then to write responses, on a course Blackboard site, to the prompts of faculty members.

The historians involved in the project are top-notch, and both the scholarship directing the modules and the design of the site are strong. I was struck, however, by how methodologically similar the pedagogic process of these modules was to the ways in which primary sources have been mobilized in the teaching of history for years. The Web has drastically improved access to primary sources, and the success of these modules lies in how faculty have framed the sources for students and directed their exploration. The site harnesses the Web’s speed and ease of information exchange for high-level history teaching. In this case, new technologies have expanded what can be done in the classroom without significantly altering the processes of teaching and learning.

It seems to me that the next generation of technological teaching tools—the products of Web 2.0, which enable increased interactivity– may pose a challenge to traditional pedagogies. While I haven’t seen inside the Blackboard sites to the fruits of the “Investigating History” modules, they seem to work on the same tracks that the teaching of history has for some time. That is, a scholar/teacher provides materials and background for students to work through with guidance; as students do, they learn about the past and about participating in the historical project. These are sound pedagogical goals for any history course.

In other disciplines, blogs and wikis have upended traditional teaching methods and goals by empowering students with more accessible means to produce and disseminate knowledge. In the teaching of history, such empowering elements of the Web have been employed in this project to reinforce and strengthen one traditional model (while also enabling more robust discussions of visual culture due to the increased accessibility of images). Historians like those who presented at the conference sense that the future of teaching history lie in using technology to more vividly open up the worlds of the past to their students. It will be interesting to see if new technologies continue to reinforce traditional methods of teaching history, or if they challenge those methods. One example of how they might is here.

The CUNY IT Conference: Notes Towards an Open (Source) University

Finally, and fittingly, the last session I attended featured Famed Friend of the Institute James Groom, who offered his “Notes Towards an Open (Source) University.” Prof. Groom’s views have been well-represented on this blog, and though I urged him to rename his talk “Waging War on the Proprietary-Software University,” his diplomatic disposition clung to the more affirmative appellation. Groom’s presentation asked, in a way, why pay lots of dough for something mediocre when you can get something fantabulous for free? He presented and discussed a few cutting edge open source course management systems, showed how certain packages can be modified for use in the classroom, and asked the very important questions: why aren’t more folks exploring this stuff at a place like CUNY, and why is open source so underrepresented at this conference? The answer, it seems, was hinted at by one of the items raffled off at the close of the conference… Blackboard provided tee-shirts for the raffle! Drupal, WordPress, and Sakai ask not what they can do for you, but what you can do for (and with) them. Who knew the open source movement was so selfish?

(note: A few audience members were flabbergasted when the gentleman who followed James Groom, Florian Lengyel, Assistant Director for Research Computing at the CUNY Graduate Center, showed us that open source has recently become a more significant presence at the Graduate Center. See here.)

Announcing the 7th Annual Symoposium

We at the Schwartz Communication Institute are very pleased to announce “New Rules: Convention and Change in Communication,” our 7th Annual Symposium on Communication and Communication-Intensive Instruction on Friday, April 27, 2007.

For more information, please see our Symposium page.

The 6th Annual Symposium: Afternoon Discussions

Remember that Symposium of ours? Below is a summary of the afternoon discussions as reported by participants at each table during the plenary session. Take a look too at the summary of the morning discussions. To watch a video of the plenary, click here and then click “Launch Media” and select “Part V: Afternoon Discussion and Report Back” on the following screen.

The 6th Annual Symposium Afternoon Discussion: Challenges and Proposed Solutions* (By Table)

Table 1: Reported by Ruth-Ellen Simmonds, Executive Director, One Stop Senior Services

Challenge: How can we teach students the kind of flexibility needed to communicate effectively in business?

Recommendation: Create a coaching culture–either through an experience mentor from another division or a team of people with whom they can practice and learn and grow. In terms of some of the activities that might engage students we suggest client-based projects. E.g., a sample activity where students have to learn to sell their ideas.

Table 2: Reported by Jody Rosen, Communication Fellow, Bernard L. Schwartz Communication Institute, Baruch College

Challenge: How do you diagnose yourself as a communicator?

