CIT Events

Flattening the Classroom: Building Collaborative Learning Environments

Net Gen students are active and prolific participants in flat-world phenomena in their personal lives: posting updates to Facebook friends scattered around the globe, playing online games with teams crossing international time zones, and collaborating on digital works bearing the imprint of multiple contributors. At the same time, the global economy demands students who can think creatively, build collectively, and adapt willingly to change. Are we fostering those skills in the classroom?

Join us September 23 and 24 for "Flattening the Classroom: Building Collaborative Learning Environments," the 2009 Educause Learning Initiative (ELI) Online Fall Focus Session. Hosted in Adobe Connect, this virtual event will be much more than just a "usual" online seminar. You'll exchange ideas and collaborate interactively with the ELI community - all without leaving your campus. You'll also receive all the resources and guided activities you need to help frame discussion and organize team events.

We'll explore an approach to learning that engages students in the active construction of collective knowledge, empowering them to build meaning together, and challenging them to examine issues from multiple perspectives. We will work together to:

The events in this series are webcasts presented by ELI and locally hosted by CIT (in other words, we will gather together physically on campus, in 039 Bostock Library, to view the online sessions broadcast by ELI). Please register for the individual sessions which most interest you (or all of them), so that we can plan how much space we will need for each session and the follow up discussions.

Series Materials

Virtual knowledge networks

Noshir Contractor, Professor of Behavioral Sciences, Northwestern University

Recent advances in digital technologies invite consideration of collaboration as processes that are accomplished by global, flexible, adaptive, and ad hoc networks that can be created, maintained, dissolved, and reconstituted with remarkable alacrity. This presentation will describe a multitheoretical multilevel (MTML) model of the sociotechnical motivations for creating, maintaining, dissolving, and reconstituting knowledge and social networks in classroom and other settings.

Materials for this event

Registration Date Time Location Presenter(s)
Closed Wed 09/23/09 1:15 PM - 1:45 PM Bostock Library Room 039 Staff, Center for Instructional Technology

Last generated November 23, 2009 2:13:30 AM EST