Teaching in Higher Ed

Teaching in Higher Ed


#028: How to see what we’ve been missing [PODCAST]

December 26, 2014

Fears and concerns over changes in higher education persist.

Whether it is our disdain for lecturing to a bunch of disconnected, texting and Facebooking students, or their boredom at being put to sleep by a droning professor reading from his powerpoint, something’s got to give…

In today’s episode, Dr. Cathy Davidson joins us to talk about finding the right practice, and the right tools, and being able to see what we’ve been missing in higher ed.

Podcast notes
Guest: Dr. Cathy Davidson

Cathy on Twitter 
Attention
The gorilla experiment

Selective attention test video by Simons and Chabris (1999)
We have a capacity for learning constantly. -Cathy Davidson
Patients as co-learners with their physicians in the healing process
Examples of facilitation of learning, unlearning, and relearning
Students write a class constitution
What happens if you take responsibility for your own learning? - Cathy Davidson
Alvin Toffler's term: unlearning

Alvin Toffler has said that, "...in the rapidly changing world of the twenty-first century, the most important skill anyone can have is the ability to stop in ones tracks, see what isn't working, and then find ways to unlearn old patterns and relearn how to learn.

This requires all of the other skills in this program but is perhaps the most important single skill we will teach."
...Sadly, we all find gorillas in our lives. They usually come through tragedy... We have all had those moments when there's a before and an after in your life when the world looks different. The world was not different. What changed was your ability to see a world that you didn't have to see when you were priviledged not to... when you thought the world only had basketball tosses in it. It wasn't that the gorilla didn't exist; it was that you didn't see it. -Cathy Davidson
Multitasking

Fears about the calculator
Debates in state legislatures and in the senate when Motorola wanted to put a radio in the car
Radio actually helped save lives, especially in night driving, to combat the issue of falling asleep at the wheel
Brain is constantly multitasking; we just don't realize it

Flow tasks (Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi)

Brain surgery, playing chess, dancing to rock music, video game playing
Reading a book is not considered a flow task - people go off the page in 2-3 minutes; we think we are concentrating, when we are not

Unitasking

Howard Rheingold on Attention Literacy
There's always something we are missing
Index cards: Write down three things we've missed and we haven't talked about...
Tools, methods, and partners are needed to fight attention blindness

Recommendations

Field Notes for 21st Century Literacies
Social Media Literacy article by Rheingold on Educause
HASTAC is an alliance of more than 13,000 humanists, artists, social scientists,