Recommendation: Ask ourselves, our colleagues, and our students the following questions as we communicate:

(1) Am I clear, concise? complete? correct?
(2) What decisions do I need to make in communicating?
(3) How do I get the data?
(4) Is the person that I’m communicating with receptive to my communication?
(5) How can I better engage my audience?
(6) Why should someone take the time to listen to the message that I’m giving?
(7) How is time a factor in communication? If I’m sending an email at 3 a.m. does the time of sending have as much effect on how it’s received as what I say?

After communicating, ask yourself the following questions:

(1) What worked?
(2) Where did I get stuck?
(3) What can I take away from this that can be applied next time?

Table 3: Reported by Deborah Bosley, Director, Center for Writing, Language, and Literacy, University of North Carolina, Charlotte

Challenge: Money to support education. Business should value communication enough to underwrite CAC the same way they underwrite math and science. The College Board did a report showing that over $2 billion is spent by companies to train people in communication skills that they don’t already have out of college.

Recommendation: Seek funding from companies and other private sources for better communication training and curricular support. The BLSCI is a perfect model. How do we replicate it across the country?

Table 4: Reported by Diane DeFilippo, Assistant Vice President of Distribution and Service, AXA Financial, Inc.

Challenge: What are the conditions that make communication more likely to be successful or effective?

Conclusions:
(1) The first thing we decided is that communication is not a one at a time thing. It’s a continuum. Even when you think it’s over, it’s not over.
(2) You have to have communication strategy. And a key component to most strategies is that we are not all the same. I am visual; some are auditory. What works for one does not necessarily work for others.
(3) You need a clearly defined purpose for communicating. You have to know WHY you’re creating a communication.
(4) Your audience is not just someone on the other side. This works whether it’s email or a meeting. Ongoing dialogue is needed. Collaboration is needed. You want to be able to adjust and inspire communication.
(5) After you think you’ve been successful, you need confirmation. Ask if you explained your message clearly. Have people paraphrase. Have them play back the information.

Table 5: Reported by Bob Garland, National Managing Director, Assurance and Advisory Services, Deloitte & Touche LLP

Challenge: Educators must develop the whole person in order to train good communicators.

Recommendations:
(1) Practice, practice, practice. Students should start with small, less formal, low-stakes presentations and build over a four-year academic career to give several much higher stakes presentations. A key thing is overcoming fear. If you can’t overcome that in a low stakes situation, you won’t be able to overcome it. Students also need the opportunity to fail. College is more forgiving than a business environment.
(2) Develop students’ listening skills.
(3) Enhanced, continuous feedback for students from professors as well as outside visitors to the classroom, including career center staff.
(4) More mentoring; for instance, expansion of Baruch’s Executives on Campus program.

Table 6: Reported by Norm Brust, Vice President, Corporate Communications (retired), Contel Corporation

Challenge: Measuring the effectiveness of communication in a timeframe early enough in the process so students and employees can change their course and maximize their effectiveness.

Recommendation: Preview all types of communication. Get some representative member of your audience (who you trust to give honest feedback) to sit with you before your presentation–before you write the memo, before you write the talk–and in effect preview your communication.

Table 7: Reported by Wendy Ryden, Assistant Professor of English, Coordinator of Writing Across the Curriculum, Long Island University, CW Post Campus

Challenge: How can communication be reconfigured as a relationship–a more holistic model that includes visual and ethical dimensions of the situation?

Recommendations:
(1) Teach and practice communication as story telling. Use role-playing for problem solving. Be more attuned to what’s going on visually, how you’re presenting yourself. It is important that there be a meta-cognitive dimension to this. Participants should move from speaker to spectator, asking “Why do I make the choices that I’m making?”
(2) Use PowerPoint in a better, more narrative way.
(3) When we’re teaching communication we’ve been focusing on what the communicator can do. But we can’t forget that the audience also has an obligation. What can we teach audience members to do in a responsible communication? Why do we react the way we do? What obligation do we have to teach the audience to understand what’s trying to be communicated?

