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| What Students Have to Say | |
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ELI Web Seminar, January 16, 2007 1:00 p.m. ET (12:00 p.m. CT, 11:00 a.m. MT, 10:00 a.m. PT); runs one hour What Students Have to SaySpecial Guest
When she is not Googling her own name or adding to her blog, Carie Windham is completing a master's degree in Irish history and politics from the University of Ulster in Derry, Northern Ireland, where she studied as a Mitchell Scholar. A recent Phi Beta Kappa graduate of North Carolina State University, she became intrigued as a college editor by the Net Gen characteristics of herself and her peers. She shared secrets of the millennial mind in "The Student's Perspective," a chapter in the 2005 EDUCAUSE e-book, Educating the Net Generation, edited by Diana Oblinger and James Oblinger. Recent works include "Father Google and Mother IM: Confessions of a Net Gen Learner" in EDUCAUSE Review and a white paper on information literacy, "Getting Past Google: Perspectives on Information Literacy from the Millenial Mind." She is currently based in Athens, Georgia.
NOTE: As of March 2008, we are now using Adobe Connect to host our web seminars. Whether you’ve participated in an ELI web seminar before or you’re joining us for the first time, please run the Adobe Acrobat Connect Connection Test before the event. The test takes approximately 30 seconds and will verify that your computer meets hardware and software requirements to use Adobe Connect, and will provide instructions for installing Adobe Flash, if needed. If you have problems completing the test or installing required software, please contact support@clarix.com, or visit Adobe Support for more information. If you are having audio or video issues during the event, please see our Adobe Connect Frequently Asked Questions page. If you need further assistance, please contact EDUCAUSE Member Services at 303-449-4430. SummaryEDUCAUSE Vice President Diana Oblinger will moderate this Web Seminar with Carie Windham, in which she discusses the student’s perspective. The rise of the millenials has spawned new conversations about engagement and learning on today's college campuses. But what do these Net Gen learners really want? From the mouth of a confessed Net junkie, learn what makes these students tick, what ticks them off, and what faculty and administrators need to know to bridge the generational divide. Using anecdotes from her own life and the lives of her peers, Carie Windham will provide an overview of Net Gen characteristics and how those characteristics translate to the classroom, including the "Ten Commandments of Net Gen Teaching and Engagement." Related EDUCAUSE Resources
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