首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Welcome, Freshmen. Have an iPod. Taking a step that many professors may view as a bit counterproductive, some colleges and u
Welcome, Freshmen. Have an iPod. Taking a step that many professors may view as a bit counterproductive, some colleges and u
admin
2013-08-27
63
问题
Welcome, Freshmen. Have an iPod.
Taking a step that many professors may view as a bit counterproductive, some colleges and universities are doling out Apple iPhones and Internet-capable iPods to their students.
The always-on Internet devices raise some novel possibilities, like tracking where students gather together. With far less controversy, colleges could send messages about canceled classes, delayed buses, campus crises or just the cafeteria menu.
While schools emphasize its usefulness—online research in class and instant polling of students, for example—a big part of the attraction is, undoubtedly, that the iPhone is cool and a hit with students. Being equipped with one of the most recent cutting-edge IT products could just help a college or university foster a cutting-edge reputation.
Apple stands to win as well, hooking more young consumers with decades of technology purchases ahead of them. The lone losers, some fear, could be professors.
Students already have laptops and cell phones, of course, but the newest devices can take class distractions to a new level. They practically beg a user to ignore the long-suffering professor struggling to pass on accumulated wisdom from the front of the room a prospect that teachers find most irritating and students view as, well, inevitable.
"When it gets a little boring, I might pull it out," acknowledged Naomi Pugh, a first-year student at Freed-Hardeman University in Henderson, Tenn. , referring to her new iPod Touch, which can connect to the Internet over a campus wireless network. She speculated that professors might try even harder to make classes interesting if they were to compete with the devices.
Experts see a movement toward the use of mobile technology in education, though they say it is in its nfancy as professors try to come up with useful applications. Providing powerful hand-held devices is sure o fuel debates over the role of technology in higher education.
"We think this is the way the future is going to work," said Kyle Dickson, co-director of research and he mobile learning initiative at Abilene Christian University in Texas, which has bought more than 600 Phones and 300 iPods for students entering this fall.
Although plenty of students take their laptops to class, they don’t take them everywhere and would prefer something lighter. Abilene Christian settled on the devices after surveying students and finding that they did not like hauling around their laptops, but that most of them always carried a cell phone, Dr. Dickson said.
It is not clear how many colleges and universities plan to give out iPhones and iPods this fall; officials at Apple were unwilling to talk about the subject and said that they would not leak any institution’s plans.
"We can’t announce other people’s news," said Greg Joswiak, vice president of iPod and iPhone marketing at Apple. He also said that he could not discuss discounts to universities for bulk purchases.
At least four institutions—the University of Maryland, Oklahoma Christian University, Abilene Christian and Freed-Hardeman—have announced that they will give the devices to some or all of their students this fall.
Other universities are exploring their options. Standford University has hired a student-run company to design applications like a campus map and directory for the iPhone. It is considering whether to issue iPhones but not sure it’s necessary, noting that more than 700 iPhones were registered on the university’s network last year.
At the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, iPhones might already have been everywhere, if AT &T, the wireless carrier offering the iPhone in the United States, had a more reliable network, said Andrew Yu, mobile devices platform project manager at M. I. T.
"We would have probably gone ahead with this, maybe just getting a thousand iPhones and giving them out," Mr. Yu said.
The University of Maryland at College Park is proceeding cautiously, giving the iPhone or iPod Touch to 150 students, said Jeffrey Huskamp, vice president and chief information officer at the university. "We don’t think that we have all the answers," Mr. Huskamp said. By observing how students use the gadgets, he said, "We’re trying to get answers from the students. "
At each college, the students who choose to get an iPhone must pay for mobile phone service. Those service contracts include unlimited data use. Both the iPhones and the iPod Touch devices can connect to the Internet through campus wireless networks. With the iPhone, those networks may provide faster connections and longer battery life than AT&T’s data network. Many cell phones allow users to surf the Web, but only some newer ones are capable of wireless connection to the local area computer network.
University officials say that they have no plans to track their students(and Apple said it would not be possible unless students give their permission). They say that they are drawn to the prospect of learning applications outside the classroom, though such lesson plans have yet to surface.
"My colleagues and I are studying something called augmented reality(a field of computer research dealing with the combination of real-world and virtual reality)," said Christopher Dede, professor in learning technologies at Harvard University, "Alien Contact," for example, is an exercise developed for middle-school students who use hand-held devices that can determine their location. As they walk around a playground or other area, text, video or audio pops up at various points to help them try to figure out why aliens were in the schoolyard.