Table 8: Reported by Virginia Malone, President, ILM, Inc.

Challenge: What’s the standard for evaluation of communication?

Recommendations:
(1) Peer evaluation, e.g., using a questionnaire.
(2) Self-evaluation: Have students look at a performance review from a company so they can see what employers use to evaluate them. 70% of the evaluation is about communication. Let them see that in their future pay raises will be affected by this.

*Many thanks to Elizabeth Busch for transcribing the discussion and to Tom Harbison for creating this summary.

6th Annual Symposium Video Now Available Online

We are very happy to report that lots and lots of video from April’s Symposium — including John Elliott’s introductory remarks, the keynote address by Steve Kerr, the fireside chat with Judith Summerfield and both report-backs — is now available at Baruch’s Digital Media Library. Click here for our entry in the DML. Once you click on “Launch Media,” you will be able to navigate to the various parts of the video. Keynotes from past Symposia are coming soon to the DML.

Symposium Blast From the Past: Alan Webber Keynote, 2004

As we’re patiently waiting for all the video from the April 28th Symposium to be digitized and put up on Baruch’s Digital Media Library and since we’ve got keynotes on the brain, we figured we’d give you a small taste of the 4th Annual Symposium from way back in 2004. Below is the text from the keynote address by Alan Webber, Founding Editior of Fast Company magazine and an all around fascinating guy. Enjoy. Once we find the video, we’ll put that up too.

I want to talk a little bit about what you all wrestled with this morning and what for the past 20 years or so, I’ve tried to do as a job, and that is to figure out how to put work and business and ideas in a common space. Briefly, my background: About 20 years ago, I went to work at the Harvard Business Review and ran it for about eight years and then left to start Fast Company magazine, which, when we launched it, we thought of it as a cross between the Harvard Business Review and Rolling Stone. And that worked pretty well. For those of you that laughed, you got it. It was an interesting hybrid and hybrids, when they work, are great. When they don’t work, they disappear rapidly.

The last thing I wrote before I left the Harvard Business Review as the editorial director in about 1993 was an essay called, “What’s So New About The New Economy?” It was actually a book review disguised as an essay. There were three or so really interesting new books by Tom Peters, of In Search of Excellence fame, and several other people who were beginning to nibble at the edges of a revolution that was just beginning to be visible in the world of business. I read these books and tried to synthesize what they all had in common; and the punch line of the essay was, “What’s new about the new economy is that work is conversation.” In the old economy, if your boss saw you hanging out at the water cooler, he or she would come up to you and say, “Stop talking. Get back to work.” And in the new economy, if your boss saw you hanging out at the water cooler, he or she would come up to you and say, “That’s great. I’m glad to see you folks are talking with each other. I’ll be you’re going to come up with some really new and exciting ideas.”

And, in fact, one of the hallmarks of the period between 1993 till about 2000 when we went through the Dot Com bust and then a bunch of CEOs got busted, and we sort of forgot about the new economy, was a transformation of the world of work along these lines. For about seven or eight years we shifted gears from an industrial model to knowledge-based model where knowledge really was power, where work really was personal, where you were expected to bring all of yourself to the work place as opposed to checking your emotions, your creativity, your individuality at the door. I remember, vividly, walking through the offices of Steelcase, one of the great, creative furniture companies in the world, and seeing how, as an investment in design creativity, they had built coffee bars all over the perimeter of the office building so that people would stop, get up from their desk, go to the coffee bar, encounter their colleagues, have a chance conversation, a serendipitous discussion, and, in the process, generate new ideas, spark new possibilities, and share knowledge across boundaries.

[Read more...]

6th Annual Symposium: Steve Kerr’s Slides

By popular request, here are the slides from Steve Kerr‘s amazing keynote from the Institute’s 6th Annual Symposium on April 28th. You can download the orignial PowerPoint slides here.




As soon as it is ready, we will post a link to a video of Steve’s keynote from Baruch’s Digital Media Library.

