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Driving seat or passenger seat? The information society and its impact on higher education Professor Derek Law Director of Information Resources, University.

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Presentation on theme: "Driving seat or passenger seat? The information society and its impact on higher education Professor Derek Law Director of Information Resources, University."— Presentation transcript:

1 Driving seat or passenger seat? The information society and its impact on higher education Professor Derek Law Director of Information Resources, University of Strathclyde

2 The Background

3 Global issues  Poverty  Equity  Social inclusion  Government/private sector balance  Education for all  Information rich and information poor

4 Global Lessons  Technology is not patriotic  Investment capital is not patriotic  The race IS to the strong but also to the swift

5 Technology and The Inflation of the Internet  The World Wide Wait  As big as a decent library  Poor navigation  Inappropriate for scholarship  A giant experiment

6 Educational Change  Group work facilitated by technology  Nintendo learning  Martini learning – anytime, anyplace, anywhere  Second chance students  Lifelong learning and CPD

7 The transformation of publishing  SPARC  OAi  Courseware  Intellectual Property Rights in teaching materials  The personal and institutional website

8 Building an Internet Culture  Resist the Technology Sales Pitch  Do not put technology on existing dysfunctional institutions  Develop people not machinery  Build Internet civil society  Email is more important than the Web

9 Building an Internet Culture  Analyse the technical and cultural environment  Use technology to amplify existing sharing  Don’t distribute technology randomly  Education should be directed to social organisation not technology  Machinery does not fix social problems and institutions

10 Changes in the Information Business  Old wine in new bottles  Good information drives out bad  User friendly systems aren’t  Recognition that we are producers as well as consumers

11 Conclusions  Tools are just tools  Geography is not destiny  Bad management is not destiny  Avoid mainframe solutions to internet problems  Remember that content is king  BUT metadata is the king’s interpreter


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