"You can imagine similar kinds of interactive activities along historical lines," like following the Freedom Trail in Boston, Professor Dede said. "It’s important that we do research so that we know how well something like this works."
The rush to distribute the devices worries some professors, who say that students are less likely to participate in class if they are multi-tasking. "I’m not someone who’s anti-technology, but I’m always worried that technology becomes an end in and of itself, and it replaces teaching or it replaces analysis," said Ellen Millender, associate professor of classics at Reed College in Portland, Ore.(She added that she hoped to buy an iPhone for herself once prices fall.)
Robert Summers, who has taught at Cornell Law School for about 40 years, announced this week- in a detailed, footnoted memorandum—that he would ban laptop computers from his class on contract law.
" I would ban that too if I knew the students were using it in class," Professor Summers said of the iPhone, after the device and its capabilities were explained to him. "What we want to encourage in these students is an active intellectual experience, in which they develop the wide range of complex reasoning abilities required of good lawyers. "
The experience at Duke University may ease some concerns. A few years ago, Duke began giving iPods to students with the idea that they might use them to record lectures(these older models could not access the Internet).
"We had assumed that the biggest focus of these devices would be consuming the content," said Tracy Futhey, vice president for information technology and chief information officer at Duke.
But that is not all that the students did. They began using the iPods to create their own "content," making audio recordings of themselves and presenting them. The students turned what could have been a passive interaction into an active one, Ms. Futhey said.
In the author’s view, being equipped with IT products may help colleges and universities______.
选项
A、build an innovative image
B、raise their teaching efficiency
C、track students’ activities
D、excite student interest in hi-tech
答案
A
解析
同义转述题。定位句提到,配备最新、最前沿的一款IT产品或许只是帮助某个高校带来最前沿的名誉而已。A)项是对原文中foster a cutting—edge reputation的同义转述,故为答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/zf97777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
A、ItisrunbyMrs.Winter’shusband.B、IthiresMrs.Winterasanadviser.C、Itgivesa30%discounttoallcustomers.D、Itenc
Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessayentitledOnDialectalTVPrograms.Youshouldwriteatleast15
Itisoftenclaimedthatnuclearenergyissomethingwecannotdowithout.Weliveinaconsumersocietywherethereisanenorm
Itisoftenclaimedthatnuclearenergyissomethingwecannotdowithout.Weliveinaconsumersocietywherethereisanenorm
A、Hewenthikingnotlongago.B、Hehasn’ttraveledaroundtheworldyet.C、Hewillgowhenhehasfinisheddoingallhiswork.
Directions:Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteacompositiononthetopic:SalaryorInterest.Youshouldwrite
WillthereeverbeanotherEinstein?ThisistheundercurrentofconversationatEinsteinmemorialmeetingsthroughouttheyear.
Nappingisoneofthebest,mostunderusedtoolsforbusypeople.Itisfrowned【C1】______bymanypeopleandisviewingasso
A、Hehasabigappetite.B、Heeatsonlyatregularmealtimes.C、Heavoidsnewfoods.D、Heeatsonlyhealthfulfoods.A选项中的He,bi
Todaytheworld’seconomyisgoingthroughtwogreatchanges,bothbiggerthananAsianfinancialcrisishereoraEuropeanmone
随机试题
下列关于感染性心内膜炎诊断检查的叙述,错误的是
有三种动态路由选择策略的具体算法,分别是独立路由选择、集中路由选择和( )。
依据《行政处罚法》的规定,行政处罚案件一般由()的行政机关管辖。
行业分析的比较研究法可分为()。
假定某投资者当前以每份75.13元购买了某种理财产品,该产品年收益率为10%,按年复利计算需要()年的时间该投资者可以获得100元。
以下不属于幼儿多动症的是()。
原告杨某任经理的江苏省甲公司与湖南省乙公司素有购销水暖器材业务往来。2009年12月16日。两公司签订了水暧器材购销协议,约定提货时先付货款6万元,余款9万元待10天后结清。杨某将水暖器材运至江苏省销售的过程中,发现水暖器材存在明显质量问题,拒绝支付余下的
试述社会主义经济中的按劳分配原则。
1924年1月,国民党一大的成功召开,标志着第一次国共合作的正式形成。大会通过的宣言对三民主义作出了新的解释,新三民主义的政纲同中共在民主革命阶段的纲领基本一致,因而成为国共合作的政治基础。大会实际上
WhichofthefollowingisNOTthenicknameoftheU.S.A.?
最新回复
(
0
)