The 6th Annual Symposium, Part I

Each year, the Schwartz Communication Institute at Baruch College hosts the Symposium on Communication and Communication-Intensive Instruction which brings together about 100 educators and business people to talk about communication. This year’s Symposium, entitled “What is ‘Effective’?: Assessing Communication in Education and Business,” saw lots of discussion on the way we evaluate communication in academic and business contexts. During the morning roundtables, participants identified salient challenges or problems related to teaching and learning effective communication. Here’s what they came up with:

TABLE 1
The differences in the communication in business and industry v. the communication in the academy is that, in business, one has to be able to think on one’s feet and address an audience who wants to know: “What’s in it for me?” In the academy, students often write or speak to and for a professor and their message is: “This is what I
know.”

Making that transition often means thinking outside the box: but do students understand what defines the box? How can we teach students the kind of flexibility needed to communication effectively in business?

TABLE 2
To make communication more effective, we need to build a pre-assessment tool into the process. As you communicate ask yourself: “How do I find out if this will be effective? Diagnose yourself as you communicate. Is the core message is coming through?

TABLE 3
Learning is a life-long activity and universities do not turn out finished products. How can business and academia create an ongoing partnership to continue education as students move from the classroom into the workplace?

TABLE 4
The challenge is communicating more effectively about what effective communication is.

Two main positions keep coming up in answer to the question, What constitutes effective communication?

“It depends on the context.”
“Everybody should know—we know it when we see it.”

We want to define it. Articulate it. Deal with the variance in standards.

TABLE 5
What does “effective communication” mean and how do we as educators cultivate it?

To make effective communicators—people who are going to be hirable and desirable—we have to cultivate the whole person – to transform the students in fundamental ways: maturity, reliability, skills, knowledge, and creativity.

TABLE 6
Audience is the central concern. We are interested in the various audiences to whom effective communicators have to communicate. Regardless of genre, how does feedback—both overt and covert—effect the communication? How does evaluation enter into the planning process? How can students learn to balance fulfilling of expectations and creative thinking? How can we make sure students have contact with those who can demonstrate effective communication?

TABLE 7
Effective Communication is about reconfiguring the model of what communication is. It’s really about forming relationships. It’s about taking into account all the factors. — How can we foster this idea as opposed to an academic, linear, individualistic model of communication?

TABLE 8
What is the standard of evaluation? If we’re talking about a population that speaks 100 languages, and many more cultures, do we have a standard of evaluation that is appropriate for a diverse population?

To be continued . . .

WAC and service learning?

Are there any service learning courses at Baruch? Are they Communication Intensive? I am kind of curious, since service learning is popular right now in higher ed. In any case, I am sure this will be of interest to someone.

Call for Papers: Writing Across the Curriculum is a permanent section of the Midwest Modern Language Association. The 48th Annual M/MLA Convention will be held November 9-12, at The Palmer House Hilton, Chicago, Illinois.
This year’s theme is “Service Learning: Writing for/about the Community.”

This panel invites papers from all disciplines on Writing Across the Curriculum and encourages proposals from community colleges and online learning institutions in addition to traditional four-year colleges and universities.

Panel Description:
This panel will explore the various ways that the pedagogy of service learning and civic engagement are incorporated into English composition courses and writing courses across disciplines. Through analysis and discussion, we will examine the relationships between theories and institutional practices and explore service learning as a framework for discovery, engagement, and professional development.

Please email a 250-word abstract to Joseph A. Barda (Section Chair) by March 31, 2006.

Joseph A. Barda
Curriculum Chair- Humanities and Social Sciences
Robert Morris College
Chicago, Illinois

(From the Literary Calls for Papers Mailing List)

8th International WAC Conference

For all you WAC types and fellow travelers, make a note that the 8th International Writing Across the Curriculum Conference will take place on May 18-20, at Clemson University in Clemson, South Carolina. The conference will feature presentations from all disciplines and from cross-disciplinary teams on a wide range of topics of interest to faculty, graduate students, and administrators at two- and four-year colleges.

For more information, visit the conference website at the link above. Please also feel free to contact the conference planners at wac2006-L@clemson.edu.