Bill Atweh; Angela Calabrese Barton; Marcelo C. Borba; Noel Gough; Christine Keitel-Kreidt; Catherine Vistro-Yu; R Vithal Springer-Verlag New York Inc. (2007) Kovakantinen kirja
Bill Atweh; Angela Calabrese Barton; Marcelo C. Borba; Noel Gough; Christine Keitel-Kreidt; Catherine Vistro-Yu; R Vithal Springer-Verlag New York Inc. (2008) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
As we enter into the 21"Century, the presence of technology, particularly techno-science, in everyday life is overwhelming. Institutions in the modem world are affected by this presence. Like Janus, the ancient Roman god whose double-faced head signified his knowledge of the present and the future, education has always been a two-faced enterprise. The past establishes goals and methods of Education, and the other face tries to capture the future and suggests and proposes new directions of thought and new styles of behavior for the generation which, in a few years, will take over both routines and societal innovation. History tells us that this face of Education has always been sensitive to emerging technologies. Technologies of communication and information have been particularly influential in new directions of society, in particular of education. The transition from orality to writing marked a new role for the teacher. From the sole repository of accumulated knowledge, the teacher became a guide and interpreter of registered knowledge. The emergence of hardware, in the form of documents and books, initiated a companionship between teacher and hardware. It is also remarkable how the emergence of writing strengthened individual memory, contrary to the concerns of Thamus when Theuth explained to him the discovery of writing. The conservative king was afraid that the new invention would implant forgetfulness in the souls of men.